An increasing number of people today find that their weight has achieved such a level that they either choose, or are more or less forced to choose, gastric bypass surgery as the only solution to their weight problem. However, having decided to undergo surgery, they are faced with the complex problem of just how to pay for the operation.
Gastric bypass surgery, including comparatively minor procedures such as gastric banding, is an expensive business requiring a highly paid surgical team, together with a stay in hospital and you are unlikely to come away with a bill of under $20,000 and could well be looking at closer to $30,000 or $35,000. Indeed, if complications arise, either immediately after surgery or during recovery at home, the final bill may rise considerably higher.
The first port of call for many people is their insurance provider. But will your insurance company meet the cost?
The answer depends in the first instance upon the form of insurance policy that you have and you will need to read through the terms of the policy with care to see whether surgery of this nature is specifically excluded and, if so, whether there are exceptions to any general exclusion. If your medical insurance is being provided by your employer then you will need to seek advice from your employer, as various insurance providers allow employers to specifically exclude weight loss surgery from their group policies.
This said, morbid obesity is a recognized medical condition and, more importantly, if left untreated it can become life threatening. Accordingly many insurance providers will cover the cost of gastric bypass surgery provided they are satisfied that surgery is a medical necessity.
So, if your insurance policy does not specifically exclude weight loss surgery and your insurance company says that your policy does not cover you when you first ask, don't merely assume that their word is gospel. Go back to them again, preferably in writing, and make your case.
Every insurance company has its own way of doing things but, in general, you will need to satisfy your insurer that this is indeed a medical necessity in your particular case, that this is the only route open to you to solve your problem and that you understand and are able to cope with the marked lifestyle changes that result from gastric bypass surgery.
This means you will typically need to provide your insurer with:
1. A full medical history provided by your doctor giving his opinion that weight loss surgery is necessary. It will also help if this is backed up by the opinion of a specialist in the field of gastric bypass surgery.
2. Proof that you have attempted weight loss under medical supervision and without success in the period before your application. This period will vary between insurers but is commonly anywhere from 6 months to 2 years. You should note that this must be a weight loss program under the supervision of a physician and that programs such as those from Weight Watchers will not generally be accepted.
3. A psychological report indicating that you understand what is involved in weight loss surgery, including the considerable changes that it will make to your lifestyle, and that you are considered able to cope with the stress that this will involve.
Once you are able to meet these criteria, your insurance provider will generally be happy to meet the costs of gastric bypass surgery.
Insurance For Gastric Bypass
Ask any bariatric surgeon whether gastric bypass surgery lowers a patient's risk of early death and he will tell you without hesitation that it certainly does. Indeed, he will undoubtedly be surprised that you are asking the question at all since surgeons have known for years that weight loss surgery extends patients' lives.
but, put that same question to a number of insurance companies and you may well receive a very different answer because, until very recently, despite the fact that there has been plenty of anecdotal evidence for what everyone knows to be the case, there has been no concrete, hard scientific proof.
Now however the results of two studies have clearly shown in numerical terms that gastric bypass surgery has a marked effect on the death rates of those concerned.
In the first study, a multi-center US study involving 16,000 patients followed over a 7 year period, long-term death rates dropped by as much as 40 percent. additionally a second Swedish study involving 4,000 patients showed a 29 percent fall in death rates.
For a long time now insurance companies have sought to put obstacles in front of patients to stop them from claiming for weight loss surgery and this movement has been gaining momentum recently as the number of obesity operations being carried out has climbed dramatically and weight loss surgery has gained greater acceptance with a number of celebrities such as Carnie Wilson, Al Rocker, Star Jones and others undergoing the procedure.
The insurance companies however have stuck strictly to the line that gastric bypass surgery should only be used as the option of last resort and that every possible attempt to lose weight through exercise and diet, including if needed the use of drugs, should be exhausted before weight loss surgery is considered. In addition, they have also insisted that gastric bypass surgery should only finally be carried out if weight presents a risk to life.
For most people this position by the insurance companies is seen as being totally stupid and a position which has clearly been adopted merely to save the insurance company money. Nevertheless, and despite this point of view, the insurance companies have gotten away with this for years now because it has been impossible to demonstrate in terms of facts and figures that gastric bypass surgery is not just a convenient and relatively easy way to lose weight but is the only option for many sufferers and an option which will not only improve their quality of life but literally extend their lives, frequently quite significantly.
For years overweight individuals have fought with their weight and, although some have had very limited success, most people (and undoubtedly those who need to lose in excess of about 80 pounds) have discovered that exercise and diet simply does not work. Despite this fact, they have had no choice and doctors have also been forced to lead them down this path because of the intransigence of the insurance companies.
It is to be hoped that at long last the insurance companies are going to be forced to meet their responsibility in this area and at last put the needs of their policyholders ahead of those of their shareholders.
Donald Saunders has sinced written about articles on various topics from Health Insurance, Forex Training and Diabetes Treatment. Additional articles about and general facts, advice and information about. Donald Saunders's top article generates over 165000 views. to your Favourites.
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