Guest guest Posted March 23, 2004 Report Share Posted March 23, 2004 I called BC today and they said they would cover IVIG as an office visit and they would be billed directly for the treatment, BUT, they will most likely ask for a letter of medical necessity along with " proof " (lab tests) confirming the existence of a primary immune deficiency like hypogammaglobulinemia or otherwise once they are hit with the huge bill. We fear that once they see that all I have is a subclass deficiency (which to me IS a type of immune deficiency but not to insurors), they'll reject the claim and my doc will be stuck with the bill. I know in recent posts, one of you mentioned that someone was getting coverage for offlabel use and that the doctor writes letters " proving " the patient needs IVIG and that it's helping her, so insurance covers it, while another wrote that they have subclass deficiency (same as me) and the doctor said it was easy to get Medicare to cover it. Unfortunately, I am too young to qualify for Medicare. So, for those of you have subclass deficiency or are using IVIG for offlabel dysfunctions and have had success getting insurance coverage, please let me know how your practitioners are getting insurance (doesn't matter if BC or not) to cover. Even if the doc does everything in his power to write a " creative " letter, he or whe still needs to back it up with lab work, so I don't see how one gets around the system. By the way, I was told today by one of the nation's leading suppliers of gamma globulin products, that Gamimune has or is being discontinued and an updated, better product has taken its place called Gamunex. In a message dated 3/19/2004 1:42:34 AM Pacific Standard Time, dorisbrown9@... writes: I would definitely get preapproval from BC. When I took shots of GG they wouldn't cover them because of a clause in my policy that said they didn't cover " blood products. " And GG is made from blood. Now I am on Medicare and they don't seem to have a problem covering it. Doris Re: Gamma Globulin Okay - I did it, finally convincing my local wholistic practitioner to agree o give me IVIG treatment for my IgG3 subclass deficiency! Now, the challenge will be a) to get my insurance (Blue Cross) to agree to cover in-office sessions, that my doc has never done it before as far as I know, c) where he can obtain the Gamimune or whatever the best is, and d) what safety precautions and contraindications need to be figured into the picture prior to treatment since this is, after all, a human blodd product, and does carry some degree of risk not just with the contamination, but allergic response or sensitivities. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 24, 2004 Report Share Posted March 24, 2004 Believe me, most of us are not getting medicare because of age. It is because of disability. I almost declined coverage but GG was a reason I did not. Doris Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 24, 2004 Report Share Posted March 24, 2004 In a message dated 3/24/2004 2:25:30 AM Pacific Standard Time, dorisbrown9@... writes: Believe me, most of us are not getting medicare because of age. It is because of disability. I almost declined coverage but GG was a reason I did not. I'm assuming you have to be disabled to qualify? What constitutes being disabled? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 24, 2004 Report Share Posted March 24, 2004 I am self-employed and call my own shots; how 'creative' can I be? What substantiation do they need in order to qualify or would they just take your word for it that you're unable to be gainfully employed? In a message dated 3/24/2004 8:18:35 PM Pacific Standard Time, duckblossm@... writes: Unable to engage in significant gainful employment. Adrienne Re: Gamma Globulin INSURANCE ISSUES - help! In a message dated 3/24/2004 2:25:30 AM Pacific Standard Time, dorisbrown9@... writes: Believe me, most of us are not getting medicare because of age. It is because of disability. I almost declined coverage but GG was a reason I did not. I'm assuming you have to be disabled to qualify? What constitutes being disabled? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 24, 2004 Report Share Posted March 24, 2004 Unable to engage in significant gainful employment. Adrienne Re: Gamma Globulin INSURANCE ISSUES - help! In a message dated 3/24/2004 2:25:30 AM Pacific Standard Time, dorisbrown9@... writes: Believe me, most of us are not getting medicare because of age. It is because of disability. I almost declined coverage but GG was a reason I did not. I'm assuming you have to be disabled to qualify? What constitutes being disabled? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 24, 2004 Report Share Posted March 24, 2004 well, are you gainfully employed in a way that provides you with a substantial income that meets your needs or not? Do you currently pay taxes on your self-employment? (I am not asking you to tell me your answer.) I would be in the gutter without disability. No way I can meet my own needs. If you are actually disabled it is easier to prove it. No, they don't just take your word. It is done with the help of doctors' evaluations. First yours, then theirs. I don't know how SSD works, but for SSI a doc has to instruct you not to work. Ultimately it also took the help of a (legal aide) lawyer, who explained to an administrative judge the exact limits I had. But I was blessed; I got a judge that never turned people away. It is a daunting process with several levels of appeals. (Again, I refer to SSI only). It took well over a year. Adrienne Re: Gamma Globulin INSURANCE ISSUES - help! In a message dated 3/24/2004 2:25:30 AM Pacific Standard Time, dorisbrown9@... writes: Believe me, most of us are not getting medicare because of age. It is because of disability. I almost declined coverage but GG was a reason I did not. I'm assuming you have to be disabled to qualify? What constitutes being disabled? