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Golden Rule, UnitedHealthCare: Please Call!

by on Jan. 05, 2011, under Health

Yesterday I had a conference call with “Alonzo”, who is from Tucson, and Golden Rule Insurance. I waited more than ten minutes to talk to a Golden Rule representative. Then I got Alonzo on the phone. We  talked for five minutes and explained Alonzo’s situation. We asked to talk to someone who understood the type of policy Alonzo had. We waited another ten minutes to be transferred to someone who could, hopefully, explain exclusions in his health insurance policy.  We talked for maybe three minutes with a representative who had Alonzo’s information on her computer screen. We gave her information, asked her several questions, and then we got cut off.  Alonzo waited for a phone call from this Golden Rule representative, but the phone call never came.

How can a billion dollar company not follow-up on a dropped call from a client who has already paid them over $4,000 in premiums?  Alonzo’s story is complicated and frustrating.

Alonzo works for a small construction company that dropped its group health insurance because the premiums got too expensive, despite rising deductibles and co-pays each year.  Alonzo figures he paid over $80,000 in health insurance premiums over 20 years and he was never really sick all that time.  He is overweight and pre-diabetic, and at 64 he was about to be uninsured.  To make things worse, Alonzo was diagnosed with prostate cancer just as he was losing his group insurance.

Alonzo applied for coverage with Blue Cross Blue Shield and was rejected because of his pre-existing conditions (and this was before he knew about the prostate cancer).  His only choice for coverage was to use the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA) which is a federal law from 1996 that requires insurance companies to offer a health insurance policy to people who have had group insurance, but lost it.  People who would not qualify for individual health insurance due to pre-existing conditions can get a guaranteed issue health insurance policy under HIPAA.

The HIPAA law has several requirements, all of which Alonzo met.  The HIPAA law also lets insurance companies take their premium rate for a healthy person, add ten percent to it, and triple that number.  So Alonzo would pay over $1,400 per month for the Golden Rule policy which has a $3,500 deductible.  He chose to pay this premium to protect his family from financial ruin that can come with serious illness and no health insurance.

Alonzo arranged for treatment of his prostate cancer, and the oncology center contacted his insurance company to check on his coverage.  Golden Rule said Alonzo is covered, but there is a six-month exclusion for treatment of “reproductive organs”, and the prostate falls under this exclusion.

Alonzo called me and I did some research about HIPAA policies, but I think we need an expert’s help on this.  Does the HIPAA law allow insurance companies to charge ridiculously high premiums for people with pre-existing conditions and then offer a policy that excludes treatment for those pre-existing conditions?

Alonzo doesn’t have time to wait for answers.  And he may have missed his one chance to get decent (though expensive) coverage under the HIPAA law by choosing the Golden Rule plan. This is an example of why I hate individual health insurance and why I concentrate on Medicare.

UPDATE Thursday, January 6, 2011:  Golden Rule did call! And it turns out the problem was all a mistake, or mis-communication……and Alonzo has no exclusions in his policy.  See my Jan. 6th post for more details.



  • M

    Did they read your article or was it really a mistake?  It sounds typical of Golden Rule.  Any idea of premium increases for 2011?

  • Denise

    A public relations person called me that afternoon.  Most big companies have someone who looks at everything that is written about them, so I figured they would get my “please call” message – and they did.
    It was all a BIG mistake because more than one customer service rep did not understand the policy. The client AND the doctor’s office were given wrong information.