Oct. 4, 2006

Anorexics Denied Insurance Coverage

Insurance Companies Stop Coverage And Cost Lives

  • Play CBS Video Video Anorexia & Insurance

    Anorexia is one of the hardest diseases to fight, but insurance companies are not giving patients the help they need to battle this crippling sickness. Melinda Murphy reports

  • Kristen Frost has struggled with anorexia for half her life.

    Kristen Frost has struggled with anorexia for half her life.  (CBS/The Early Show)

  • Quiz Are You Food Savvy?

    Have you consumed myths about diet and nutrition? Take these quizzes to find out.

  • Interactive Food Pyramid

    The government's latest guidelines for healthy eating get personal.

(CBS)  Most experts agree that eating disorders are the deadliest of all mental illnesses, but treatments for anorexia is expensive and difficult to get. Many insurance companies force families into a life-or-death struggle for coverage.

For half her life, Kristen Frost has struggled with anorexia. She has been hospitalized four times — and in each instance, her hospitalization was cut off by insurance.

"You blame yourself, you feel worthless," she told The Early Show correspondent Melinda Murphy. "You hit your goal weight and immediately cut off. You're uncomfortable with the weight."

While she fought to save her life, her parents fought with the insurance companies, which forced them to spend $175,000 of their own money.

"It's very difficult," Frost said. "It's something that weighs on me every day."

What's worse, Frost's mother, Joan Frost, claims spending so much time on the insurance battles has cost her three jobs, stressing finances more.

"Every time she's been hospitalized, her dad and I say this is the last time," she said. "We can't do this any more. There's nothing left to do it with. And we still managed to find a way."

Most states don't treat eating disorders like other illnesses. That's something the National Eating Disorder Association is trying to change.

"Most mental illnesses deal with the neck up, if you'll forgive me," Lynn Grefe, the group's executive director. "But eating disorders deal with the top of your head all the way down to the toes because they ravage your body."

Brian Smith's daughter Janell often wrote him letters before she lost her battle with anorexia.

"Thank you for being there. Your support means more than I can express," one letter said.

Janell Smith appeared to have it all: talent, looks and a close family. Her sister Diana Wilson didn't fully understand Janell's dark secret until one day when Janell showed her.

"She came to me and said, 'I really wanna know your opinion,'" Wilson said. "And she took off the majority of her clothes. And when I saw how skinny her arms were and her ribs out and all that I was crushed.

Soon after, Janell was hospitalized — twice within a few months. The second time, the insurance company called her parents after three weeks to say they were withdrawing coverage, a decision her doctors felt would put her at greater risk for relapse.

"The counselor said, 'nobody's talked to us about next step strategies. In fact, we don't support this. The insurance company is pulling the plug,'" he said. "That was her words."

The Smiths didn't realize they could appeal the decision. Janell left the clinic. Only days later, her father went looking for her after she didn't answer his calls.

Continued



©MMVI, CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved.

Exclusive Webshow

Michelle Obama tells how her role as the First Lady has changed her perspective. Watch Now

Latest News
News in Pictures
Scroll Left Scroll Right
  • The Fall Of The Berlin Wall The Fall Of The Berlin Wall

    Looking Back at the Wall that Once Divided Germany On the 20th Anniversary of Its Collapse

  • Patricia Clarkson Patricia Clarkson

    Television and Film Actress, Yale School of Drama Graduate and Academy Award Nominee

  • Day in Pictures Day in Pictures

    A Glimpse at the Day's News as Seen Through a Camera Lens

  • Andre Agassi Andre Agassi

    Former Top-Seeded Tennis Star, Gossip Column Favorite and Philanthropist

  • Yankees Victory Parade Yankees Victory Parade

    The Yankees Celebrate Their 27th World Series Championship with a Ticker-Tape Parade Up Broadway

  • Orlando Office Shooting Orlando Office Shooting

    A Gunman Opens Fire at the Offices of an Engineering Firm Where He Once Worked

Connect with CBS News

Stay connected with the CBS News using your favorite social networks and online news applications: