Guest guest Posted January 8, 2009 Report Share Posted January 8, 2009 I am going through H#ll trying to get self-insured. I was just denied coverage because a former doc prescribed Armour -- which didn't help -- yet I didn't have a definitive diagnosis from him of hypothyroidism. So, it's " unresolved " and hence I'm too risky to be insured. My current doc has given me the diagnosis of " fatigue " . She says that is a diagnosis. But the insurance companies balk at that - ugh. I just started a new job and my employer is dragging his feet about insuring me. Its a small outfit. He's worth a fortune too. Just incredibly cheap. I have a script for cytomel but my doc wants baseline labs first and I'd like an RT3 test first. I'm tempted to just pay out of pocket tomorrow for the basic labs so I can start my meds. My boss is also asking why I'm not seeing an endocrinologist. One of the other employees, a man, has hypothyroid and takes synthroid which he says has taken away his symptoms. I have never seen an endocrinologist because my bloodwork is always within range so I feel why bother? Maybe I should see one? The doc I'm seeing now does not take insurance. My boss has been commenting on how tired I look in the morning " Don't you sleep? " . Also, every stranger I encounter asks " are you cold? " . I have brain fog and am forgetful and have horrific muscle/joint pain. My cycle is messed up and my hair and skin is dry. I am convinced there is a massive cover up about secondary/subclinical hypothryoidism or whatever you want to call it. It should not be this hard to get treatment for an OBVIOUS TO EVERYONE I ENCOUNTER illness. Yet doctors covered by insurance will not treat me because my labs are normal. Oh wait, they have referred me to the shrink's couch. A drug conspiracy - ABSOLUTELY. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 8, 2009 Report Share Posted January 8, 2009 Yeah, I think you got it. I've played this game for many years---no more. Insurance really is a joke and they run the show, not the doctor. The best doctors do not take insurance so they can actually practice medicine as they see fit and help the patient. The problem is that most people can't afford it. My husband is self-employeed and when we looked into insurance, they wouldn't cover me because I had thyroid surgery when I was 27 years old. We found a catastophic insurance with a $20,000 deductible. I prefer paying cash anyway. Most doctors will give a discount for self-pay and I have found that some doctors will work with you in your treatment simply because they don't have to deal with the bone-head insurance companies. > > > I am going through H#ll trying to get self-insured. I was just > denied coverage because a former doc prescribed Armour -- which > didn't help -- yet I didn't have a definitive diagnosis from him of > hypothyroidism. So, it's " unresolved " and hence I'm too risky to be > insured. My current doc has given me the diagnosis of " fatigue " . > She says that is a diagnosis. But the insurance companies balk at > that - ugh. I just started a new job and my employer is dragging his > feet about insuring me. Its a small outfit. He's worth a fortune > too. Just incredibly cheap. I have a script for cytomel but my doc > wants baseline labs first and I'd like an RT3 test first. I'm tempted > to just pay out of pocket tomorrow for the basic labs so I can start > my meds. My boss is also asking why I'm not seeing an > endocrinologist. One of the other employees, a man, has hypothyroid > and takes synthroid which he says has taken away his symptoms. I > have never seen an endocrinologist because my bloodwork is always > within range so I feel why bother? Maybe I should see one? The doc > I'm seeing now does not take insurance. My boss has been commenting > on how tired I look in the morning " Don't you sleep? " . Also, every > stranger I encounter asks " are you cold? " . I have brain fog and am > forgetful and have horrific muscle/joint pain. My cycle is messed up > and my hair and skin is dry. I am convinced there is a massive cover > up about secondary/subclinical hypothryoidism or whatever you want to > call it. It should not be this hard to get treatment for an OBVIOUS > TO EVERYONE I ENCOUNTER illness. Yet doctors covered by insurance > will not treat me because my labs are normal. Oh wait, they have > referred me to the shrink's couch. A drug conspiracy - ABSOLUTELY. > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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