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 25, 2004 Report Share Posted March 25, 2004 Although I've read a number of posts with this subject header I haven't read all and so this reply might not be on target. When Doris asked what constitutes disability I assumed,since Medicare was being talked about as an insurance that has covered GG, that a prior statement that to qualify for Medicare before age 65 you have to be disabled. If I'm right about the sequence I wanted to make sure you know that the issue isn't if you're too disabled to work in the area that your previous education and work experience suggests, it requires that you apply for and receive Social Security Disability Insurance. After two years on it you are eligible for Medicare. Re GG and Medicare, the doc who felt I might do well on GG gave me three IV infusions (lasting about an hour and a half long). After the 2nd one I felt enormously better for a day or two and might have overdone it and thus undermined the good, which was a huge downer for me. I looked forward to the third treatment and did get it and responded well about l/2 hr into the treatment,like my body was cleared of pain and gunk. But by the time I got home (about a 3/4 hr ride) I felt lousy. I proposed we try giving them to me more often, as someone on the list was getting good results that way and also I saw it could do something that helped me. BUT, the doc refused. Medicare won't preapprove what they'll cover. The cost of an infusion of the size I had (I forget) was thousands of dollars and he knew I couldn't pay. I did everything I could to find out if there was any way for Medicare to commit to a certain # of treatments. One woman there said they'd probably cover it. But there's no literature that really could be brought to them and this doc wasn't willing to risk being out by several thousand. Don't be discouraged. Just forewarned. Someone on the list in Calif got the state Medicaid to cover it but I think she was doing IM, though I don't know the difference in amount used and thus cost. Judith Wisdom > I am self-employed and call my own shots; how 'creative' can I be? What > substantiation do they need in order to qualify or would they just take your word > for it that you're unable to be gainfully employed? > > In a message dated 3/24/2004 8:18:35 PM Pacific Standard Time, > duckblossm@c... writes: > Unable to engage in significant gainful employment. > Adrienne > Re: Gamma Globulin INSURANCE ISSUES - help! > > > In a message dated 3/24/2004 2:25:30 AM Pacific Standard Time, > dorisbrown9@y... writes: > Believe me, most of us are not getting medicare because of age. It is > because of disability. I almost declined coverage but GG was a reason I > did not. > I'm assuming you have to be disabled to qualify? What constitutes being > disabled? > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 25, 2004 Report Share Posted March 25, 2004 What's your diagnosis and what tests did the doc do to substantiate a claim for insurance? In a message dated 3/25/2004 1:20:41 AM Pacific Standard Time, wisdomjf @aol.com writes: Although I've read a number of posts with this subject header I haven't read all and so this reply might not be on target. When Doris asked what constitutes disability I assumed,since Medicare was being talked about as an insurance that has covered GG, that a prior statement that to qualify for Medicare before age 65 you have to be disabled. If I'm right about the sequence I wanted to make sure you know that the issue isn't if you're too disabled to work in the area that your previous education and work experience suggests, it requires that you apply for and receive Social Security Disability Insurance. After two years on it you are eligible for Medicare. Re GG and Medicare, the doc who felt I might do well on GG gave me three IV infusions (lasting about an hour and a half long). After the 2nd one I felt enormously better for a day or two and might have overdone it and thus undermined the good, which was a huge downer for me. I looked forward to the third treatment and did get it and responded well about l/2 hr into the treatment,like my body was cleared of pain and gunk. But by the time I got home (about a 3/4 hr ride) I felt lousy. I proposed we try giving them to me more often, as someone on the list was getting good results that way and also I saw it could do something that helped me. BUT, the doc refused. Medicare won't preapprove what they'll cover. The cost of an infusion of the size I had (I forget) was thousands of dollars and he knew I couldn't pay. I did everything I could to find out if there was any way for Medicare to commit to a certain # of treatments. One woman there said they'd probably cover it. But there's no literature that really could be brought to them and this doc wasn't willing to risk being out by several thousand. Don't be discouraged. Just forewarned. Someone on the list in Calif got the state Medicaid to cover it but I think she was doing IM, though I don't know the difference in amount used and thus cost. Judith Wisdom > I am self-employed