The Money Trail
Money — its a big issue when youre coping with a neuromuscular
disease. The search for funds to cover needed equipment, home modifications,
drugs, treatments and other expenses, and the fight to get benefits
from insurance companies and government agencies can be as stressful
as the effects of the disease itself.
In this issue, Quest attempts to provide a map of some of the traps,
detours and dead ends that make up the tortuous Money Trail —
as well as some of the rest stops and satisfactory destinations to which
it can lead.
"Learning to Squawk" offers strategies for
making your voice heard and getting what you want. "Keeping
Your Insurance Coverage on Track" looks at solutions to some
common insurance hassles, including those that may arise with Social
Security, Medicare and private insurance. "Where
Is All the Money?" tells how several individuals creatively
found funds to cover their needs.
"From Where I Sit" presents
a personal reflection by Kimberly Sullivan, parent of a son with spinal
muscular atrophy, about "The Middle-Class Trap" —
a condition she describes as making too much money to get assistance
to buy medical necessities, yet not making enough money to pay for
them yourself, without sacrifice. Its a familiar story for many.
Tying it all together is an extensive list of resources.
There youll find further roads to take and stops to make —including
MDA —that will give you information and assistance. We hope the
information in this package will lead to a happy ending to your trip
down the Money Trail.
Learning
to Squawk
by Christina Medvescek
Mama might have taught you to be modest
and retiring, but those qualities dont cut it when youre fighting
the system.
Successful advocacy demands that you believe
youre entitled to have what you want, and that you squawk loudly enough
to get it. But squawking is an art. Rude, angry squawking can lead straight
to the chopping block.
It takes finesse coupled with persistence
— squawking in perfect pitch, if you will — to end up with
the golden egg.
Two Types of Advocacy
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Therese
Nadeau with Sassy
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You might be advocating for a larger
cause that affects many people, such as federal health care legislation.
Or, you might be self-advocating for yourself or a loved one
over an issue that mainly affects you, such as an insurance coverage
denial or school placement. Both are demanding, but in many ways self-advocacy
is the tougher.
In self-advocacy, youre rocking the boat
and insisting your needs be met. Even if youre right, you may worry
that youll look like a whiner or make people angry. And even if none
of that bothers you, self-advocacy is time-consuming. While a large
cause may have an organization behind it, in self-advocacy if you dont
do it, no one will.
Therese Nadeau of Glastonbury, Conn.,
knows well how hard it is to self-advocate. The 33-year-old social worker,
who doesnt let type 2 spinal muscular atrophy get in the way of her
busy professional life, has been "doing advocacy work in different
ways all my life." But when she experienced firsthand discrimination,
Nadeau learned that "advocating for yourself is pretty different.
I really struggled."
While getting her masters degree in social
work, Nadeau took an internship as an elementary school counselor —
and uncovered a little pocket of prejudice.
"They immediately stereotyped me
as someone who needed a lot of assistance and who couldnt provide assistance
to a child," she says. People refused to get heavy files from high
drawers, or even help her take off her coat. "They basically said
it wasnt in their contract to do that." Their bottom line: She
couldnt do the job.
"I actually was working quite well
with the children, but I wondered if I was capable of doing a job like
this or if I even wanted to go into social work as a career," she
recalls. "I felt embarrassed. I wanted to run away."
Nadeau ultimately decided to stay with
social work but switched to a different internship. She says it took
her a couple of years to "realize how important it was to face
all that I experienced head-on rather than run away from it —
a lesson that taught me how to be a much stronger advocate today.
"I realized the importance of addressing
the issue. I was afraid to ask for help. I thought if it didnt appear
like I needed help it would be OK, but that wasnt the case. When I
did ask for help, I could accomplish so much more. I learned to be really
open about what it is I need and why — and also about what I have
to offer."
Self-advocacy can be scary and uncomfortable,
but ultimately rewarding, Nadeau found. "Sometimes you say, Ive
tried and this isnt happening. But as long as you try the best that
you can, youve made some kind of difference."
The Rules of the Game
Whether self-advocating or addressing
a larger cause, there are some strategies that can make your fight more
effective:
Before you start to fight, sharpen your
sword.
First of all, know exactly what you want
and why. Youd be surprised how many people, caught up in blaming, go
into battle without knowing this.
Next, know your rights under the law.
Make copies of specific policies or codes that apply to your situation.
When youre appealing a denial, make sure
you have all needed documentation from your doctor and that his/her
notes are legible. Be sure you have objective data (test results) in
addition to subjective data (opinions and personal experience).
Gather research on the effectiveness of
the treatment or equipment youre requesting. You may want to make a
video showing how you function with and without the requested equipment,
or keep a diary documenting your condition before and after starting
a certain medication.
Seasoned advocates keep three-ring binders
containing all correspondence, test results, copies of laws and research
reports, and a running diary that lists names, dates and outcomes of
all contacts over the problem. This is an extremely powerful tool.
This kind of preparation enabled Kristine
Biagiotti of Franklin, Mass., to successfully get insurance coverage
for the over-the-counter supplement coQ10 for her 8-year-old daughter,
Kayla, who has a mitochondrial disease (see "Keeping
Your Insurance on Track"). At the appeal hearing, the insurance
lawyer tried to "rattle me with all the legalese wording,"
but found her unshakable.
