Faith in the System

Time: Faith in the System

Three years ago, James Lansberry faced the kind of health care crisis that has become all too common in the U.S. Less than two weeks after his wife Theresa gave birth to their sixth child, she had to rush back to the hospital to have her appendix removed before it burst. Her medical bills eventually totaled more than $23,000. It would have been a stressful time for any family — but especially for those who, like the Lansberrys, do not have health insurance.

But James, the sole breadwinner for his Peoria, Ill., family, didn't lose sleep over the cost of his wife's procedure and hospital stay. The Lansberrys belong to what is called a health-sharing ministry, an organization whose Christian members pay one another's medical costs. Within a few weeks of Theresa's appendectomy, the family received checks (and get-well cards) from more than 100 people in 21 states, covering the medical costs and offering prayers for her recovery. "We didn't worry about the bills," says James. "God took care of us." (See the top 10 religion stories of 2009.)

Organized Christian health-sharing arrangements, which first cropped up in the early 1980s, have become an alternative to traditional health insurance for an estimated 100,000 Americans. The groups range from small, community-based collectives to large, multistate organizations like Samaritan Ministries International and Medi-Share, which each month direct the flow of millions of dollars from individuals to fellow members with eligible health care expenses. The bill-sharing premise is based on biblical principles in verses like Hebrews 13: 16: "Do not forget to do good and to share with others."

But there's also a significant financial appeal. Lansberry and his wife have seven children, but as Samaritan members, they pay just $320 a month in "shares," the ministry equivalent of premiums. At a time when the average monthly health-insurance cost for a family of four is slightly more than $1,500, the savings can be substantial.

Is there a catch? Yes, there are several. For starters, Samaritan and other health ministries will turn down applicants if they're too obese. (Samaritan's main rival, Medi-Share, accepts people with certain chronic health problems but only if they agree to work with a "health coach.") If accepted, members must attend church regularly — and have that attendance verified by a pastor — and abstain from tobacco use in order to maintain their status.

At Samaritan, members generally have to pay out of pocket for preventive care like wellness checkups for children and routine tests like mammograms. Other ministries pay only when a bill is more than $300 and only if it falls within guidelines voted on by the ministry's members. For members of Medi-Share, that means a second bout with breast cancer will be deemed ineligible if it occurs within 15 years of the first. Unwed women's maternity care is covered only in rape cases. …


Comments

3 responses to “Faith in the System”

  1. These ministries also make you sign some pretty restrictive doctrinal statements that, even as a minister, I’m not comfortable with. My husband, who doesn’t like doctrinal statements (which he sees as other people telling him what to believe), refuses to sign any kind of doctrinal statement. All the ones I’ve investigated also say that you have to promise not to drink any alcohol at all. Even though I’ve not had any alcohol since we moved to the US in August 2009 (that’s my “typical drinking pattern”), I would not sign such a statement. For one thing, it would prevent me from having communion in both elements in a denomination which uses wine.
    Nonetheless, I think it’s a good example of what I was calling on my blog “co operative insurance” (I know that, strictly speaking it’s not insurance. I also know that there have been issues with how these ministries should be regulated.)
    My friend who died of cancer in April had excellent health insurance on account of being a hospital Chaplain but she got to see her bills. She mentioned to me that the last treatment she had – cyberknife surgery for a brain tumor – cost $90,000. Many cancer patients run up bills of between $1 million and $2 million. One of the reasons why, even though we are healthy 50-somethings, I have a hard time with people telling me “You can’t afford health insurance? Well, just suck it up because the free market is a more important priority.”

  2. I applaud this sort of thing, but not covering unwed maternity care isn’t very pro-life. I also don’t understand the rationale for not covering a recurrence of breast cancer? If you get it again, it must mean it’s God’s will?

  3. I found some of the specifics a little odd but I thought the general idea was interesting. In many ways it is retro back to the early 1900s and “friendly societies” (I think that is what they were called) before the rise of the AMA drove them out of existence. These societies operated in a similar manner. Then the AMA concentrated power with doctors and medical institutions.

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