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Home » Blogs » Couch in Crisis

Psychiatric Times.
COUCH IN CRISIS 

Diagnostic Criteria for PIISD – Private Insurance Induced Stress Disorder

By Carol A. Paris, MD | October 28, 2010
Dr Paris is a member of the Maryland Chapter of Physicians for a National Health Program and a board certified adult psychiatrist in private practice in Leonardtown, Maryland.

The essential feature of private insurance induced stress disorder (PIISD) is the development of characteristic symptoms following exposure to an insurance-induced traumatic stressor involving direct personal experience of an event or witnessing an event that threatens another person. Traumatic events include, but are not limited to, recission of health insurance after developing a costly illness, denial of health insurance due to a pre-existing condition such as being female and fertile or delay of needed treatment or medication due to requirements for pre-authorization. In the case of physicians, traumatic events include witnessing the deterioration of patients due to financial ruin resulting from uncovered costs of care. Similar to some forms of PTSD, this disorder is prone to be severe because the stressor is of human/corporate design. Note: this diagnosis is not currently reimbursed by health insurance carriers.

Diagnostic criteria for PIISD include a history of exposure to a traumatic insurance-induced event meeting the following criteria and symptoms:

Criterion A: The person has been exposed to a traumatic insurance-induced event in which both of the following have been present:

• The person has experienced a health insurance traumatic event, due either to lack of access to health insurance, or due to failure of their health insurance to meet their health care needs. (NOTE: in the case of physicians/providers, the trauma is based on the inability to provide needed care to one’s patients, or doing so at one’s personal expense, ie, free care and/or oppressive paperwork burdens).
• The person’s traumatic response involved intense fear, helplessness, anger, and confusion and was caused by financial considerations that seriously complicate their (or their patient’s) medical treatment and recovery.

Criterion B: The traumatic event is persistently reexperienced in one (or more) of the following ways:

• Feelings of anger, frustration, and shame at the thought of one’s inability to access (or provide) needed care.
• Feelings of alienation from and abandonment by one’s countrymen and elected officials, precipitated by exposure to any form of corporate-controlled news media coverage of the health care crisis.
 • Feelings of inadequacy, as an individual, as a family member, or as a physician/provider, due to the repeated inability to obtain needed care for oneself, one’s family member, or one’s patient.
• Avoidance of seeking, or providing, needed care due to fear of serious financial strain or even bankruptcy.
• Fear of an acute confusional state or other cognitive disorder following attempts to understand one’s EOBs (explanation of benefits).

Criterion C: Persistent avoidance of stimuli associated with the trauma and numbing of general responsiveness, as indicated by three or more of the following:

• Efforts to avoid thoughts, feelings or conversations about anything related to health insurance or healthcare.
• Efforts to avoid interactions with physicians, hospitals or health care centers that arouse recollection of the trauma. In the case of physicians, efforts to avoid patients who are experiencing health insurance trauma.
• Markedly diminished interest or participation in significant activities.
• Feelings of detachment or estrangement from others.
• Restricted range of affect (eg, unable to experience feelings of wellbeing)
• Sense of foreshortened future (eg, does not expect to have a career, marriage, children, or a normal life span). In the case of physicians, does not expect to remain in practice, anticipates early retirement or disability due to consequences of health insurance trauma.

Criterion D: Persistent symptoms of increased arousal, as indicated by two or more of the following:

• Difficulty falling or staying asleep, due to intrusive thoughts about the health insurance trauma.
• Irritability or outbursts of anger. In the case of physicians, this often results in sanctions, possible loss of hospital privileges, and being labeled a “disruptive physician.” In the case of patients, it often results in suspiciousness directed at one’s physician, often being labeled a “difficult patient.”
• Difficulty concentrating, resulting in functional impairment and further jeopardizing career, health, and sense of wellbeing.
• Hypervigilance, (eg, won’t let children play on playground equipment for fear of minor injury resulting in possible retraumatizing need to interact with one’s health insurance company).

Criterion E: The disturbance causes clinically significant distress or impairment in social, occupational, or other important areas of functioning.

Specify if:
 With bankruptcy
 With home foreclosure

 

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by sobia Khurram | January 29, 2011 3:56 PM EST

Health care needs to be divorced from financial situation, for the patient and for the healthcare system.

It is exciting for me to know that some one is taking that one step.

Sobia Khurram

by Thea Schneider | January 04, 2011 5:39 PM EST

Hoped it was a joke, yet sadly there are many supporting your idea!!

by f weinstein | December 23, 2010 11:32 AM EST

I would definately endorese this as a new diagnostic category for DSMV! I have spent many sessions with patients working  through PIISD related issues as well as after hours care via phone with suicidal/ withdrawing patient's because their psychotropics or pain medications were suddently not authorized and they ran out.  Patient's feel disbelieved about their symptoms, become depressed, suicidal etc. Please also add to specify if... Workers Compensation.  Thanks for the humor! F. Weinstein

by James Knoll | December 14, 2010 8:17 PM EST

Well done Dr. Paris!!!

The diagnosis of PIISD must be conquered post haste, as we all have patients to treat and I do not believe there is any service connections for this disorder.

At what point must we stand united and proclaim:
What is the difference between ICU life support and 1:1 monitoring for suicide?  What is the difference between quality psychotherapy and brain surgery?  I propose that any distinctions are stigma based form over substance.

Kudos!
J

by Carol Paris | November 18, 2010 10:51 PM EST

I'm just catching up on the comments regarding PIISD; yes, it is pronounced "pissed"and is meant to be a parody, poking sharply at the private health insurance industry that is the cause of an enormous burden of secondary anxiety and depression in patients and physicians, alike.  Thank you, Dr. Pies, for directing readers to www.pnhp.org as a wonderful resource for learning about single payer.  There is so much misinformation promulgated by the mainstream media outlets concerning single payer/Improved Medicare for All.  Perhaps this is because of overlapping directorates; the boards of directors of the health insurance industry overlaps with the boards of directors of the mainstream media outlets, according to a report by FAIR-Fairness and Accuracy in Reporting. 

It is looking very hopeful that Vermont will become the first state to pass and enact single payer legislation on a state-wide basis and, when they do, I will have my Vermont medical license ready and waiting.  I am so tired of dealing with the hassles of multiple insurance companies, at a cost of $68,000 to $72,000 per physician per practice per year, according to a report in Health Affairs last year.  I sure could put that money to better use.

Stay tuned.  One of my colleagues in PNHP suggested we start a group called "Physicians Anonymous" for all those physicians who are feeling powerless over health insurance and whose lives have become unmanageable as a result of having to deal with them on a daily basis. 

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