By Mark S. King
August 03 2017
__________________________________________________________________________________
Discrimination against LGBT people
is often once-removed, shielded under double-speak and fraudulent
intentions. So, itโs refreshing, really, when a company comes right out
and says in black and white that gay men arenโt worthy of the same
protections as everyone else.
In a pre-authorization
denial letter to a gay patient seeking Truvada as PrEP, United
Healthcare cited โhigh risk homosexual behaviorโ as their reason for
denying his claim. Seriously. Because we all know PrEP is meant for
people who are, you know, not at risk for HIV infection.
Thatโs not all. The letter from United Healthcare refers to their criteria for authorization, among them โto reduce the risk of sexually acquired HIV-1 infection in adults at high risk.โ So, adults at high risk are okay. Homosexual behavior crosses the line. (Strange, considering this United Healthcare Truvada criteria document from 2013 makes no mention of the sexuality of the patient.)
The patient denial letter makes the obscene disconnect pretty clear [read the full letter below]
James Krellenstein, a member of ACT UP NYC (and one of my โHIV Advocates to Watchโ in 2015) who once convinced the FDA to approve the Alere Rapid HIV Test, was absolutely livid when he posted a redacted version of the United Healthcare letter on social media this week. He was no less incensed in our interview.
โThis is a direct attack on the rights of our community to have access to healthcare,โ James said. โIt is preventing people from protecting themselves from HIV infection. This is unacceptable. You canโt discriminate against gay patients. You canโt endanger patientsโ welfare because of your homophobia.โ
โThe commissioner can rule they are discriminating,โ said James, โif he finds they are discriminating they can pull them from the health insurance market. He has the authority to do anything. We want United Healthcare to disclose to the commissioner how many people have been denied for similar reasons, and an assurance that this conduct will cease immediately.โ
The fact that Truvada for PrEP requires a pre-authorization process at all is ludicrous. โThey could change this tomorrow,โ said James. โIt is an extra hurdle to get the drug, including filling out forms that ask questions about sexual behavior that then go through another level of bureaucracy.โ
Donโt even get James started about the cost of Truvada as PrEP, considering Gilead, the maker of the drug, did not fund the research that proved the drug to be effective as PrEP. โThe research was paid for by the U.S. taxpayer,โ James explains. โAnd they continue to raise the cost of the drug, 10% this year alone. They charge $1500 a month for this drug and manufacture it for $9. Based on their research investment in Truvada, Gilead should be charging the price of a bottle of aspirin for it.โ
โI know people for had to stop using Truvada because they couldnโt afford it. The canโt afford the out of pocket costs, the co-pays or the deductibles, which can be really high. Gilead has a patient assistance program that covers up to $3,600 dollars in costs, but lower quality health plans can have medication deductibles as high as $6,000 or more.โ
There has been no response, as of yet, from either United Healthcare or Gilead in regards to this case, or about their pre-authorization process or criteria. So now is the perfect time to sign the petition.
Stay tuned.
Thatโs not all. The letter from United Healthcare refers to their criteria for authorization, among them โto reduce the risk of sexually acquired HIV-1 infection in adults at high risk.โ So, adults at high risk are okay. Homosexual behavior crosses the line. (Strange, considering this United Healthcare Truvada criteria document from 2013 makes no mention of the sexuality of the patient.)
The patient denial letter makes the obscene disconnect pretty clear [read the full letter below]
James Krellenstein, a member of ACT UP NYC (and one of my โHIV Advocates to Watchโ in 2015) who once convinced the FDA to approve the Alere Rapid HIV Test, was absolutely livid when he posted a redacted version of the United Healthcare letter on social media this week. He was no less incensed in our interview.
โThis is a direct attack on the rights of our community to have access to healthcare,โ James said. โIt is preventing people from protecting themselves from HIV infection. This is unacceptable. You canโt discriminate against gay patients. You canโt endanger patientsโ welfare because of your homophobia.โ
โThe commissioner can rule they are discriminating,โ said James, โif he finds they are discriminating they can pull them from the health insurance market. He has the authority to do anything. We want United Healthcare to disclose to the commissioner how many people have been denied for similar reasons, and an assurance that this conduct will cease immediately.โ
The fact that Truvada for PrEP requires a pre-authorization process at all is ludicrous. โThey could change this tomorrow,โ said James. โIt is an extra hurdle to get the drug, including filling out forms that ask questions about sexual behavior that then go through another level of bureaucracy.โ
Donโt even get James started about the cost of Truvada as PrEP, considering Gilead, the maker of the drug, did not fund the research that proved the drug to be effective as PrEP. โThe research was paid for by the U.S. taxpayer,โ James explains. โAnd they continue to raise the cost of the drug, 10% this year alone. They charge $1500 a month for this drug and manufacture it for $9. Based on their research investment in Truvada, Gilead should be charging the price of a bottle of aspirin for it.โ
โI know people for had to stop using Truvada because they couldnโt afford it. The canโt afford the out of pocket costs, the co-pays or the deductibles, which can be really high. Gilead has a patient assistance program that covers up to $3,600 dollars in costs, but lower quality health plans can have medication deductibles as high as $6,000 or more.โ
There has been no response, as of yet, from either United Healthcare or Gilead in regards to this case, or about their pre-authorization process or criteria. So now is the perfect time to sign the petition.
Stay tuned.
Read more articles from PLUS, here.
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