Man Succumbs To 7-Year Battle With Health Insurance

September 22, 2008 | Issue 44•39 | The ONION

DENVER—After years of battling crippling premiums and agonizing
deductibles, local resident Michael Haige finally succumbed this week
to the health insurance policy that had ravaged his adult life.

Haige, who had suffered from limited medical coverage for nearly a
decade, passed away early Monday morning. According to sources, the
46-year-old was laid to rest at Fairplains cemetery, surrounded by
friends, family members, and more than $300,000 of mounting debt.

"I miss Michael every single day, but at least he can finally rest
now," said Sheila Haige, who watched as insurance rates ate away at
her husband over time. "What Michael went through, the humiliating
forms, the invasive background checks, the complete loss of dignity
and hope—I wouldn't wish that kind of torture on anyone."

Once a healthy and happy father of two, Haige saw his life forever
change seven years ago when health insurance professionals diagnosed
him with a preexisting condition. As months passed and his line of
credit continued to deteriorate, the former high school football coach
would experience excruciating headaches and bouts of nausea every time
another hospital bill arrived.

"My dad always seemed invincible, like there was nothing in the world
that could hurt him," son Ryan Haige said. "But then, one night, I
found him bent over a stack of UB-92 and HCFA forms, and he was
crying. I'd never seen my father look so scared in all my life."

Added Ryan, "Making those payments each month—it was killing him."

While family members refused to look at Haige's insurance plan as a
death sentence, it soon became clear that their loved one was facing
the biggest fight of his life. Countless visits to doctors, claims
adjusters, and loan officers proved futile, with Haige being told at
every turn that his case was hopeless.

"They said there was nothing they could do for him, that modern
medicine was powerless against this monster," Sheila Haige said.
"Still, Michael never gave up. He kept saying that he was going to
beat the odds, that he was going to find some way to get coverage."

According to an independent study released last month by the Mayo
Clinic, health insurance is the nation's No. 2 cause of death,
claiming the lives of some 400,000 Americans each year. A silent
killer, health insurance often strikes without warning, its harmful
and profit-based policies avoiding detection until it is far too late.
Although the cruel bureaucratic disorder does not discriminate,
statistics have shown that senior citizens, young dependents, and
those woefully underemployed are most at risk.

"I can't tell you the number of patients I've had to deliver the bad
news to over the years," said Haige's longtime family physician, Dr.
Howard Silverman. "It's never easy to look someone in the eye and tell
them it's going to have to be out-of-pocket. For most of these poor
people, prayer is the only hope."

Toward the end of Haige's seven-year ordeal, family members said, the
once loving husband and father had become an empty husk of his former
self.

"I remember the last thing he ever said to me," said eldest son Mark
Haige, holding a small picture of his father during happier times,
before the endless battery of co-pays began. "He took my hand in his,
and he said, 'Son, promise me you'll never sign up for a
high-deductible, network-model HMO.'"

While still angry and in shock over Michael's premature passing,
Sheila and her two children say the whole experience has taught them
the importance of family.

"If Dad were still with us, I know he would want us to be here, at
home, supporting Mom," Mark Haige said. "She really hasn't been doing
so well ever since Bankers Life and Casualty denied her life insurance
claim."

-- 
Jim Devine / "Nobody told me there'd be days like these / Strange days
indeed -- most peculiar, mama." -- JL.
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