It is currently 04/27/24 10:23 pm

All times are UTC - 6 hours




  Page 1 of 1   [ 3 posts ]
Author Message
 Offline
PostPosted: 11/19/14 9:16 am • # 1 
User avatar
Administrator

Joined: 11/07/08
Posts: 42112
WTH????? ~ this is obscene ~ but I'm hoping the behemoth Blue Cross will eventually allow the claim ... even if only to stem the horrendous publicity sure to follow ~ :g ~ Sooz

Canadian woman hit with $950K medical bill after unexpectedly giving birth in US hospital
Travis Gettys | 19 Nov 2014 at 08:08 ET

A Canadian woman was hit with an unexpected medical bill of nearly $1 million after going into labor early while vacationing in Hawaii.

Jennifer Huculak-Kimmel was six months pregnant when she was cleared by her doctor to leave the country on vacation.

She and her husband purchased travel insurance before flying from their home in Saskatchewan to Maui.

But two days after arriving, her water broke and she went into labor nine weeks early.

Huculak-Kimmel was airlifted to Honolulu, and her daughter was delivered Dec. 10 by emergency C-section.

She had been at the hospital for about a week when her insurance carrier, Blue Cross, notified her that her coverage was denied due to a pre-existing condition – a bladder infection she’d had during the fourth month of her pregnancy.

Huculak-Kimmel said her specialist had examined her prior to the trip with an ultrasound, and the physician determined her pregnancy was stable.

“He saw no reason for me not to go,” she said.

She told the Blue Cross salesperson about the bladder infection when she bought her travel policy, and the representative said she was fine to travel because she was less than 36 weeks pregnant.

“I guess we thought we had done everything right,” she said.

A medical expert told CBC that he believes the treatment should have been covered if Huculak-Kimmel was cleared by her physician, who sent a letter to Blue Cross.

“I don’t think we can be our own doctors,” Steven Lewis, a health policy analyst in Saskatoon. “Either we do, or we don’t have a pre-existing condition — and we’re not likely to know about them unless we’ve been told by our doctors that we have them.”

Huculak-Kimmel spent six weeks on bed rest at the hospital, and she was told that her daughter would require a lengthy stay in the neonatal intensive care unit – if she survived.

That cost up to $15,000 per day, and she spent about $30,000 renting a condominium and car during her daughter’s two-month hospital stay.

Huculak-Kimmel looked into various options to return home, but doctors said travel wasn’t safe for their daughter.

She insists she never would have traveled if she believed there was a risk to her baby or herself.

“Anybody in their right mind doesn’t risk their life, their unborn baby’s life to go on a vacation,” Huculak-Kimmel said.

Her daughter, Reece, is now 10 months old and healthy, and Huculak-Kimmel is grateful for the care they received in Hawaii.

But she and her husband can’t afford to pay the $950,000 the insurance carrier has billed them, and they said if they begin paying they’ll be stuck paying the rest of their lives.

“We don’t know what to do,” Huculak-Kimmel said. “We can’t afford to pay a million-dollar medical bill. We can go deeper in debt and try to fight Blue Cross. We can wait and declare bankruptcy on the bill, which is no good for anybody. But we don’t have very many options.”

Watch this video report posted online by LuvLuv:


http://www.rawstory.com/rs/2014/11/canadian-woman-hit-with-950k-medical-bill-after-unexpectedly-giving-birth-in-us-hospital/


Top
  
 Offline
PostPosted: 11/19/14 9:37 am • # 2 
User avatar
Editorialist

Joined: 05/05/10
Posts: 14091
Travel insurance can be a joke. When we purchase ours, we have to reveal my high bp. Should I ever have a heart "incident" or stroke while in the US, they could refuse to pay. I try to protect myself by visiting the doc right before our trip, since my bp is controlled with meds, but that's not a guarantee.

I think her provincial insurance may step in with some help too.

We buy through our bank, not Blue Cross, but they have pages of fine print. This has happened many times. Travel insurance is only good for people with NO existing health issues and it's mostly a money grab for all others no matter where you live or where you are traveling.


Top
  
 Offline
PostPosted: 11/19/14 10:40 am • # 3 
Administrator

Joined: 01/16/16
Posts: 30003
Her provincial insurance will only pay the same rates as they pay within her province. Drugs, medication, helicopters, house rentals, car rentals, are probably not covered.


Top
  
Display posts from previous:  Sort by  

  Page 1 of 1   [ 3 posts ] New Topic Add Reply

All times are UTC - 6 hours



Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 3 guests


You cannot post new topics in this forum
You cannot reply to topics in this forum
You cannot edit your posts in this forum
You cannot delete your posts in this forum
You cannot post attachments in this forum

Search for:
Jump to:  
cron
© Voices or Choices.
All rights reserved.