::: Auto Cheap Insurance Information :::


::: Auto Cheap Insurance Articles :::

Redefining Insurance Fraud: On Managed Care

by Robert Levin

Want to hear MY definitions of "insurance fraud”? I'll tell you anyway.

Insurance fraud is when an HMO sells you a policy at an exorbitant rate and then finds all manner of ways to frustrate your pursuit of benefits.

Insurance fraud is when an HMO impedes access to procedures and specialists by requiring further "review" or "investigation.”

Insurance fraud is when an HMO denies coverage for pre-existing conditions.

Insurance fraud is when, to demolish any chance one might have of effectively communicating requests or complaints, an HMO deliberately hires morons to staff its customer service department.

Finally, insurance fraud is when an HMO not only plays these games but also joins with other HMOs to mount lobbying and advertising campaigns against the development of alternative health insurance systems.

A subversive I may be, but I've never been of the militant variety. When the SDS was blowing up banks in the early '70s, I was expressing my displeasure with the establishment by intentionally omitting zip codes—THAT'LL jam their gears!

And, however grudgingly, I‘ve come over time to accept capitalism as a permanent reality. A given.

But this managed care business, which is to say, capitalism of a blatantly predatory stripe, is making me ponder actions way off my normal spectrum.

I’m finding it increasingly difficult, that is, to sit still for a category of capitalism in which people demonstrably unqualified to participate in a free market system—who get much too giddy when they use it— routinely commit what amount to acts of violence against their customers. (Jesus. Messing as they do with other people's very lives, you have to wonder how these HMO creeps were brought up, what kind of parents they had.)

Of course, much as I'd like to respond with actual violence I could never dispatch each and every HMO administrator to his local ICU all by myself. I'd need help, and on a broad scale. But the prospect of getting such help is dim. The vast majority of us, after all, are reluctant to so much as question, let alone rise against, even the ugliest manifestations of a broader system that promises every American a piece of the serious action—and this despite how false that promise is for all but a relatively few, or how destructive may be the indignities our belief in it obliges us to suffer. Most of us remain willfully stupid in this regard (which in another context is one of the reasons the Enron dirt bags who truncated their employees' futures are still alive).

Indeed, even most of the 45 million Americans who go without insurance because they can't afford the premiums oppose the alternative of not-for-profit system. It apparently hasn't occurred to them that there'd be no significant risk to capitalism in this solution. We've already got "socialized" institutions in this country—police and fire departments, for example—that hardly infringe on our freedom to take advantage of one another. A few more would still leave us with plenty of opportunities to ripoff our fellow man.

(And speaking of a not-for-profit health care system, does anyone seriously think that dealing with a government bureaucracy would somehow be more brutal than dealing with Aetna, Prudential or Oxford?)

So what’s left to do when revolt is no more in the offing than government intervention is?

Unfortunately, beyond fantasizing that our growing population of serial killers (folks who’ve made it clear that accumulating money isn’t their first priority) will develop a sense of civic responsibility to go with their skills and proclivity, I haven’t come up with much. Certainly nothing that would yield more than the smallest of rewards at the price of considerable personal sacrifice.

I’m speaking of getting sick a lot; using, you know, the hell out of my policy. By constantly contracting illnesses that require frequent doctor visits, extended hospitalization and enormous quantities of pharmaceuticals, I’d have the satisfaction of at least putting a dent in an HMO's profits.

Yeah, I know, but I like the pharmaceuticals part and it WOULD be a step up from omitting zip codes.


About the Author

Former contributor to The Village Voice and Rolling Stone. Coauthor and coeditor, respectively, of two collections of essays about rock and jazz in the '60s: "Music & Politics" and "Giants of Black Music."



::: Auto Cheap Insurance Featured Resources :::

SEARCH RESULTS

Money Saving Tips About Car Insurance.
Find Out How To Continually Save Hundreds Of Dollars A Year On Your Car Insurance Without Shopping For A New Policy.

Get Low Cost Car Insurance...For Life.
How To Slash Your Car Insurance Costs Up To 67% - For Life..regardless Of Age, Driving Record, State You Reside In Or Credit History.

Insurance Leads Generation.
Generate quality new leads at a fraction of the cost of offline marketing.

Annuities: The Shocking Secrets Revealed.
Discover the Shocking Secrets that Banks and Insurance Companies Don't Want You to Know. Affiliates Earn 50% of New $97 Upgrade.


::: Auto Cheap Insurance News :::


[CaRP] Can't open cache file.

[CaRP] Unable to create/open RSS cache file.
Yahoo! News Search Results for Auto Cheap Insurance
Yahoo! News Search Results for Auto Cheap Insurance
Yahoo! News Search Results for Auto Cheap Insurance

Golf Carts All The Rage In Lyons, Colo.
18 Jul 2010 at 3:16pm
LYONS, Colo. -- One Colorado town is starting to look a bit like a Florida golf resort. Now that golf carts have been made street-legal in Lyons, more residents are turning to the cheap, energy-effici...
Small aircraft crashes outside Grifton
18 Jul 2010 at 7:17pm
GRIFTON A small aircraft crashed in a field east of town sometime before 8 this morning, according to officials on the scene.
'Inception' Earns Dreamy Opening Reception
18 Jul 2010 at 11:31am
LOS ANGELES -- Leonardo DiCaprio and Christopher Nolan's "Inception" is anything but a sleeper as the thriller opened big with $60.4 million and a No. 1 finish at the weekend box office.
Zsa Zsa Gabor Hospitalized With Broken Hip
18 Jul 2010 at 9:56am
Zsa Zsa Gabor was rushed to a hospital Saturday night after falling out of bed and breaking her hip, her husband said.
Study: Treating HIV Also Prevents Its Spread
18 Jul 2010 at 7:31am
A Canadian study strongly suggests that treating people who have the AIDS virus can help prevent its spread to others. Researchers say that new HIV infections dropped in British Columbia as more peopl...
Zsa Zsa Gabor To Have Hip Replacement Surgery
18 Jul 2010 at 6:57am
Zsa Zsa Gabor will have surgery to replace the hip she broke when she fell out of bed in her Bel Air home, her publicist said Sunday.
Why a Higher Postal Rate Is Good for the Economy
17 Jul 2010 at 5:39am
When the U.S. Postal Service loses money, it's effectively subsidizing inefficient business models and operations. And less mail would be better for the economy, better for businesses and consumers, a...
French Paper: Paris Hilton Caught With Marijuana In Corsica
17 Jul 2010 at 5:31pm
PARIS -- A French news report said socialite Paris Hilton was briefly detained in Corsica after a "quite small" quantity of marijuana was found in her bag.
ZipCode Form Field
ZIP Code  

::: Auto Cheap Insurance Blogs :::




[CaRP] Can't open cache file.

[CaRP] Unable to create/open RSS cache file.
Search Feeds At Technorati
Search Feeds At Technorati

New Search Results, from Technorati and Ingboo
by webmaster@technorati.com
4 Mar 2010 at 5:00pm

Technorati and Ingboo have partnered together to provide an all new kind of subscription experience for Technorati content, including search results. Look for a blue Ingboo icon for a full range of su...



Google
 


 
Best sellers from



[CaRP] Can't open cache file.

[CaRP] Unable to create/open RSS cache file.

[CaRP] XML error: Invalid document end at line 1