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THIS IS ANOTHER EXAMPLE OF HOW RIDICULOUS AND SORRY THE HEALTH CARE SYSTEM IS IN AMERICA. COME ON...GIVE ME A BREAK....

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DENVER POST-

GRAND JUNCTION — Alex Lange is a chubby, dimpled, healthy and happy 4-month-old.

But in the cold, calculating numbered charts of insurance companies, he is fat. That's why he is being turned down for health insurance. And that's why he is a weighty symbol of a problem in the health care reform debate.

Insurance companies can turn down people with pre-existing conditions who aren't covered in a group health care plan.

Alex's pre-existing condition — "obesity" — makes him a financial risk. Health insurance reform measures are trying to do away with such denials that come from a process called "underwriting."

"If health care reform occurs, underwriting will go away. We do it because everybody else in the industry does it," said Dr. Doug Speedie, medical director at Rocky Mountain Health Plans, the company that turned down Alex.

By the numbers, Alex is in the 99th percentile for height and weight for babies his age. Insurers don't take babies above the 95th percentile, no matter how healthy they are otherwise.

"I could understand if we could control what he's eating. But he's 4 months old. He's breast-feeding. We can't put him on the Atkins diet or on a treadmill," joked his frustrated father, Bernie Lange, a part-time news anchor at KKCO-TV in Grand Junction. "There is just something absurd about denying an infant."

Bernie and Kelli Lange tried to get insurance for their growing family with Rocky Mountain Health Plans when their current insurer raised their rates 40 percent after Alex was born. They filled out the paperwork and awaited approval, figuring their family is young and healthy. But the broker who was helping them find new insurance called Thursday with news that shocked them.

" 'Your baby is too fat,' she told me," Bernie said.

Up until then, the Langes had been happy with Alex's healthy appetite and prodigious weight gain. His pediatrician had never mentioned any weight concerns about the baby they call their "happy little chunky monkey."

His 2-year-old brother, Vincent, had been a colicky baby who had trouble putting on pounds.

At birth, Alex weighed a normal 8 1/4 pounds. On a diet of strictly breast milk, his weight has more than doubled. He weighs about 17 pounds and is about 25 inches long.

"I'm not going to withhold food to get him down below that number of 95," Kelli Lange said. "I'm not going to have him screaming because he's hungry."

Speedie said not many people seeking individual health insurance are turned down because of weight. But it does happen. Some babies less hefty than Alex have had to get health endorsements from their pediatricians. Adults who have a body-mass index of 30 and above are turned down because they are considered obese.

The Langes, both slender, don't know where Alex's propensity for pounds came from. Their other child is thin. No one in their families has a weight problem.

The Langes are counting on the fact that Alex will start shedding pounds when he starts crawling. He is already a kinetic bundle of arm- and leg-waving energy in a baby suit sized for a 9-month-old.

They joked that when he is ready for solid food, they will start him on Slim-Fast.

Meanwhile, they made Alex's plight public on KKCO this week. They plan to appeal Rocky Mountain's denial.

If that doesn't work, they plan to take their case to the Colorado Division of Insurance.

"My gripe is not with Rocky Mountain," Bernie said. "It's with the general state of the health care system."


Comments


  • Yes, I know that the child does have coverage NOW...NOW that they were exposed for the vial,sick,sad people/business they are. SUZY- YOU,I,ALL of us have NOOOO idea of how severely this is happening all over the US...BUT, I know it DOES HAPPEN as I am one of the MANY that were denied coverage because of a pre existing condition that came about and has and always was out of my control. If I could of done ANYTHING to make my condition not come about you bet I would of done it. They simply said I was to much of a high risk. So, my life is not worthy enough for descent health care. I have been self paying for my condition for 5 yrs now and I am sure I have had to spend $10,000 easy... some money financed as well as given from family and MOST out of my husbands hard earned paychecks. I miss important necessary appt. at times because I can't afford them. It's sad that anyone should have to live like I have or the way these people were treated!

    October 14, 2009 at 2:28 p.m.

  • You know the baby wouldn't have been covered if it hadn't have been on TV. How many other people are being discriminated against?

    October 14, 2009 at 12:33 p.m.

  • My first born was 9lbs when I had her. She was 17lbs within 3 months. She was not FAT!!! She was PERFECT in every way. And she was within the percentile they use at the pediatricians office and the doc always told me what a healthy baby she was. If this happened to me I would SUE them till they were shut down. This is WRONG WRONG WRONG on every level. SICK WORLD we live in!!!!

    October 14, 2009 at 11:33 a.m.