By JoNel
Aleccia DECEMBER 28, 2018
Robert
and Tiffany Cano of San Tan Valley, Ariz., have a new marriage, a new house and
a 10-month-old son, Brody, who is delighted by his ability to blow raspberries.
They
also have a stack of medical bills that threatens to undermine it all.
In the
months since their sturdy, brown-eyed boy was born, the Canos have acquired
more than $12,000 in medical debt — so much that they need a spreadsheet to
track what they owe to hospitals and doctors.
“I’m on
these payment arrangements that are killing us,” said Tiffany Cano, 37, who has
spent her lunch hours on the phone negotiating payoff plans that now total $700
a month. “My husband is working four jobs. I work full time. We’re a
hardworking family doing our best and not getting anywhere.”
The
pair, who earn nearly $100,000 a year, are insured and have had no major
illnesses or injuries. Still, the Canos are among the 1 in 4 Americans
who report in multiple polls that
the high cost of health care is the biggest concern facing their families. And
they’re at risk of joining the 62 percent of
people who file for bankruptcy tied to medical bills.
“Oh,
yes, that worry is always in the back of my mind,” Tiffany said.
The
family is part of a struggling group: middle-class folks who have followed the
rules and paid for employer-based medical insurance, only to find that soaring
health care costs — combined with high deductibles, high copayments and
surprise medical bills — leave them vulnerable.
“I
thought we’d be covered, and it’s just not enough coverage at all,” she said.
Robert
Cano, also 37, had family health insurance for 2018 through his job as a
manager at a large-chain retail store, for which he pays nearly $500 per month.
The plan’s $3,000 annual deductible and 40 percent coinsurance fees have added
up faster than the Canos anticipated.
First
came the nearly $4,000 bill from the in-network hospital where Brody was born
Jan. 2, followed by separate fees from the anesthesiologist and the doctor who
performed the routine delivery. Then, at 2 months, Brody was hospitalized with
breathing problems doctors said could be related to allergies or asthma. In
May, Tiffany came down with a stomach virus that sent her to the emergency room
for drugs to treat nausea and dehydration. In October, the baby developed a bad
case of bacterial conjunctivitis, or pinkeye.
“It’s
been, like, $300 here, $700 there,” said Tiffany. “We had a hospital bill for
him being sick of, like, $1,800.” Unable initially to find a pediatrician she
liked, Tiffany has agonized over whether to use the ER when Brody gets sick.
When he had pinkeye, she debated whether to take him in, hoping it would get
better on its own.
Then he
got worse, she said, pulling up a photo on her phone of her son with half-moons
of red, puffy flesh under his dark eyes.
“I let
him suffer for a day like that,” she said.
The
Canos lost their first child, a girl, midway through her pregnancy in 2016.
Tiffany acknowledges that experience has left her more anxious than the average
first-time mom.
“It
gave me so much fear that something would happen to him,” she said.
As for
their own health care needs, the couple put themselves lower on the priority
list. Tiffany has used a prosthetic limb since childhood, when her lower left
leg was amputated because of a birth defect.
She
needs a new prosthesis because her body changed during pregnancy, but she can’t
see how to afford it.
A model
suitable for the busy life of a working mom would easily cost $10,000 to
$15,000, according to Tom Fise, executive director of the American Orthotic
& Prosthetic Association.
“I try
to push through,” Tiffany said. “I put on that brave face of just walking, but
it’s so painful to walk. I have bruises all over my leg. I get blisters all the
time.” Lately, she’s been wearing an old prosthesis, one she used in high
school, because it’s more comfortable.
The
Canos don’t know how exactly they fell into such debt, since they tried hard to
make responsible decisions. After meeting three years ago, they knew quickly
that they wanted to marry and have a family.
“I waited
until I found the right guy,” said Tiffany, who was thrilled when, in 2016,
they were able to afford a 2,500-square-foot, two-story home in one of the
stucco-and-tile neighborhoods an hour outside Phoenix.
But,
taken together, the medical payment plans and premiums are almost as much as
their $1,300 monthly mortgage. All told, the Canos spend about 15 percent of
their annual income on health care, almost three times the average for
non-Medicare households in the U.S.
