Archive for Botox
Navigating Hyperhidrosis And Me
Posted by: · on November 29, 2010 | CommentsIt has been just over a year since I started putting together this website. As most big projects do, this site has evolved over time. My main goal for this site has remained unchanged: to offer a safe place to come and empathize with others’ hyperhidrosis stories, and to provide a place where one can find advice as well as product and treatment recommendations.
I quickly learned a few things: First, there is a lot of information regarding hyperhidrosis available, and quite a few treatments and products that need to be explained and reviewed. I did my best to research every real treatment option and provide you readers with accurate information. I also found that there are many products on the market that can help you manage and conceal the sweating. Organizing all this information has been a challenge! At times I worry that navigating this site is not as easy as I would like it to be.
Blog posts are organized by categories, which you can find below the title of the site. Pages describing treatments, strategies, and various products can be found above the title of the site. If you want to know about a particular treatment, Botox for example, click on Treatment Options, and you will see a menu drop down where “Botox” can be found. You can also click on “Botox” on a category tab (below the title of the site) and you will be taken to blog posts where I discuss Botox. When I discuss Botox in a post, I also usually provide a link to my PAGE for Botox too. Confusing? I hope not!
If you would like to know more about ETS (Endoscopic Thoracic Sympathectomy), please don’t hesitate to download the report I offer for free here. I will not give anyone your email address or require you hand over your Firstborn (thanks, I have enough kids). You will simply be added to my list of folks who get an email once a week containing my latest blog posts… and you can opt out of that if you want to.
Something you will NEVER find here is a recommendation or Heaven forbid, a link to any scammy sure-fire “cures” for hyperhidrosis. That was the biggest surprise for me when I embarked on this journey. The ratio of fake cures to real cures for hyperhidrosis is depressingly huge. This is something I talk about a lot here, because it does two things: it rips people off, and it also makes it very difficult for people like me, who offer only genuine and honest help, to be found. There are several honest sites for hyperhidrosis– maybe a dozen?– and hundreds of scams. Hundreds. You have probably found many of them before you found me, yes?
I hope this little navigation tutorial can help you find your way around this site!
HyperhidrosisAndMe Weekly Spotlight: Insurance Coverage for Hyperhidrosis
Posted by: · on September 7, 2010 | Comments
The spotlight this week is on health insurance coverage for hyperhidrosis. I know, YAWN. Please keep reading, though– I have a few points to make that could help with your treatment!
If you have….by any chance… read my report on ETS (on your right, over there →
), you may know that you really MUST be proactive in dealing with your coverage.
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Herewith, a few facts and tips:
- In case you haven’t noticed (sarcasm alert), hyperhidrosis does not seem to get much attention in society at large, and also is the red-headed stepchild in the medical community as well. This tends to result in health insurance policies either giving extremely narrow coverage parameters, or ignoring the disorder altogether.
- You really need to know what your policy does or does not cover. Absolutely do not, DO NOT, call your insurance company and ask if something is covered. Read the damn thing yourself. This was a mistake that I made that very nearly cost my family $20,000. It didn’t cost me in cash in the end, but the distress it caused was very real and completely unnecessary. Hypothetically: You call your insurance company and ask, “Am I covered for Botox treatments for hyperhidrosis?” The person on the other end (who gets paid whether or not the answer you get is accurate or not) may respond, “Well, is it medically necessary?” To which you reply, “Yes, absolutely, I think so!” That person then replies, “Well, then you’re covered!” Then, you merrily go on your way and get the treatment. Weeks or months later, a letter comes in the mail from your beloved insurance company informing you that you did not take the proper steps to prove medical necessity and therefore coverage for the treatment is rescinded. And you are left with the bill. Really. That happened to me, but the treatment was not Botox. It was about 20× more expensive.
- Oftentimes, the aforementioned “proper steps to prove medical necessity” for anything invasive and/or expensive require you to do any number of things, such as taking oral medication, using a prescription topical treatment, iontophoresis, etc. Skip any of these steps at your own expense.
- Many policies I have reviewed will only pay for treatment of hyperhidrosis if hyperhidrosis is directly causing skin infections or diseases. This means that you are only eligible for relief from sweating if the sweating is causing you bodily harm. Because we are apparently not suffering enough. (sorry, insurance makes me snarky)
- If your insurance company balks at covering your treatments, a letter of medical necessity from your doctor may change their stance.
- If your insurance company refuses to cover your treatments or if you feel you are being treated unfairly, do not hesitate to contact the insurance commission for your state. This is one of the things that I did, and I think it really helped my case.
- Keep a written record of all communication between you and the insurance company: dates, names, brief outlines of conversations. Also print out any emails and keep any letters. Again, that probably factored in my little victory.
- If it is worth the expense, don’t be afraid to get a lawyer involved. Once again, I did!
- For more information and to download letters of medical necessity and other helpful forms, go to http://www.SweatHelp.org, which is the website for the International Hyperhidrosis Society. See “Insurance Tools”– they have it all covered (pun intended
)!
Please keep in mind that it costs insurance companies NOTHING to rescind payment or promise of payment for a procedure/treatment you have already received! My lawyer told me that the vast majority of people who are denied coverage just accept the decision. Don’t be one of them.
You have a medical disorder: Your Sympathetic Nervous System does not work properly. You do need medical intervention to correct it. You pay for medical insurance; therefore, you have the right to coverage for the medical interventions your hyperhidrosis requires. It is wrong that you should have to fight for that. But you may have to– and I hope you will.
If we don’t fight for what we are entitled to, how will anything change? Do you want to fight insurance companies for the next 20 years? I don’t.
Botox for Palmar Hyperhidrosis
Posted by: · on August 7, 2010 | CommentsI follow RealSelf.com on Twitter, and they posted a video that shows Botox being administered to a patient’s hand for Palmar Hyperhidrosis. Botox has become a relatively popular treatment for Axillary, or Underarm, Hyperhidrosis, especially since Hyperhidrosis became classified earlier this year as a skin disease, making this expensive treatment eligible for coverage by many health insurance policies.
Generally speaking, Botox is an acknowledged treatment for Palmar/Plantar Hyperhidrosis but not as many dermatologists administer the drug for those areas. This is due to mainly two reasons:
- The parent company of Botox, Allergan, does not officially state on its website that Botox is meant to treat these areas. The website officially acknowledges Botox as a treatment for Axillary Hyperhidrosis and makes no mention of Botox being administered for any other type of Hyperhidrosis.
- Botox injections administered in the hands and feet are significantly more painful, and many patients shy away from this treatment. Therefore, the demand for it is lower, which reduces the number of doctors who are experienced in doing it or who are even willing to do it.
Here is the video, which does show the treatment being administered (it’s not so bad, and I am squeamish!
):
After watching this video, the thought of having Botox done in the hands is not as…. unthinkable, even for little ol’ Needle-Phobic me! After all, four minutes of discomfort for six months of relief is not such a bad deal. This doctor practices in the San Francisco area; here is the link to the RealSelf page: http://www.realself.com/question/stop-sweaty-palms-botox







