Dr. Slattery from House Ear Clinic wrote this letter for me to assist in getting United Healthcare to cover ALL of my BAHA:
"To Whom It May Concern:
This letter concerns Sally Hamilton who is insured through United Healthcare. This letter is to assist in seeking positive pre-determination of coverage and authorization for a bone anchored hearing aid (BAHA) partial implant surgery and follow-up. The surgery is an outpatient procedure with general anesthesia and will be performed at Emory Hospital, Georgia by Dr. Douglas Mattox.
Sally Hamilton, age 44, has been diagnosed with single-sided deafness as a result of an acoustic neuroma. This was removed on 1/3/02, at St. Vincent Medical Center in Los Angeles by me and a team of doctors. She an excellent candidate for the implantable BAHA device. Previous trials with traditional hearing aids have not been successful due to the profound nature of the hearing loss, the demands of her employment and postoperative sensitivity of her deaf ear.
The BAHA device is a vibrotactal sound processor that will pick up sound on her deaf side and send it to the intact cochlea on the contralateral side. The partially implanted vibrotactial sound processor is similar to other prosthesis such as a cochlear implant.
If you have any further questions regarding Ms. Hamilton, please do not hesitate to contact me."
I also wrote a lengthy letter to UHC asking them if they'd rather pay out medical benefits for the rest of my life after I got hit by a car because I didn't hear it approaching on my deaf side, and how could they pay for reconstructive surgery for losing a breast to cancer or for a prosthesis for losing a limb and not cover a device that could help give me back such an important sense such as hearing. I went on and on but in the end it worked! I even went as far as to say I'd gladly give up a breast if I could have my hearing back.