September 15, 2009

For Speech-Impaired, Insurance Fights Remedy
By ASHLEE VANCE
NY Times

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/09/15/technology/15speech.html?hp=&pagewanted=print


SAN FRANCISCO — Kara Lynn has amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, or A.L.S., 
which has attacked the muscles around her mouth and throat, removing her 
ability to speak. A couple of years ago, she spent more than $8,000 to 
buy a computer, approved by Medicare, that turns typed words into speech 
that her family, friends and doctors can hear.

Under government insurance requirements, the maker of the PC, which ran 
ordinary Microsoft Windows software, had to block any nonspeech 
functions, like sending e-mail or browsing the Web.

Dismayed by the PC’s limitations and clunky design, Ms. Lynn turned to a 
$300 iPhone 3G from Apple running $150 text-to-speech software. Ms. 
Lynn, who is 48 and lives in Poughkeepsie, N.Y., said it worked better 
and let her “wear her voice” around her neck while snuggling with her 
5-year-old son, Aiden, who has Down syndrome.

Medicare and private health insurers decline to cover cheap devices like 
iPhones and netbook PCs that can help the speech-impaired, despite their 
usefulness and lower cost.

Instead, public and private insurers insist that, if Ms. Lynn and others 
like her want insurance to pay, they must spend 10 to 20 times as much 
for dedicated, proprietary devices that can do far less.

The logic: Insurance is supposed to cover medical devices, and 
smartphones or PCs can be used for nonmedical purposes, like playing 
video games or Web browsing.

“We would not cover the iPhones and netbooks with speech-generating 
software capabilities because they are useful in the absence of an 
illness or injury,” said Peter Ashkenaz, a spokesman for the federal 
Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services. Private insurers tend to 
follow the government’s lead in matters of coverage. Two years ago, 
iPhones and netbooks barely existed, so it may not be surprising that 
the industry has yet to consider their role as medical devices.

But the health care system has long had trouble keeping up with Moore’s 
Law, the principle that computing power rapidly increases even as costs 
fall sharply.

Doctors must still bring a patient into their offices instead of, say, 
inspecting an e-mailed photo of a rash if they want most insurers to pay 
for the consultation. Digitizing medical records is such a vast 
undertaking that the government is now spending billions of dollars to 
jump-start it.

In the case of A.L.S., also called Lou Gehrig’s disease, advocates spent 
years fighting to have any speech-specific devices covered by insurance, 
finally succeeding in 2001.

For the millions of Americans with A.L.S., Down syndrome, autism, 
strokes and other speech-impairing conditions, the insurance industry’s 
aversion to covering mainstream devices adds to the challenges they 
face. Advocates say using an everyday device to communicate can ease the 
stigma and fear of making the adjustment.

At the same time, current policies mean that the government and private 
insurers may be spending unnecessary dollars on specialty machines.

Dr. Stanley E. Harris, who helps set device coverage policies for 
Horizon Blue Cross Blue Shield of New Jersey, said that if enough 
patients requested new types of devices, the insurer would study their 
usefulness. “We’re looking for evidence-based data to support the 
effectiveness of whatever is being requested,” he said.

In the meantime, people with speech disabilities have a choice: pay for 
a cheaper product from their own pockets, try to borrow one from a 
private assistance group or spend their insurer’s money on a specialty 
device from a company like DynaVox Mayer-Johnson or Prentke Romich.

DynaVox, a leading maker of devices for the speech-impaired, has 
computers that start at $8,000 and run Windows, just like 90 percent of 
all PCs. To meet insurance rules, DynaVox disables the general computing 
tools. After the insurer pays, customers can pay $50 to DynaVox to 
reactivate the full functions.

The proprietary devices have some special qualities. They are sturdier 
than typical computers and have better speakers and links to support 
services.

But the prices may seem hard to justify based on components alone. One 
$5,000 DynaVox product is essentially the speech software bundled with a 
two-pound keyboard that has a six-inch screen. And the manufacturers 
mark up standard accessories by as much as 2,000 percent. Prentke 
Romich, for example, charges $250 for a Bluetooth wireless adapter 
similar to those that cost $20 in stores.

Jim Shea, vice president for marketing at DynaVox, says his company’s 
prices run high because it must do a lot of custom work and research to 
serve a niche that mainstream companies ignore. “We are not riding the 
wave of consumer electronics in terms of cost,” he said. “We’re building 
the devices here in Pittsburgh from scratch.”

In addition, the do-it-yourself approach isn’t for everybody, he said. 
“You have to be somewhat savvy, get the software and set it up,” he said.

Disease experts say companies like DynaVox and Prentke Romich make many 
sophisticated, helpful products. Still, advocates argue, advances in 
computing and easy-to use speech software have opened doors to use cheap 
mainstream alternatives. Indeed, the price drops have made it possible 
for A.L.S. assistance groups to buy dozens of netbooks, install 
specialized software like Proloquo2Go and lend them to clients.

Betsy Caporale, a speech language pathologist in Danville, Calif., has 
tested various devices and software with children who have Down syndrome 
and autism.

“The iPhone has been a runaway success with these kids,” she said. “It 
takes them about 10 minutes to learn how to use the iPhone, and there is 
this cool factor for them.”

Ms. Lynn, from Poughkeepsie, would like to see insurers loosen their 
rules to accommodate general-purpose devices and give people like her 
more financial flexibility. Since insurers will typically cover only one 
device every five years, people with degenerative conditions like A.L.S. 
often hold off any claims until their condition worsens, and they really 
need an expensive specialty product that can track their eye and head 
movements.

Perhaps the government could set a certain dollar limit and then let 
patients find the products that fit their needs, Ms. Lynn suggested. “I 
really would like to see Medicare do away with the dedicated-device rule 
and the one-device limit,” she said by e-mail.

But so far, government and private insurers are not swayed. “We look at 
determining the effectiveness of the technology — and not the cost — 
first,” Mr. Harris said.

For Ms. Lynn, the iPhone, with the special software, is cheaper, more 
effective and essential. “Technology has become as important to me as 
air, food, water,” she wrote.

-- 
================================
George Antunes, Political Science Dept
University of Houston; Houston, TX 77204 
Voice: 713-743-3923  Fax: 713-743-3927
Mail: antunes at uh dot edu

***********************************
* POST TO MEDIANEWS@ETSKYWARN.NET *
***********************************

Medianews mailing list
Medianews@etskywarn.net
http://lists.etskywarn.net/mailman/listinfo/medianews

Reply via email to