advice needed:help
Hello everyone,
I am at the very beginning......kind of. For the past 1 and 1/2 I have seen several doctors and at best, alot of wasted time. I am now waiting for a consultation in January 2005 with hopes I can get help with my life long stuggle with weight. My BMI at present is 39 and between health insurance confussion and not finding a helpful doctor I don't know if I will ever receive help. My questions are:
1. Out of four insurance plans choices I have at work which one would be most simathetic (Health-Net HMO, Jersey Plus, AEtna, AmeriHealth HMO)
2. Anyone out their who has LapBand please tell me your success and struggles.
Thank you all and I am so happy I found this wonderful resouces.
Sincerely
L.
I can only tell you about Aetna. They will only pay for Lap Band in limited cir****tances. Here is a the text from the Clinical Policy Bulletin that mentions Lap Band:
# Vertical Banded Gastroplasty (VBG) and Laparoscopic Adjustable Silicone Gastric Banding (LASGB or Lap-Band):
Aetna considers open or laparoscopic vertical banded gastroplasty (VBG) or laparoscopic adjustable silicone gastric banding (LASGB, Lap-Band) medically necessary for members who meet the selection criteria for obesity surgery and who are at increased risk of adverse consequences of a RYGB due to the presence of any of the following comorbid medical conditions:
1. Hepatic cirrhosis with elevated liver function tests; or
2. Inflammatory bowel disease (Crohn's disease or ulcerative colitis); or
3. Radiation enteritis; or
4. Demonstrated complications from extensive adhesions involving the intestines from prior major abdominal surgery, multiple minor surgeries, or major trauma; or
5. Poorly controlled systemic disease (American Society of Anesthesiology (ASA) Class IV).
Louella, unless you have a co-morbidity (diabetes, high BP, sleep apnea..) your BMI has to be 40 to get insurance approval. It would also be good to have a documented 6-month attempt to lose weight (diet and excercise) and have your primary ready to right a letter in your support. I think it is harder in general to get approval with an HMO than a PPO.
All the rest (bloodwork, cardio check, psych eval etc) that your surgeon may require can be done when you finalize your surgeon selection.
I think there may be a board here for lap-banders(?)
Jen
Best wishes to you, I found this on OH, check it out. Hope it helps, hang in there.
http://www.obesityhelp.com/morbidobesity/bariatric+surgery+insurers+in+new+jersey.html