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I'm afraid I have to sort of agree with the article, because that very scenario happened to me. I was diagnosed with sleep apnea while I was working for a small startup and received my CPAP through my company's health insurance. The CPAP worked so well for me that I thought of myself as healthier than ever. When I was laid off in 2001, I didn't bother with COBRA because it was so expensive that I knew I could find a much cheaper individual policy. Imagine my surprise when I found out that I was considered uninsurable due to a pre-existing condition. I would argue with each insurance company that if I hadn't bothered with the sleep test and didn't use a CPAP, they would gladly offer me a policy even though I would be at much higher risk for heart attack or stroke. Every insurer had the same response - "That may be true, but we have no guarantee that you will actually use your CPAP." I was flabbergasted, and wound up going bare-back (no health insurance at all) for 14 months until I found another job and was insured under a group policy.
The moral of my story is that if you are laid off and you are using CPAP, make sure you go COBRA and continue your group policy. Part of Obama's stimulus plan provides for the government covering 65% of COBRA costs for up to nine months, so it shouldn't be a the terrible economic burden that it used to be.
Back then, I had received my CPAP from a National DME that has five letters in its name. It was a REMstar LX with no data collecting capabilites. It was clearly used before they gave it to me. They handed it to me along with a Goldseal mask (anyone else remember that torture device?) and wished me good luck. I was so clueless at the time, I was unaware that there were other options, or that there was more than one type of mask out there.
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