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Gyno Surgery, Things to say to your doc

  • Thread starter Thread starter BLAZAY
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BLAZAY

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Hi guys,
I need a couple of suggestions that mightv'e worked for you guys. Im trying to get my insurance to cover my gyno surgery and what im gonna say is true and the insurance should cover it but i need some more things to add in.

Basically first off im gonna go to my doc and be like , "doc, my gyno is really painful, so painful that i cant go to sleep at night because when my chest touches the bedsheet it causes alot of discomfort causing me to get very little sleep.

This is true, and was just wondering if theres anything else that i could say that mightve worked for you guys when it came to having your insurance cover your surgery.
 
99% chance it wont matter. Gyno in men is VERY VERY RARELY covered by insurance, unless you get lucky. Ive heard tons of stories where people exagerate their symptoms to the extreme and insurance still turns down the claims. You have to remember, insurance claims only make money by NOT granting claim money. Basically youre problem has to be life threatening...Insurance companies are dicks lol.

-Legacy
 
i live in nj, and im pretty sure if pain is involved and not cosmetic purposes it should be covered.. mr nitro can you let us kno what you said that might help the rest of us in the same boat
 
BLAZAY said:
Hi guys,
I need a couple of suggestions that mightv'e worked for you guys. Im trying to get my insurance to cover my gynecomastia surgery and what im gonna say is true and the insurance should cover it but i need some more things to add in.

Basically first off im gonna go to my doc and be like , "doc, my gynecomastia is really painful, so painful that i cant go to sleep at night because when my chest touches the bedsheet it causes alot of discomfort causing me to get very little sleep.

This is true, and was just wondering if theres anything else that i could say that mightve worked for you guys when it came to having your insurance cover your surgery.

Quite a few guys on the boards have theirs covered by insurance. I think the key is to emphasize the discomfort and that it interferes with sleep and normal daily routine.
 
yea thats what im aiming for so hopefully it works, i just wanted to add something that mightve worked for other people that i dont have in my arguement yet..
 
it is all about the Doc
My Doc is a client of my company..so we did trade
basically he told the insurance company he was concerned about the possibility of cancer...and that also the possiblity of visual disfigurement would classify as disability it was either do the surgery or let me tap into my key man insurance..which would have cost them FAR FAR FAR more than the gyno surgery... so they went right ahead and ponied up the $$$ :coffee:
 
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