and call my own shots; how 'creative' can I be? What > substantiation do they need in order to qualify or would they just take your word > for it that you're unable to be gainfully employed? > > In a message dated 3/24/2004 8:18:35 PM Pacific Standard Time, > duckblossm@c... writes: > Unable to engage in significant gainful employment. > Adrienne > Re: Gamma Globulin INSURANCE ISSUES - help! > > > In a message dated 3/24/2004 2:25:30 AM Pacific Standard Time, > dorisbrown9@y... writes: > Believe me, most of us are not getting medicare because of age. It is > because of disability. I almost declined coverage but GG was a reason I > did not. > I'm assuming you have to be disabled to qualify? What constitutes being > disabled? > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 25, 2004 Report Share Posted March 25, 2004 With all that hassle, there's just no way I would qualify then. What is/was your diagnosis that the doc used to get it through? Again, I fear that it will all come down to proving that I have a primary immune deficiency which I don't, I have subclass deficiency, which is not considered a disease, hence, no coverage. In a message dated 3/24/2004 11:21:43 PM Pacific Standard Time, duckblossm@... writes: well, are you gainfully employed in a way that provides you with a substantial income that meets your needs or not? Do you currently pay taxes on your self-employment? (I am not asking you to tell me your answer.) I would be in the gutter without disability. No way I can meet my own needs. If you are actually disabled it is easier to prove it. No, they don't just take your word. It is done with the help of doctors' evaluations. First yours, then theirs. I don't know how SSD works, but for SSI a doc has to instruct you not to work. Ultimately it also took the help of a (legal aide) lawyer, who explained to an administrative judge the exact limits I had. But I was blessed; I got a judge that never turned people away. It is a daunting process with several levels of appeals. (Again, I refer to SSI only). It took well over a year. Adrienne Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 25, 2004 Report Share Posted March 25, 2004 The CFIDS Association used to have a good disability primer in their materials library. I found this very helpful when I applied for disability. Also, getting an attorney who works with social security disability is essential. A doctor must use specific language in letters (generally with the phrase " patient is 100% disabled " ) and, frankly, if you're working at all, you probably won't get disability, even if you can only work part-time at home. Supportive documents can include lab tests, articles on CFIDS, symptom diaries, letters from former employers or friends or partners, and material from doctors. It's best to be organized and informed before you apply, or you will end up with many rejections and appeals (and you'll likely have some of these anyway). Peggy Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 25, 2004 Report Share Posted March 25, 2004 Even if you have not worked enough to apply for Social Security Benefits or Medicare, you can qualify for Supplimental Security Income Disability Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 25, 2004 Report Share Posted March 25, 2004 In a message dated 3/25/2004 8:44:49 PM Central Standard Time, duckblossm@... writes: > The diagnosis does not depend on any tested deficiency. There is no test > for this diagnosis. > There is a test for hypogammaglobulinanemia. Carole Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 25, 2004 Report Share Posted March 25, 2004 Important questions but the answers are deep in some unfiled files! I don't know what dx he used. I don't think it was CFS but some immunological dx. The specific tests he used were my helper to suppressor ratio and several immunoglobulin levels. If you really need the specifics let me know. They actually might be filed now that I think of it. I do know he was giving GG to many patients whose own dx's were many: CFS,Lyme, AIDS, cancer, but I never asked him what they (we) had in common re our immune tests. Or if we did. He was/is a strange guy that I never figured out. He trained at Sloan Kettering in oncology and immunology, did stuff there with hyperthermia, is a consultant to a respected hospital here, in their oncology dept, has gone very part time which he claims to be the result of PA's high insurance rates. Promised me that when my CFS doc died and the subsequent one closed her practice a month after I started with her to everyone's shock that he'd be my CFS doc. I started bringing him lit and tapes and all of a sudden he said he was overwhelmed by the complexity and amount,but I saw he was reading nada. He is quirky and bright but strange, at least to me and those who drove me there and hung around. The CFS patients andthe Lyme patient were far more healthy than I was,and I could only guess at who were cancer patients based on baldness. I am not aware that he used the tests when submitting to medicare, just the dx but I assume the tests were the basis on which he felt I could benefit. He wasn't committed enough or steeped enough in my care once he realized what was involved in that committment. I don't think he realized how complex CFS is,though the doc who sent me to him originally was the woman who went out of business,who was very knowledgeable about CFS and alternative medicine. Apparently they were in a group of docs interested in some of the samethings. I never knew