Current:Home > Invest"Today I am going blind": Many Americans say health insurance doesn't keep them healthy -Secure Growth Solutions
"Today I am going blind": Many Americans say health insurance doesn't keep them healthy
View
Date:2025-04-16 22:15:03
Edna Garcia thinks she has paid her dues. For 34 years, she worked as a public high school teacher in Bridgeport, Connecticut, while also serving as a local lawmaker for eight years. In her retirement, she volunteers at her church, where she helps members deal with health insurance problems.
"I have been beneficial to my community," she told CBS MoneyWatch.
But for Garcia, 73, enjoying her retirement has been difficult. Despite having health insurance for retired teachers through UnitedHealthcare, she has struggled to afford medical treatment. Garcia is diabetic, has Crohn's disease, for which there is no cure, and suffers from a vision condition that has caused her eyesight to deteriorate over time.
Garcia, who also has Medicare Part A and B so she can keep her private plan, said her health insurance falls short of covering her medical expenses or paying for the treatment her doctors recommend.
"My eye doctor said the medication she wants to prescribe me for the problem I have is not covered by insurance. And I certainly cannot afford it," she said.
Instead, she uses prescription eye drops that her insurance does cover, but that don't properly treat her condition. "They don't meet the needs for my eyes. So today I am going blind," Garcia told CBS MoneyWatch.
Garcia is only one of the many Americans who say they are unable to get the medical care they need despite carrying health insurance. Roughly 30% of working-age adults in the U.S. with health coverage said rising medical costs make it hard to afford essentials like food, utilities, car payments and loans, according to a recent survey from The Commonwealth Fund. That forces millions of people to take on debt to pay for care or make difficult tradeoffs.
Garcia also said her insurance plan doesn't cover Ozempic, a drug used to treat diabetes that has also grown popular for weight-loss and that can cost hundreds of dollars a month out of pocket. Meanwhile, she said her UnitedHealthcare plan at one point suddenly stopped covering Remicade, the medication she was taking to keep her Crohn's disease flareups in check.
"I was fine, then all of a sudden insurance decided they wouldn't pay for it because it cost too much," Garcia said. "So my doctor took me off it and put me on something different, and I got sick like a dog, and I have been sick since."
She has since been put back on the medication, which UnitedHealthcare is covering again, according to Garcia.
UnitedHealthcare declined to comment.
Still, Garcia said she is often forced to choose between essentials like groceries and pricier medications that could help her stay healthy but that she can't afford out of pocket.
"I go without medicine because I have to decide between eating and taking care of my medical needs," she said.
No birthday trip
Eddie Vader, 45, a veteran who has insurance coverage through TriWest Healthcare Alliance, said he sometimes has to bear costly expenses on his own because his plan doesn't cover them. Vader is due for a root canal this month, a procedure he told CBS MoneyWatch he will have to pay out of pocket and that will cost him roughly $1,300.
"I can't really afford it, but we have to make it work," he said. "It's going to be a tight month."
Making it work will mean forgoing an annual trip he and his wife usually take for her birthday. "Typically we'd go spend a night at a hotel somewhere, get out of town and go somewhere. That's not going to happen until we can afford it," he said.
TriWest did not respond to CBS MoneyWatch's request for comment.
Adam Rollings, a North Carolina dock builder, is covered along with his two children under his wife's insurance plan. An Onslow County school teacher, his wife gets health care benefits through a Blue Cross Blue Shield plan for state employees.
That plan costs the family about $10,000 per year. They spend another $3,000 to $5,000 a year on added health care expenses, most of which are to related to their nine-year-old son's Type 1 diabetes.
"We are fortunate that we don't care any medical debt, but our frustration is that the coverage she is offered as a county employee seems to be inadequate for what's expected of her as a teacher and public service worker," Rollings told CBS MoneyWatch. "We would expect to be fully covered, or at least for coverage to not be as expensive as it is for that typical family of four."
- In:
- Health Care
Megan Cerullo is a New York-based reporter for CBS MoneyWatch covering small business, workplace, health care, consumer spending and personal finance topics. She regularly appears on CBS News streaming to discuss her reporting.
veryGood! (8)
Related
- Travis Hunter, the 2
- 20 sharks found dead after killer whales' surgical feeding frenzy
- Transcript: Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker on Face the Nation, March 5, 2023
- Pregnant Rihanna Has a Perfectly Peachy Date Night With A$AP Rocky in Milan
- Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
- How composer Nicholas Britell created the sound of 'Succession'
- Madonna’s Brother Anthony Ciccone Dead at 66
- Two new novels illustrate just how hard it is to find a foothold in America
- The White House is cracking down on overdraft fees
- Two summer suspense novels delight in overturning the 'woman-in-trouble' plot
Ranking
- California DMV apologizes for license plate that some say mocks Oct. 7 attack on Israel
- Why Royal Family Fanatics Have to Watch E!'s New Original Rom-Com
- 2 Americans dead, 2 rescued and back in U.S. after Mexico kidnapping
- He was a beloved farming legend. But for Reddit, his work ethic meant something else
- Can Bill Belichick turn North Carolina into a winner? At 72, he's chasing one last high
- 'Of course we should be here': 'Flower Moon' receives a 9-minute ovation at Cannes
- How composer Nicholas Britell created the sound of 'Succession'
- Beauty culture in South Korea reveals a grim future in 'Flawless'
Recommendation
Travis Hunter, the 2
Ed Sheeran reveals his wife was diagnosed with a tumor while pregnant
Fake stats, real nostalgia: Bonding with my dad through simulation baseball
Woman arrested in killing, dismemberment of model Abby Choi in Hong Kong — the 7th person linked to the crime
Could your smelly farts help science?
Farrah Abraham Shares Video of Daughter Sophia Getting Facial Piercings for Her 14th Birthday
How Hoda Kotb Stopped Feeling Unworthy of Motherhood
Earth, air, fire, water — and family — are all 'Elemental' for Pixar's Peter Sohn