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'Would he have lived?' When insurance companies deny cancer care to patients

Writer's picture: Tex PatientsTex Patients

Health insurers are increasingly interfering in care, an NBC News investigation found. Doctors say the stakes are highest in cancer care, when delays can be the difference between life and death.


Angela Pike’s husband, Tracy, had just celebrated his 45th birthday when he was diagnosed with Stage 4 stomach cancer. A father of three and the maintenance chief of a Louisville, Kentucky, skyscraper, Pike immediately started chemotherapy, which reduced the size of the tumor his doctor had discovered.


While continuing the chemotherapy would keep him going in the short term, Pike’s best shot at a longer and more healthy life, his doctor told him and his wife, was to undergo a routinely practiced treatment combining surgery and intensive chemotherapy at the MD Anderson Cancer Center in Houston.


After MD Anderson agreed to provide Pike with the treatment, he and his family traveled to Texas in 2023. The night before the first procedure, Pike’s surgeon called to let the family know Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Illinois, Pike’s health insurer through his employer, had declined to cover the roughly $40,000 treatment.


The insurer ruled Pike’s treatment was “not medically necessary” because it was “experimental, investigational and unproven,” documents show.


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Paid for by the Texas Coalition for Patients

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