Petition updateSUPPORT HR 4616 & S 2584 THE LIVING DONOR PROTECTION ACTMatt Reed: Stop ripoff for kidney donors
James MyersHammond, IN, United States
May 5, 2016
Matt Reed: Stop ripoff for kidney donors Matt Reed, FLORIDA TODAY columnist 6:58 a.m. EDT May 4, 2016 Bill would ban discrimination by insurance companies against people who donate kidneys and other organs to save lives. Wochit Bill would help living organ donors who face difficulty getting insurance, leave Donor MomsBuy Photo (Photo: MALCOLM DENEMARK/FLORIDA TODAY) Would you donate one of your kidneys to a friend or relative who would die without one? Or that it could jeopardize your job because some employers won’t grant medical leave for that?What if it meant insurance companies would deny you life or disability insurance afterward? Both are possibilities for would-be living organ donors in the United States, which doesn’t seem right. I know it would cause me to think twice about donating to anyone but an immediate family member who was in immediate danger of dying. And that’s a sick situation to the National Kidney Foundation of Florida, a Brevard County-based group dedicated to raising money and awareness for the prevention and treatment of disease. So at the kidney foundation’s May 7 Kidney Walk on Cocoa Beach and its signature pro-surfing event later this summer, attendees will hear a call to support a bipartisan bill in Congress called the Living Donor Protection Act. Congressman Bill Posey, R-Rockledge, is among the cosponsors. “It'll help untangle the insurance and financial mess that our patients and donors go through,” said Phil Salick, who donated a kidney to his twin brother, Rich Salick, in the 1970s, and then co-founded the charity surf festival with him. “I know about the mess.” (Rich Salick died in 2012 at the age of 62.) Healthy changes If passed, the bill would do three things: Prohibit discrimination against living organ donors in the availability, price, coverage or cancellation of life insurance, disability insurance or long-term care insurance. Amend the Family and Medical Leave Act to specifically cover living organ donation as a “serious health condition” that entitles donors to leave. Order the Department of Health and Human Services to publicize the changes. PETITION: Support the Living Donor Act of 2016 “It’s a very safe surgery today for the donors, as far as long-term complications,” said Bill Hahn, a kidney recipient who now chairs the Kidney Walk on Cocoa Beach. “It’s really done in a single-site laparoscopic surgery, where there’s one incision and the tools go right in through your belly button. The hospital stay and leave for most patients have been cut down five-fold.” Yet, a survey by the Organization for Transplant Professionals found that 39 percent of its member centers had eligible donors decline due to fear of future insurance problems. It’s a reasonable fear. A federally funded study of 1,000 people who donated kidneys at Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine in Baltimore found that 34 percent of those who did so between 2005 and 2011 reported difficulty obtaining life insurance afterward. Another 6 percent of donors reported difficulty getting health insurance afterward. But that problem was solved by the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act of 2010 (better known as Obamacare) which banned health insurers from considering “pre-existing conditions.” If Republicans including Posey are serious about repealing and replacing Obamacare, there’s one protection they should hurry up and replace. “Most donors will underestimate the potential financial impact of donation,” says a report by the Organization for Transplant Professionals. “For donors of modest means, out-of-pocket expenses such as travel costs to the transplant center … prescription drug cost and unpaid leave from work are all significant potential factors in post-operative financial stress.”
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