Valley News (West
Lebanon, NH)
Chicago Tribune
April 23, 2018
At 23, Erin Keith didn’t know if she wanted children, but
she knew she wanted a choice.
So before embarking upon months of chemotherapy to treat
Hodgkin lymphoma — treatments that could leave her sterile — the New Lenox,
Ill., woman had her eggs frozen. She did it despite being unsure whether her
insurance would cover the procedure.
“At 30, I don’t want to regret a decision I made at 23,”
said Keith, now 24. She recently had her final treatment and will soon find out
if the cancer is gone.
“I should be celebrating right now that I did my last
treatment for chemotherapy, but right now I’m thinking am I going to owe $7,000
to $8,000?” she said. “I’ve got this looming bill over my head.”
State law requires insurers to cover infertility
treatments, such as in vitro fertilization, for those who’ve tried and failed
for a year to conceive. But insurers are not required to cover fertility
preservation — freezing of eggs, sperm and embryos — for patients facing
medical treatments that might leave them unable to have children. Some insurers
cover the procedures but many don’t.
A bill under consideration in the Illinois legislature
aims to change that — one in a string of such measures across the nation.
Connecticut and Rhode Island passed bills last year requiring insurers to cover
fertility preservation, and a similar bill is before Maryland’s governor.
In Illinois, about 5,800 people of reproductive age — ages
14 to 45 — are diagnosed with cancer each year, according to the Illinois
Department of Public Health, though not all those patients would need or want
to freeze sperm, eggs or embryos.
Supporters of the Illinois measure say it’s necessary to
ensure that patients with diseases such as cancer, lupus and sickle cell anemia
get the coverage they need to have biological children. The bill would apply to
most women, including those with Medicaid coverage.
But the bill is opposed by insurance industry groups and
others concerned that the cost of coverage would be borne by all consumers.
Sperm freezing can cost as little as a couple of hundred dollars while the
process of preserving eggs and embryos can cost more than $10,000.
“Coverage mandates increase health insurance premiums and
decrease choice for Illinois consumers,” said Whitney Barnes, a spokeswoman for
the Illinois Department of Insurance, which opposes the bill.
Other opponents include Blue Cross and Blue Shield of
Illinois, the state’s largest insurer, and America’s Health Insurance Plans, an
insurance industry group.
The bill’s advocates say patients shouldn’t have to decide
between financial ruin and their ability to have children.
Keith said she knew right away she’d want to freeze her
eggs, but the question of insurance coverage made her hesitate. She’s still
working with her insurer to see if it will cover any of the procedure. If it
doesn’t, she probably will have to take out a loan to cover the expense.
“I’ve paid into this insurance for five years, and the one
time I need it most they’re not willing to help me out,” Keith said. “This is a
very necessary procedure.”
Miranda Gerowitz, 23, of Chicago, was also surprised when
she learned that her insurance wouldn’t cover preserving her eggs after she was
diagnosed with breast cancer.
Her fertility clinic gave her a discount on the procedure,
charging her $3,000. Still, it was too much money for the hotel sales
coordinator. Her parents agreed to pay the $3,000, and she’ll pay an additional
$500 a year to keep the eggs frozen. “I didn’t want to regret not doing it,”
Gerowitz said.
But she knows that not everyone has that option.
https://insurancenewsnet.com/oarticle/illinois-considers-forcing-insurers-to-cover-embryo-freezing
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