Vacation is over, at least mine is although I know many people are on spring break this week. I tried my hardest to detach myself from work for a few days and it was quite enjoyable. That said, I decided to read fiction (which I so rarely do) and I picked up John Grishams new best-seller, The Appeal. For those of you who have not read it I recommend it highly but it was impossible to detach completely because the book details a county where cancer rates skyrocketed due to contaminated water. Simply a great read. Another story of this diseases impact on this country and our world.
I was just reading the Wall Street Journal (March 11th) and I was moved by the article entitled “Insurers Pressed to Pay More for Prostheses.” Having traveled the country for the past six years working with the Presidents Cancer Panel I remember vividly this issue being raised during our series of hearings on survivorship. I will never forget the parent of a young adult who testified that her son, who had his leg amputated as a result of his osteosarcoma, was only eligible for one prostheses. Let me explain further. Her son was diagnosed as a young child and yet he was only given access to once covered prosthetic leg. What happens when he is 18? What happens when he is 30? What happens when he is 40? This young man, and thousands just like him, deserve to have prosthetics. Period.
This is yet another example of the inequities of our system. It is unconscionable. All insurance companies know better. They need to act. We will be watching.
We fight to improve the lives of people affected by cancer