Doris Holt had an unprovoked deep vein thrombosis in her leg. Her managed Medicare plan (ironically called a Medicare Advantage plan – certainly not true for patients who get snuckered into signing up) required a Peer-to-Peer call when I ordered a CT scan of her chest, abdomen and pelvis to look for occult cancer. They teach you to do that in medical school.
The man on the phone called himself doctor so-and-so. He didn’t tell me his specialty.
“Has she had any coags (blood tests for clotting disorders)?”
“No, she needs lifelong anticoagulation with apixiban anyway, so that would be moot.”
“Has she had any other imaging?”
“Doppler of the leg. Mammogram scheduled.”
“Colonoscopy? Pap smear?”
“Colonoscopy consult pending, but she’d have to hold her blood thinner then…”
“Hmmm. Has she had any weight loss or B-symptoms (fever, night sweats etc.).”
“No.”
“I’m checking her plan.” (Pause.) “I cant approve the chest without a chest X-ray first, or the abdomen-pelvis without a colonoscopy or Pap smear.”
“So, you’re denying everything.”
“Yes.”
I didn’t even say goodbye.
Pancreas cancer is first on the CDC’s list of malignancies that can cause blood clots:
Some cancers pose a greater risk for blood clots, including cancers involving the pancreas, stomach, brain, lungs, uterus, ovaries, and kidneys, as well as blood cancers, such as lymphoma and myeloma.
Medicare Advantage is a golden goose for the for-profit insurance companies that offer them. They lure patients in with low premiums (and they get Federal subsidies), hearing aids, free vitamins, rides to the doctor and so on, but they waste my time with roadblocks like peer-to-peer calls and prescription prior authorizations. And they deny rapid diagnosis of occult cancers where time is sometimes of the utmost essence.










