A user posted this information in a reply to a somewhat obscure topic heading. I thought I would repost it in hopes that more individuals read it.
After battling my insurance company since 2003 I got my excision portion approved (the liposuction was not that much more) in December 2007. I cited the gynecomastia case from New York in which a gyencomastia sufferer sued his insurance company and won. Here are the generically relevant passages of my insurance company appeal I filed. Because gynecomastia is painful you must also include numerous ER visits to document gynecomastia pain and functional impairement and the insurance company will realize it is cheaper to pay a few thousand on the surgery than tens of thousands in ER costs:
Courts have ruled that gynecomastia surgery is medically necessary.
Certainly instructive is Steven S. v. GHI 2004 NY Slip Op 24464, 6 Misc. 3d 213, 787 N.Y.S.2d 828, 2004 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2327, affirmed on appeal in Schulman v. Group Health Incorporated, 2007 NY Slip Op 2804, 39 A.D.3d 223, 833 N.Y.S.2d 62, 2007 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 4127 (Supreme Court of New York, Appellate Division 2007) wherein the court ruled that gynecomastia surgery, even without pain or considering the serious risk of cancer was neither elective nor cosmetic. It held that gynecomastia surgery was medically necessary treatment to eliminate impaired functioning and that “gynecomastia was an objective, tangible, and unusual source of turmoil, more akin to a clubfoot or cleft palate than to a large nose, heavy acne, or diminutive breasts on an adolescent female. The latter conditions, while objective and tangible, are relatively common and often lead to elective and cosmetic treatments.”
Cancer risk makes gynecomastia surgery medically necessary.
The breast is an epicenter of cancerous activity in the body. The genesis of many a cancerous death starts by suspicious lumps in the breast of both sexes. The procedure is medically necessary because the gynecomastia tissue removed in the procedure would be sent to a pathology lab for analysis for cancer and pre-cancerous cells. Women merely worried about possible cancer risk haven taken to prophylactic breast removal to thwart cancer in the future. Therefore, all men with gynecomastia are entitled as of right to have medically necessary gynecomastia surgery to prevent cancer. See Ductal carcinoma in situ in a 16-year old adolescent boy with gynecomastia: a case report, J Pediatr Surg. 2005 Aug;40(:1349-53; Gynecomastia, neurofibromatosis and breast cancer, Breast. 2004 Feb;13(1):77-9; Breast enlargement in young men not always gynecomastia: breast cancer in a 22-year old man, ANZ J Surg. 2005 Oct;75(10):914-6; Bilateral atypical ductal hyperplasia, an incidental finding in gynecomastia – case report and literature review, Breast. 2005 Aug;14(4):317-21; Male gynecomastia and risk for malignant tumors – a cohort study, BMC Cancer. 2002 Oct 16;2:26.
The standard of care for male patients with suspicious breast masses is to remove all the festering painful fibrofattyductal breast tissue and send it to the pathology lab. Unlike females, males do not need to preserve breast tissue for social or functional purposes and gynecomastia surgery is medically necessary and akin to tonsillectomy, appendectomy, and wisdom teeth removal, in that it is standard surgical practice to remove unnecessary painful and diseased body parts for the good of the patient.
Gynecomastia pain makes the surgery medically necessary
Clearly, gynecomastia is a painful condition. In fact, the medical helpline referred [insert your name] to the emergency room to get on pain medicine in order to document the pain which would make the removal of the offending tissue medically necessary. There is clear support in the medical literature that removal of gynecomastia tissue ameliorates gynecomastia pain. See Gynecomastia due to hormone therapy for advanced prostate cancer: a report of ten surgically treated cases and a review of treatment options. Tumori. 2004 Jul-Aug;90(4):410-5. Again that the condition is deteriorating only serves to validate that the surgery is medically necessary back when first requested on [insert first requested date]. [insert insurance carrier's name]'s Tuskegee-like policy of letting a covered insured languish for five years is punitive, outrageous, malicious, bad faith denial of coverage, and civilly actionable.
Denial of requested surgery is violates federal law and is unconstitutional as applied
Even assuming, in arguendo, that the procedure was cosmetic, the coverage policy manual covers a myriad of cosmetic breast surgeries for women such as providing or removing breast implants as described in the section relating to female breasts on [insert page and section numbers]. Incidentally, the manual implies the notion that female breast tissue is often removed for medically necessary purposes. Most cogently, because cosmetic breast surgery is provided for women, it must also be provided for men who want to remove allegedly cosmetic gynecomastia tissue and this must be so in order to avoid running afoul of the Civil Rights Act and the United States Constitution’s Fourteenth Amendment Equal Protection Clause. Although the right to the surgical procedure at issue is not a fundamental right, the discrimination based on the sex of a citizen requires that a court nonetheless apply the strict scrutiny standard. Therefore, disparate provision of two citizens of different genders the benefit of cosmetic breast surgery amounts to unconstitutional discrimination no different than and subject to the same constitutional scrutiny as voting and employment discrimination based on sex. However, a court need not necessarily analyze this issue because the surgery is medically necessary and not cosmetic.
This seems to be an excellent and researched source to prepare an appeal to your insurance company.
NOTE: Some of this information may be provider specific, and you should ensure it applies to your situation before submitting.
m90291 if you are still frequenting the forum, it would be great to have you ellaborate a bit on your successful claim.