By being very prepared and understanding
the part of the state regulations she was arguing, and because she had
all the details in place (medical reports, doctors testimony, research
articles, etc.), "it boosted my confidence so I could not be intimidated
and could stand my ground on my specific case."
Remember that communication is a two-way
street.
Communication consists of talking and
listening. A common mistake is to do the first and not the second. Careful
listening enables you to learn more about the other sides position
and uncover clues toward a solution. It also shows respect — which
tends to lead to respect being given back.
To become a better listener, get in the
habit of summarizing what the other person has said: "Let me see
if I understand this correctly"
Dont speak in anger.
Make every attempt to sustain relationships,
especially with people youll have to deal with again. "Its best
to work in a friendly, helpful way," says Mick Mickler, 47, of
Cedar Creek, Texas, who has Duchenne muscular dystrophy. Mickler runs
Disability Advocates, an association that helps people denied government
benefits.
"Approach them with an answer rather
than a complaint," he advises. Even though the problem affects
you personally, dont take it personally. Be as professional as possible,
he adds. "Youre taken with much more credibility if you act credibly."
Put a human face on the problem.
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John Hunter and family |
Tell a story, advises John Hunter, 40,
of Litchfield, Ohio, who has amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS or Lou
Gehrigs disease). Hunters initial request for Social Security Disability
Insurance (SSDI) was denied, and a clerk admitted that his family might
get death benefits before he saw disability benefits.
Outraged, Hunter launched a quest to get
the SSDI approval process changed from the top down. In lobbying members
of Congress in Washington, he told how the denials made a bad situation
worse for his wife and two young children. He says this helped to "make
it a human story they can connect with. Tell how it affects you and
your family. They were very responsive to that."
Seek human contact.
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Anthony Okoro
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Whenever possible, go for face-to-face
interaction. Anthony Okoro, 50, of Washington, D.C., wrote a ream of
letters trying to get housing assistance when his polymyositis forced
him to quit working.
"I kept getting the runaround. They
wouldnt answer my letters. Finally I just went to the housing authority
commissioners meeting and told them about my need for help to pay my
rent. Three months later I got a letter saying I was approved for Section
8 housing assistance."
Okoro continues to employ this approach
when dealing with problems or even filling out routine forms. "I
dont call or write a letter, I just show up. I get acquainted with
the workers, so they know me and I know them."
Talk to the people in
charge.
If the person with whom youre dealing
cant answer your questions or keeps citing policy, ask to speak to
the supervisor. Politely move up the power chain until you find the
person with authority to make decisions.
Enlist their help.
Sometimes, the "other side"
isnt so much an enemy as a befuddled bureaucracy. Assume you both want
to see this problem worked out successfully. State your case and ask,
"Can you help me get this straightened out? What do you think I
should do? Who should I talk to?"
Making allies out of enemies is your strongest
suit.
Get educated.
Network with others to gain skills, contacts,
support and information about their experiences. Try to find some advocacy
training. (Check your local chapter of The Arc, which sponsors training
for parents of children with disabilities. See "Money
Trail Resources.") Biagiotti says advocacy training "greatly
helped me with planning my case."
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Nick
Dupree savors his victory over Medicaid outside the Federal Courthouse
in Montgomery, Ala.
Kiichiro Sato/Mobile Register
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Get the media involved.
Not every injustice is a front-page story.
But when it is, the media can be a powerful friend.
"I couldnt have done it without
the media," says Nick Dupree, 21, of Mobile, Ala., who has an undiagnosed,
severe form of muscular dystrophy. Dupree successfully fought a Medicaid
age requirement that would have eliminated his in-home nursing care
and forced him into a nursing home when he turned 21. His advocacy ended
up sparking wholesale changes in Alabamas Medicaid rules. (For more
on Duprees story, see www.mda.org/news/030213nickdupree.html.)
Dupree launched a Web site (www.nickscrusade.com)
and an articulate letter-writing campaign, but it wasnt until the media
got involved that his message was heard. "Letters raise awareness
but they dont necessarily raise the level of caring," he says.
Legislators care more "when a reporter puts them on camera and
says, OK, what are you going to do about this?"
But Dupree admits its very hard to get
the media interested in a story. Connections often are the key. The
wife of a friend knew a local TV reporter who initially covered his
quest; a national disability rights advocate "knew a guy who knew
a guy who knew Joe Shapiro at National Public Radio."
Show the right stuff.
"Life is unfair," Okoro says.
"But the big mistake people make when they are being treated unfairly
is they give up and they think that the whole world is against them."
Have a "tough mind," Okoro urges.
Hang in there. "One cannot expect magic overnight. Everything takes
time. Be patient, persistent and have a positive attitude."
It really helps to "become comfortable
with yourself as a person, comfortable with your disability," Nadeau
says. "Know what your strengths are and what you can bring to a
situation."
Advocacy isnt for sissies, Dupree observes
wryly. "I dont envy people that are having to do this. It takes
a lot out of you." The stress of his campaign briefly landed him
in the hospital with an opportunistic infection.
But the stress didnt decrease his motivation,
he says. "You have to care enough to do it every day. Thats what
you need more than any strategy. Do something, write somebody, every
day."
Is it worth it? "Yeah, its worth
it," he says. "It would have been worth it even if I hadnt
won, because its important to make a stand and raise awareness. Its
the right thing to do.
"It doesnt matter if you win, you
just gotta try." 
Click here to read about keeping your insurance coverage
on track |