enough to put it all together even though I tried. It was a very stressful experience for me because he seemed to go into reverse with no explanation and didn't even try to fight for me toget coverage. Again,let meknow if you want me to check the specific tests. Judith Wisdom > > I am self-employed and call my own shots; how 'creative' can I be? > What > > substantiation do they need in order to qualify or would they just > take your word > > for it that you're unable to be gainfully employed? > > > > In a message dated 3/24/2004 8:18:35 PM Pacific Standard Time, > > duckblossm@c... writes: > > Unable to engage in significant gainful employment. > > Adrienne > > Re: Gamma Globulin INSURANCE ISSUES - > help! > > > > > > In a message dated 3/24/2004 2:25:30 AM Pacific Standard Time, > > dorisbrown9@y... writes: > > Believe me, most of us are not getting medicare because of age. > It is > > because of disability. I almost declined coverage but GG was a > reason I > > did not. > > I'm assuming you have to be disabled to qualify? What constitutes > being > > disabled? > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 25, 2004 Report Share Posted March 25, 2004 It means you are unable to work (hold any job in the national economy) for the forseeable future. You apply for SSDI which stands for Social Security Disability Insurance. They send you to doctors. You have to be pretty sick (really unable to work), and you should have tests to support that you are sick and doctors letters to explain why you cannot work. For example, because you are so fatigued you can't get out of bed, because if you go out shopping one time you end up in bed for a week, because you have cognitive impairments, etc. I am not saying it is easy but there are definitely those of us with CFS that get this. Oh, and you have to have worked and earned social security credits to be eligible. Doris. ----- Original Message ----- From: nutrimedent@... I'm assuming you have to be disabled to qualify? What constitutes being disabled? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 25, 2004 Report Share Posted March 25, 2004 There are some specific limits. If you make more than $600 or so a month (not the exact number, but close) then by default you are able to work and are not eligible. Doris ----- Original Message ----- I am self-employed and call my own shots; how 'creative' can I be? What substantiation do they need in order to qualify or would they just take your word for it that you're unable to be gainfully employed? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 25, 2004 Report Share Posted March 25, 2004 Could you direct me to a source where I could learn more about this? lindaj@... Re: Gamma Globulin INSURANCE ISSUES - help! > Even if you have not worked enough to apply for Social Security Benefits or > Medicare, you can qualify for Supplimental Security Income Disability > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 25, 2004 Report Share Posted March 25, 2004 I have been on disability since the early'80's. My diagnosis was major depression. No one I knew was talking about CFS then. I didn't get my real diagnosis for several years after that. I was training to be a therapist, and during my internship, someone came to me to adjust to this chronic illness she had. The more she talked about her symptoms, the more I identified. She finally told me the name of her problem. (I didn't really do her much good, at least not at first. At first I thought she was " somatasizing. " I met her socially some years later and she told me she could tell I didn't believe her.) Eventually some doc signed off on the correct diagnosis, but that made no difference to my disability standing. Having a subclass deficiency may not qualify you, but if you have a bunch of other symtoms...? I mean, are you sick? The diagnosis does not depend on any tested deficiency. There is no test for this diagnosis. There used to be a non-specific category of disability that essentially said " oh you have no one disorder but you have a collection of various disabling symtoms? Ok " Don't know if that is changed. Adrienne No one has chimed in to say that SSDI is real different from what I have been describing.(SSI) I hope that means I am not incorrect. Re: Gamma Globulin INSURANCE ISSUES - help! With all that hassle, there's just no way I would qualify then. What is/was your diagnosis that the doc used to get it through? Again, I fear that it will all come down to proving that I have a primary immune deficiency which I don't, I have subclass deficiency, which is not considered a disease, hence, no coverage. In a message dated 3/24/2004 11:21:43 PM Pacific Standard Time, duckblossm@... writes: well, are you gainfully employed in a way that provides you with a substantial income that meets your needs or not? Do you currently pay taxes on your self-employment? (I am not asking you to tell me your answer.) I would be in the gutter without disability. No way I can meet my own needs. If you are actually disabled it is easier to prove it. No, they don't just take your word. It is done with the help of doctors' evaluations. First yours, then theirs. I don't know how SSD works, but for SSI a doc has to instruct you not to work. Ultimately it also took the help of a (legal aide) lawyer, who explained to an administrative judge the exact limits I had. But I was blessed; I got a judge that never turned people away. It is a daunting process with several levels of appeals. (Again, I refer to SSI only). It took