That
leaves too little for day care, car payments, gas, food and dozens of other
domestic expenses, Tiffany said.
For 17
years, Robert Cano had comprehensive health insurance through his job as a
soldier in the Army Reserve and paid little or nothing for medical care. He
left the Army in 2017, however, after he learned he would be deployed for an
extended time away from his wife and new son.
“I told
them, ‘I have to be at home,’” he recalled. The Army insurance ended on Dec.
31, 2017, two days before Brody was born.
That
meant moving to his employer’s insurance plan. Like more than 40 percent
of 152 million Americans who
get health insurance through work, the Canos are enrolled in a plan that
demands thousands of dollars before any coverage kicks in.
The
couple discovered that they earn too much to qualify for financial assistance
from medical providers, or for subsidies if they shifted their insurance to a
plan under the federal health insurance exchange. She is a full-time bank
compliance officer. He is a full-time store manager.
Tiffany
wrote to KHN after seeing stories about sky-high medical bills on TV. Dr.
Merrit Quarum, the chief executive of WellRithms, a health care consulting
firm, reviewed the family’s medical bills and the responses from their health
care providers.
Though
Quarum had questions about some of the fees in the itemized bills — $4 for a
600-milligram ibuprofen tablet? $3,125 to place an epidural? — he found the
charges were legitimate under the terms of the contract between the hospital
and the Canos’ insurer. Tiffany’s only recourse was to set up the five payment
plans she navigates each month.
“I wish
I could say it wasn’t so, but it is,” Quarum said.
Mostly
to pay off that health care debt, Robert has taken several part-time gigs this
year — he works as a substitute teacher and a nighttime security guard and
delivers sandwiches for a fast-food chain in Scottsdale, 40 miles away, where
tips are better. He said he sometimes works up to 120 hours in a week.
“I’m
not ashamed or embarrassed, even as old as I am, to deliver sandwiches,” he
said, pulling on his retail chain polo shirt before rushing to a Saturday
morning shift.
He
continued: “I know people, they’d rather get food stamps and feel sorry for
themselves. But I’m a fighter. I will not give up. … If I can bring in an extra
$400 a week or $800 a month, she can get what she needs for the baby.”
Often
getting home after midnight, he keeps shampoo and shaving cream in his car and
naps in parking lots between jobs, relying on Red Bull and aspirin to stay
alert.
That
means on many nights, when Tiffany picks up Brody from day care after her
90-minute commute, she handles most of the chores at home.
“Sometimes
I feel like a single mom because my husband is never around,” she said.
She
carefully tracks the family’s medical expenses, trying to juggle them with
ordinary outlays that can’t wait — like $500 for the brakes that went out on
her car this month.
At the
rate they’re going, the bills won’t be paid until Brody is 3, Tiffany said. The
Canos are getting older and they’d like to have another baby before it’s too
late, but, for now, that seems impossible.
For
2019, the couple have decided to switch to a different plan offered through the
regional bank where Tiffany works. The premium is higher — $650 a month — but
the deductible is $1,500 with just 10 percent coinsurance.
“It is
going to be a lot more per paycheck, which is going to hurt us,” Tiffany said.
“But after what just happened, I want to make sure we are prepared in case
anything does occur.”
How to
fix a health care system that burdens middle-class families so heavily is beyond
her, she said.
“The
only thing we can do is just keep working,” Tiffany said. “I always wonder: How
does everybody else do it?”
KHN’s
coverage of children’s health care issues is supported in part by the Heising-Simons Foundation.
https://khn.org/news/insured-but-still-in-debt-5-jobs-pulling-in-100k-a-year-no-match-for-medical-bills/?utm_campaign=KFF-2019-The-Latest&utm_source=hs_email&utm_medium=email&utm_content=68700082&_hsenc=p2ANqtz--iLvvFGBIJmNgtLSaFn7r079gR29LgddDiadLOgOmp71o_6QKSAI8BnZ-CgNYr8MiMpatfs27U2_wF4OLODUJ16r0MMA&_hsmi=68700082
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