Return To Full Article
You can republish this story for free. Click the "Copy HTML" button below. Questions? Get more details.

I Write About Americas Absurd Health Care System. Then I Got Caught Up in It.

I got a hurried voicemail from my pharmacist in Wisconsin the day before Thanksgiving letting me know my insurance was refusing to cover my insulin.

I had enough of the hormone that keeps me alive to last 17 days.

In my 10 years living with Type 1 diabetes, Ive never really struggled to access insulin. But in my job reporting on the people left behind by our countrys absurdly complex health care system, Ive written about how leads to deadly rationing and about to bring those prices down.

For the most part, though, Ive been spared from the problems I cover. Maybe thats why I waited over a week to call my new pharmacy in St. Louis, where I recently moved for this job with KHN.

Id been waiting since September for an appointment with an endocrinologist in St. Louis; the doctors office couldnt get me in until Dec. 23 and wouldnt handle my prescriptions before then. When I finally called a pharmacy to sort this out, a pharmacist in St. Louis said my new employer-provided insurance wouldnt cover insulin without something called a prior authorization. Ive , too. Theyre essentially requirements that a physician get approval from an insurance company before prescribing a treatment.

Doctors hate them. The American Medical Association has a to the practice, while the insurance industry defends it as protecting patient safety and saving money. It feels like a lot of paperwork to confirm something we already know: Without insulin, I will die.

I knew right away the prior authorization would be a problem. Since it was a Saturday when I learned about the need for the authorization, my best option was to call my old endocrinologists practice that Monday morning and beg his staffers to fill out forms for their now former patient.

I had enough insulin to last seven days.

But late that afternoon, I got an automated message from the pharmacy about an insurance issue.

After spending 45 minutes on hold the next morning, I finally got through to the pharmacist, who said my insurer was still waiting for a completed prior authorization form from my physician. I called the doctors office to give a nudge.

Four days worth of insulin left.

The price of my prescription without insurance was $339 per vial of insulin, and I use about two vials per month. Normally, I pay a $25 copay. Without the prior authorization, though, Im exposed to the list price of insulin, as is anyone with diabetes who lacks insurance, even if they live in with intended to rein in costs.

I called the pharmacy again on Thursday at 7:30 p.m., figuring itd be less busy. I got right through to the pharmacist, who told me my insurer was still waiting on the prior authorization form. Friday morning, the diabetes nurse at my doctors office said shed check on it and call me back.

Id be out of insulin the next day.

By this time, I was my attempt to refill my prescription and started to get the kind of messages that are familiar to anyone in whats known as the diabetes online community. People in Missouri offered me their surplus insulin. Some suggested I go to Walmart for $25 insulin, an older type I have no idea how to safely use.

My new strategy was to use one of the recently to help people get cheaper insulin. The very same day, the U.S. House Committee on Oversight and Reforms Democrats released a deriding these types of assistance programs as tools to garner positive public relations, increase sales, and raise revenue.

But before I tried that option, I heard back from the nurse who had called the pharmacy (she had spent 25 minutes on hold) and learned that my new insurance wouldnt cover the brand of insulin I was using. The pharmacist was checking on a different brand.

Soon the pharmacist called: My insurance would cover the other brand. But the pharmacy might not have enough to fill my order. She said I should call a different branch of the chain. The first location I called was also out but pointed me to another one that had it.

With 12 hours worth of insulin left, I walked out of that third store with my medicine in hand.

Bram Sable-Smith holds a months worth of insulin that took him 17 days and 20 phone calls to acquire. The health insurance he got when he switched jobs refused to cover his ongoing prescription without something called a prior authorization, essentially a requirement that a physician get approval from an insurance company before prescribing a treatment.

It took 17 days and 20 phone calls. But I know Im lucky. My insurance really is exceptional, recent events aside. My boss insisted that being alive was part of my job as I spent hours on the phone during the workday. And my job is to be persistent as I puzzle through the labyrinth of U.S. health care.

The time wasted by me, the pharmacists, the nurses and probably some insurance functionaries is astounding and likely both a cause and a symptom of the high cost of medical care. The problem is also much bigger than that.

Insulin is the single most important resource in my life, and this is what I had to do to get it. But I know not everyone has my good fortune. Ive interviewed the loved ones of people with Type 1 diabetes who could not get insulin, and its not hard to imagine how my story could have ended just as tragically.

On Dec. 23, I finally saw my new doctor, who sent in a new prescription. That night, I got a message that my insurer was waiting on a prior authorization.

I had 17 days worth of insulin left.

窪蹋勛圖厙 News is a national newsroom that produces in-depth journalism about health issues and is one of the core operating programs at KFFan independent source of health policy research, polling, and journalism. Learn more about .

Help 窪蹋勛圖厙 News track this article

By including these elements when you republish, you help us:
  • Understand which communities and people were reaching.
  • Measure the impact of our health journalism.
  • Continue providing free, high-quality health news to the public.
Canonical Tag

Include this in your page's <head> section to properly attribute this content.

Tracking Snippet

Add this snippet at the end of your republished article to help us track its reach.