A Legal Victory for the "Invisibly" Disabled!

I've spent time sitting in the office of Senator Schumer (D-NY) and even had appointments with the aides of Mike Thompson (D-CA), Xavier Becerra (D-CA) and Stephanie T. Jones (D-OH) - all members of the House Subcommittee on Health. My issue? Reforming ERISA so that genuinely disabled persons,
particularly those of us with autoimmune and invisible disabilities. Get a fair shake from the Insurance Industry.

Did you know that the Insurance Industry is the SECOND largest lobbying faction in Washington? Remember that your premiums may be paying for free lunches to Washington policy makers so that your claims are delayed or denied!

CA Jury Awards FM/CFS Patient
$15.4 Million in Disability Suit

by ImmuneSupport.com

On Thursday March 8, 2007 a jury in the Superior Court of San Diego County, California ordered Prudential Insurance Company of America to pay FM and CFS patient Darla Johnson $14 million in punitive damages.

This was in addition to an award of $982,082 in compensatory damages the jury had awarded her the previous week to cover back and future disability benefits the company had fully terminated – plus general damages of $500,000 “for the grief, humiliation, and inconvenience caused by the improper termination of benefits,” according to the San Diego-based legal firm of , Simpson & Moore, LLP, which represented Ms. Johnson.

Prudential charged that Ms. Johnson, age 49, had not submitted enough evidence to prove she is disabled. But the jury decided otherwise, after a six-week trial during which Ms. Johnson spent much of the time with her head down on the table or resting on the floor.

Formerly a University Construction Manager
By way of background, the attorneys reported, “As a project manager in the University of California-San Francisco's construction department, Ms. Johnson bought into a group plan providing coverage for income replacement if she became unable to work. In May 1995, Ms. Johnson was diagnosed with Lupus, Fibromyalgia Syndrome, Chronic Fatigue Syndrome, and Antiphospholipid Antibody Syndrome, and had to stop working.
"After approximately five years of paying benefits [at half her income before she stopped working], Prudential terminated Ms. Johnson's benefits. Two internal appeals were denied, and Ms. Johnson had to file suit to correct the wrongful termination of her policy benefits.”
Prudential maintained that the termination decision was proper, because Ms. Johnson was not able to provide sufficient objective evidence to substantiate her disability.

Landmark Victory for Victims of Such Illnesses
Before the decision to halt payments, Prudential sent Ms. Johnson to a physician for “an independent medical exam,” which resulted in a report indicating she was not disabled, according to coverage of the case in the March 10, 2007 issue of the San Diego Union-Tribune. An expert for the defense testified that the insurer had begun to require “more stringent objective evidence to support disability claims, such as X-rays and blood tests,” the Union-Tribune article stated. But Ms. Johnson’s case involved “a perfunctory exam” and “a perfunctory report,” Charles Moore, one of her attorneys, reportedly charged. “He was paid to find she wasn’t disabled.”

“This case is a landmark victory for anyone with Lupus, Fibromyalgia Syndrome, Chronic Fatigue Syndrome, or other illness or syndrome for which there is limited objective medical evidence,” Moore stated.
Admittedly, the award for punitive damages that the jury called for is huge, and there’s some debate as to whether it is within legal limits. Prudential plans to appeal. But the bigger questions are whether Ms. Johnson will actually receive some of this compensation – and if so, when? It could take three years for her to receive any money, comments her lead defense attorney, Sean Simpson.


ORIGINAL

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