WASHINGTON, Jul 18, 2008 (UPI via COMTEX) -- A U.S. House of Representatives
committee will investigate health insurers who cancel coverage when
policyholders get sick, the committee chairman said.
House Oversight and Government Reform Committee Chairman Rep. Henry Waxman,
D-Calif., said moves to expand the individual insurance market require greater
scrutiny, especially insurers' cancellation practices, the Los Angeles Times
reported Friday.
About 14 million Americans pay for medical benefits on their own.
Waxman noted Thursday one case in which he said a consumer lost coverage because
he didn't disclose headaches on his application.
He "was terminated because the insurer said he should have known that occasional
headaches would later be diagnosed as multiple sclerosis," Waxman said.
"I understand that insurance companies need to protect themselves from fraud,"
Waxman said. "But that is not what happened ... (in states) across the country.
Insurers are using technicalities or trumped-up 'misrepresentations' to rescind
policies after individuals get sick and accumulate hundreds of thousands of
dollars in medical bills."
Stephanie Kanwit, a lawyer for America's Health Insurance Plans, told the
committee rescinding coverage is rarely used but necessary to ensure that people
who lie about medical conditions don't contaminate the risk pool for honest
consumers, resulting in higher prices.
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Copyright 2008 by United Press International