pol
Benefits rep for the parent company called me this morning to say "we're doing everything we can."
I asked if they were contracting a second insurance provider so we'd at least have a market from which to choose, or if they were lobbying for single-payer at the corporate level.
He said no.
I said, "then you're not doing everything you can. I expect better."
The conversation didn't really go anywhere after that, but it took him forty-five minutes to recognize that.
pol
THIS is why we need unions.
THIS is why we need collective action.
THIS is why we need solidarity.
THIS.
The benefits rep on the phone said flat-out he's having to tell a patient with breast cancer that she's exceeded her limits, and he "felt terrible" for having to do it. I about screamed on the bus, "your feelings won't pay for her cancer treatment."
pol
Never assume your employer will have your back.
Never assume your employer will see you as a person.
Never assume your employer will reciprocate the time, the effort, or the mindpower you give them.
Never assume your employer will see you as anything other than a potentially fungible resource that will have to be replaced one day.
Build your care networks away from capitalism and its evils.
Find what comfort and solace you can in those who will see you as a person, not as food for Moloch.
pol
@literorrery I don't know how I managed to miss this thread, but I'm caught up now.
*sends soft and gentle hugs* I'm so sorry you have to deal with this shit.
If anyone can change policy over these sorts of situations, you can.
Oh, fun question: Are they self-insured? Most companies offering heath insurance are. That means it's not Anthem making these decisions, it's the company board. Anthem's job for a self-insured company is to enforce the decisions of the company board.
pol
@mawr I don't know. It's worth asking when next they contact me.
pol
@literorrery It'd be worth knowing.
If they are self-insured, know that they literally set it up that way on purpose. The insurance provider is contractually unable to make exceptions without board approval and the board is intentionally unreachable by employees and gets to decide whether or not to even hear your case if the insurance provider even bothers to bring it to them.
I've yet to find a company in which anyone short of VP/Pres/CEO has the authority to force an exception through.
pol
@literorrery That's illegal unless this is a grandfathered plan. So next time you can tell him he's probably a criminal.
pol
@literorrery this is just... *he* was trying to make *you* FEEL SORRY FOR HIM. "I had ~no choice~ but to do this horrible thing!" YOU ALWAYS HAVE A CHOICE. how somebody can sit there hand-wringing while doing hideous things for a fucking salary... UGH.
"The Ones Who Walk Away From Omelas" should be *required reading*, starting in grade school. :|
pol
@green "If you are neutral in situations of injustice, you have chosen the side of the oppressor. If an elephant has its foot on the tail of a mouse and you say that you are neutral, the mouse will not appreciate your neutrality." Desmond Tutu.
pol
@green And yes, I understand when people can't fight. I understand disempowerment and helplessness. I understand the limits of individual capacity to fight against a corrupt system or their own demons. I refuse to blame victims for not fighting back. I'm not faulting mice for failing to drag the elephant to the table.
I do blame the people who could speak up and refuse to do so. I blame those who could take a stand and don't. I blame those who have the capacity to fight and don't do so.
pol
@literorrery I mean... my hands aren't clean by any means, I'm still living in Omelas--but I do what I can to reduce the harm I do. after doing that job for--less than a year, I can only imagine myself quitting and dedicating my knowledge and experience to *changing the system* instead of passively handing down death sentences and "feeling bad" about it. I personally would not be able to live with that choice.
pol
He told me that he felt that every action the company took was to support as many employees as they could. I asked him how I was supposed to feel about the company if the actions they took to cover as many as possible left me in the cold and their answer to being confronted with that fact was "oops, sorry." He said he hoped I didn't feel like the company didn't care about me because of this. I said, "that's exactly how I feel, increasingly every time I talk about it."