Complete Insurance Coverage in Newborn Screening

By Lance E. Wyble, MD, Assistant Professor, Department of Pediatrics, University of South Florida, College of Medicine, Tampa, Florida.

This treatise, written by Dr. Lance Wyble of Tampa, Florida, was used to help argue the case for state insurance coverage of PKU medical foods and low protein products.

Should there be a legal requirement of insurance companies to cover all medically prescribed components (drugs and/or diet) of a regimen to protect against the damaging and incapacitating effects of phenylketonuria (PKU)? There are cogent, moral arguments against even mild barriers to appropriate protein intake following identification of the inheritance and presence of phenylketonuria by mandated state screening. There are also compelling arguments against a policy which allows insurance carriers to refuse coverage of a specially prepared food item, which is specifically prescribed for PKU, simply because it does not come in the form of a pill or shot.

Phenylketonuria is one of a number of metabolic disorders occurring in I per 10,000 to I per 20,000 births and has been included in the state of Florida Newborn Screening Program since 1965. Currently there are I 00 to 120 children and adults being treated for phenylketonuria or other inherited metabolic disorders in Florida. Undetected and untreated, phenylketonuria will result in severe mental retardation in infancy. Although universal screening and milk product substitution in infancy is now a standard of care, if children with phenylketonuria and other forms of inherited metabolic disorders amenable to dietary treatment are not able to maintain strict dietary regimen throughout their life they become victims of slow, but significant, intellectual change over the course of their lifetime. This terrible development can be prevented by following a very strict low protein/vegetarian diet, which includes specially prepared medical foods (low phenylalanine formula and specially prepared pastas and breads) to provide the bulk nutrients lacking in the restricted diet. Because these medical foods are specifically formulated to treat PKU and other metabolic disorders, these products are very expensive.

The heart of this problem, now encountered by a family whose child is diagnosed with PKU, is that in most states there is currently no policy of insurance coverage of the few very low protein or no protein metabolic supplements which have now been developed as staples (such as pasta, baking mix, gelatin desserts, cookies, and flour). These products broaden the variety of foods an individual may use to maintain dietary control for PKU. This is particularly important now that authorities are recommending the diet restriction of protein should be lifelong. Unfortunately, these products are also very costly. A 12-ounce box of low protein pasta costs over $4; a package of crackers over $5; a 14-ounce package of baking mix that produces one loaf of bread costs over $7. In summary, these special foods help make a very difficult dietary regimen tolerable and improve the medical well-being of children and adults with PKU, but they don't come easily.

The United States government has recently suggested that our economy can no longer fully afford all the health care that medical science can bring us. Because infinite needs have encountered finite resources, we must now plan our spending wisely. Some social commentators believe that modem genetic diagnosis and technologies has the potential to foster a new era of medicine. Many have become concerned that these technologies may become tools of discrimination. Likewise, legislation on health policy which limits access to health care for certain diseases or situations could be considered a form of eugenics.

There is no reasonable question as to what is in the best interest of infants diagnosed with PKU or other inborn errors of metabolism. A public policy that grants parents the right to consign their children to a state of irreversible and variable mental damage, would have to be perceived as morally unacceptable. Just as it was long ago decided that requiring parental consent for PKU screening was intellectually inappropriate, a policy to allow parental choice because of insurance industry refusal to provide medically indicated care would have to be questioned. If the principle consideration is the welfare of children, they are best served by a program of compulsory and non-exceptional coverage by insurance industry of medically indicated dietary alterations which affect long term outcome and ultimate healthy development.

There has been a longstanding tradition granting parents and the family broad discretion and control over the care and welfare of children. Most insurance industry representatives respond to accusations of rationing and the creation of barriers by restating the philosophical position that the insurance industry only offers choices and provides cost oriented programs to fulfill the desires of its consumers. Many health care consumers have feel helpless to resist the obvious directive of the insurance industry towards the path of financial least resistance or sometimes least headache.

There is no disagreement about the consequences of "no insurance coverage for therapy," a therapy which is as indicated as insulin for a diabetic. The only logical argument which can be made would request that either government or parents of children born with inherited defects of metabolism pay for required low protein food products, instead of insurers. The insurance industry argument centers around the statement that the industry covers medicinal products, but cannot be expected to cover a particular diet. The insurance industry also allows refusal of coverage for treating diseases if such treatment is experimental and unproven. In the case of PKU and other inherited defects of metabolism, no such argument can be made. Since mass screening began around 1965, the positive effect of dietary modification throughout life has come to be recognized.

As PKU screening has become compulsory, is the State not obligated to assure that the medical resources necessary for effective treatment are made available? This would include adequate follow up and counseling for parents of babies with positive tests, as well as referral to pediatricians who are experienced in the management of PKU. By applying the same reasoning, is it possible to generate a State obligation to finance PKU treatment for infants when the financing of care cannot be arranged through any of the other mechanisms (e.g. Medicaid, Crippled Children's Funds, third- party payers, parental resources, etc.)? It is important to note that any program of health coverage which in theory has been purchased for the express purpose of treatment of medical conditions owns certainly no less a responsibility than the State institution which mandates diagnosis.

Perhaps these arguments against the current policy position involve a combination of political, pragmatic, and moral considerations. The largeness of the harm involved in the argument over PKU food product provision would seem fairly remote on the statewide scale because of both the relative rarity of the disease and the empirically demonstrated low rate of parental refusal to maintain some attempt at dietary modification. It might, therefore, be reasonable to ask, "Why bother to change industry standards?" That is to say, why bother to buck the prevailing insurance industry policy over compulsory programs. Despite these concerns, I remain deeply skeptical about the moral justiciability of any negative effect attributable to the current policy. Furthermore, policy change mandating, by law, dietary therapy coverage of PKU and other inborn metabolic defects will lead to no attributable risk. It remains to be seen whether my position is sufficiently; compelling to override moral, practical, and political arguments against my proposed change.

 


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