Students suffer under health insurance costs
24 03 08 - 15:30
I'll be surprised if I make it to 45 years old. I'm sure I'm not the only one out there who suffers from a thing called insurance. I get sick a lot and not having insurance is not an option for me.
It all started when I went into the "real" world and got a job. I was covered by BlueCross BlueShield within a month. It was all nice until I found out that I needed to have surgery. I was pretty lucky because I was insured at the time, and they helped cover my surgery.
After I lost my job and decided to go back to school, the trouble began. Not at first, though, because I wasn't yet 25. But last December I turned 25, and realized I no longer qualified for my parents' insurance and had to find my own.
My dad and I decided to try BlueCross BlueShield again because they had a student-specific insurance plan. They reviewed my application and after seeing I'd had one minor surgery, which I had completely recovered from, I was charged an extra $150 from the original plan's cost.
When I had a full-time job, I could barely afford their rates. Now as a full-time student with a part-time job, there is no way I can afford it.
So we found a different provider, United Healthcare.
They had a student option as well, and it cost much less. The only qualification was you that needed to be a college student enrolled in at least nine hours, which I was.
So I applied, got accepted and paid for the coverage. Then I got sick.
I got sick with a viral infection in February. Then I suffered from a migraine, and I had to get a check-up for the previous migraine. But I also had a yearly visit to my dermatologist, which is not covered under the plan.
United was alarmed by all this and sent me a five-page letter requesting a lot of information. Because the visit to the dermatologist was denied, it seemed they got suspicious and wanted me to verify I was indeed a student.
It made no sense to me that they'd accepted my application and my money, and then wanted verification that I was a student. So now I have to go to the University of Kansas registrar's office and get someone to sign it, verifying I'm a student and send it back to United.
United is trying to get information that could prove that I've had or still have other insurance just so they don't have to pay for my doctors' visits. They are trying to disprove that I'm a student so they don't have to cover me.
Isn't that backwards? Shouldn't health care companies want to give Americans better health and care? Shouldn't we feel safer now that we have insurance coverage? But instead, I fear the day I cross a street and get hit by a car. I fear every time I turn on my blow dryer or the leak in our basement that threatens to collapse the entire house.
But worse of all, I fear some lengthy illness like cancer, any form of cancer. It seems the longer the disease and the more the treatments, the less the insurance companies want to cover you.
I know a lot of students face this and will continue to face this when they get out in the work force. I wish I could offer some solutions like a unified health care system for everyone, but that just doesn't seem feasible. The insurance companies have gained too much power to be brought back down to Earth. My only suggestion would be to fly across the world in order to get the specialized treatment or go to Canada and wait in line. Hey, it's better than having to sign your life away for one simple surgery.