Cheney Dropped By White House HMO

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apathrev

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WASHINGTON, DC—Citing Dick Cheney's pre-existing health conditions and his refusal to meet regularly with his primary care physician, the White House's health-insurance provider terminated the vice president's coverage Monday.

Vice President Dick Cheney.
AmeriHealth, the parent company of the HMO serving the executive branch, issued a "termination of benefits" notice to Cheney Aug. 3. The form letter, addressed to "Member #782B-11107-3905C (Cheney, Richard Bruce)," informed the vice president that his health coverage would cease, "effective immediately."

Speaking to reporters Monday, Cheney expressed dismay over being dropped from the HMO.

"I am a victim of a bureaucracy," Cheney said. "This action on the part of AmeriHealth is exceedingly unfair."

In the form letter, AmeriHealth customer-service manager Bob Kielas apologized for any inconvenience caused by the adjustment, and encouraged the vice president to contact an AmeriHealth customer-service representative to make arrangements for his final payments.

Cheney said he was on hold for "almost half an hour" during a phone call he made to AmeriHealth shortly after receiving the notice. "This is a contemptible way to treat a customer," he said. "It's complete bullshit, to speak frankly."

Cheney said he was "reasonably certain" that his premiums were still being automatically deducted biweekly from his pay.

"I'm supposed to be covered," the vice president said. "This is a nightmare."

Those close to Cheney report that the vice president has long complained about having to see doctors within the HMO network, rather than choosing his own specialist. In 2003, Cheney wrote a letter of complaint when, instead of being admitted to the Bethesda Naval Hospital for treatment of his angina, he was directed to an HMO-approved urgent-care clinic in Clarendon, VA. According to the vice president, he sat in a crowded lobby between a mother with a colicky baby and a drunken Georgetown student with a broken nose for several hours, and both were examined before him.

The vice president waits to see his primary-care physician at a Washington-area clinic.
Last February, Cheney received a bill for $2,000 for a coronary procedure that was only partially covered by his HMO. In a call that was recorded for quality-assurance purposes, Cheney argued for nearly 20 minutes with an associate customer-service representative identified only as "Heather." Cheney grew progressively more belligerent on the phone, until Heather said, "Sir, if you continue to use that type of language, I will have to end this call."

White House sources say that, while Cheney received his letter early this month, he was unaware of the cancellation on Aug. 23, when he visited the hospital following a possible heart attack and was told that he was "not in the computer."

Although the vice president was admitted to the hospital and learned that he had only been suffering acid reflux, he received a bill Monday for $1,500.

"This is a complete and total outrage," Cheney said. "AmeriHealth cannot possibly expect me to pay that kind of money out of pocket."

Cheney said he is unsure what action he will take if his HMO membership is not reinstated.

"I'm still too young for Medicare, and I'll simply run into the same pre-existing-condition clause if I purchase a health-insurance policy on my own," Cheney said. "Sometimes I just feel hopeless. There are very few health-care options available to someone like me."

:fruit:
 
yea, HMO sucks. the better choice to have is PPO in my opinion.
 
Before, anyone else posts, I should probably inform you, this is from the Onion.
 
cental34 said:
Before, anyone else posts, I should probably inform you, this is from the Onion.


ahh got it... yea it is good and funny news online.
 
deafclimber said:
yea, HMO sucks. the better choice to have is PPO in my opinion.
why you support PPO?

i have PPO under my employer's insurance.. and i have to pay hefty 20% and they pay 80%.. HMO covers 100%?
 
DeafSCUBA98 said:
why you support PPO?

i have PPO under my employer's insurance.. and i have to pay hefty 20% and they pay 80%.. HMO covers 100%?

You need to study more carefully, but you are getting closely...

There are three different kind of health insurance services: HMO (Heath Maintainance Oragnization), POS (Point of Service), and PPO (Preferred Provider Organization). I do have HMO plan since they only offer free service for my kids under 4 or 5.

HMO does not always cover 100% but depends on serious situation if it may be covered 100%. HMO is lower cost for the co-payments than PPO.
 
Most DRs in Atlanta dont accept HMO at all. there were big news in atlanta about dirty HMOs.

it depends on what these insurance can cover and cant cover. I am interested what is the best for my daughter.

i dont complain if i pay 15 bucks per dr visit under PPO.
 
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