well over a year. Adrienne Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 25, 2004 Report Share Posted March 25, 2004 And if you have not worked enough to qualify for SSDI, you then go ahead and apply for SSI, which is for folks who don't qualify for SSDI. Adrienne Re: Gamma Globulin INSURANCE ISSUES - help! It means you are unable to work (hold any job in the national economy) for the forseeable future. You apply for SSDI which stands for Social Security Disability Insurance. They send you to doctors. You have to be pretty sick (really unable to work), and you should have tests to support that you are sick and doctors letters to explain why you cannot work. For example, because you are so fatigued you can't get out of bed, because if you go out shopping one time you end up in bed for a week, because you have cognitive impairments, etc. I am not saying it is easy but there are definitely those of us with CFS that get this. Oh, and you have to have worked and earned social security credits to be eligible. Doris. ----- Original Message ----- From: nutrimedent@... I'm assuming you have to be disabled to qualify? What constitutes being disabled? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 25, 2004 Report Share Posted March 25, 2004 Your local Social Security office can give all the info. And clarify the two types of disability payments they administer- and the Medicare/ Medicaid side of it, too. You can go in or find their 800 number in the gov't pgs of the phone directory. Adrienne Re: Gamma Globulin INSURANCE ISSUES - help! > Even if you have not worked enough to apply for Social Security Benefits or > Medicare, you can qualify for Supplimental Security Income Disability > > This list is intended for patients to share personal experiences with each other, not to give medical advice. If you are interested in any treatment discussed here, please consult your doctor. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 26, 2004 Report Share Posted March 26, 2004 Here is the government website for SSDI and SSI. http://www.ssa.gov/ As someone else mentioned, the CFIDS groups also have good info and links. http://www.cfids.org/ There is a group called DISINISSUES, but they don't have archives online so you have to just join and start reading new posts. And www.Immunesupport.com has articles on how to get it. http://www.immunesupport.com/library/powersearch2.cfm/T/CFIDS_FM/cat/disability Doris Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 26, 2004 Report Share Posted March 26, 2004 In a message dated 26-03-2004 3:49:23 Central Standard Time, duckblossm@... writes: > think we were talking about CFS/ME. > Is the one you mention a disabling disease Yes, it is all wrapped up with CFID(ID) immune dysfunction ME/ Fibro. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 26, 2004 Report Share Posted March 26, 2004 Carole I think we were talking about CFS/ME. Is the one you mention a disabling disease? Adrienne Re: Gamma Globulin INSURANCE ISSUES - help! In a message dated 3/25/2004 8:44:49 PM Central Standard Time, duckblossm@... writes: > The diagnosis does not depend on any tested deficiency. There is no test > for this diagnosis. > There is a test for hypogammaglobulinanemia. Carole Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 26, 2004 Report Share Posted March 26, 2004 Doris has provided some great info/links. This is a bit OT - It's been a while for me - I still go thru reeval's every 4-5 yrs? (either on paper, or actually going to an state/gov't assigned doc) - and I could be mistaken - but I don't think the diagnosis or actual disease is the foundation for getting SSDI or SSI. In fact, I initially went in with " CFS dx " paperwork/tests, but the CFS has dropped down in import in subsequent reevaluations (my last review included CFS as a possibility, but first actually stated that, 'from multiple physicians and tests', etc., it appears the patient has an autoimmune disease and/or MS Getting SSDI or SSI is more how functional/dysfunctional - debilitated you are Many diseases, including MS, Parkinson's Disease, Lupus, etc., greatly vary in how debilitated the patient may or may not be. I lived next to a guy who had MS, for a few yrs, and he was highly functional (he wasn't in much MS pain, by his own account, but did have intermittent vision problems), while I was mostly bedridden and not very ambulatory They (still?) also look at what job(s) you have skills for or could get trained for, and if your health would allow doing them, i.e, how long can you sit or stand, can you lift so much weight, can you think clearly enuf Each case is independent and unique, and the evaluating docs can vary considerably (as most things) I recall my low Max V02 test added strength to my (initial) approval (but I paid for it w/a harsh relapse), and good CFS specialists (and probably CFS disability lawyers) would know what specific tests could/should be done A lot of info could be found on-line, to get a feel for potential eligibility Lance > Here is the government website for SSDI and SSI. > http://www.ssa.gov/ > > As someone else mentioned, the CFIDS groups also have good info and links. http://www.cfids.org/ > > There is a group called DISINISSUES, but they don't have archives online so you have to just join and start reading new posts. > > And www.Immunesupport.com has articles on how to get it. http://www.immunesupport.com/library/powersearch2.cfm/T/CFIDS_FM/cat/disability > > Doris > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.