Web Search powered by YAHOO! SEARCH
TEXT SIZE: A A A A
email this
print this
reprint or license this
TOM GRALISH / Inquirer Staff Photographer
Dan Daskus and his wife, Debra, spread their bills on a coffee table in their Minersville, Pa., home. Daskus used up $4,500 in savings and maxed out his credit cards paying for cancer treatments, medicine and household expenses.
1 of 4
RELATED STORIES
 
MULTIMEDIA EXTRA An Inquirer Seres: The Uninsured
SAVE AND SHARE


Victimized by the coverage gap

After Dan Daskus came down with cancer, the cost of co-pays and medicines left him thousands in debt.

MINERSVILLE, Pa. - Dan Daskus' greatest pleasure was driving to the Susquehanna River in his Dodge truck and going bass fishing.

He took special pride in his pickup, with heated seats and leather interior. "That truck was my mark in life," said Daskus, 41. "I mean, it's not much, but for me that was everything. The only thing I loved more was my wife.

"Never missed a payment," he added.

That was until he got cancer in July 2007, couldn't work, lost his job, and went $27,000 in debt - partly from co-pays and medicines his insurance didn't cover.

On July 16 at 2 a.m., the repo man came to his home in Schuylkill County, loaded the truck on a flatbed, and drove it away in the dead of night.

"I cry when I think about that truck," he says. "It's humiliating to me that I can't pay my bills."

His is a common humiliation. The magnitude of the crisis is well known: 46 million uninsured, according to the U.S. Census Bureau; 80 million struggling to pay medical bills, according to the nonprofit Commonwealth Fund; premiums paid by workers doubling in 10 years, according to the journal Health Affairs; and at least 18,000 people a year dying because they lack health insurance, according to the Institute of Medicine.

This series, in the coming weeks, will bring those numbers to life.

Stories like these are hidden and rarely draw attention - a temp worker who can't get a cancer test until she gets insurance; a home health aide who can't afford a hernia operation; a young rock and roller who gives a fake name to avoid an emergency-room bill.

These aren't exceptional cases. And that's the point.

Daskus, 41, grew up in Minersville, three miles from Pottsville, in small-town central Pennsylvania. He has worked since he was 19. He was in trade school to become a cabinetmaker, but his father died, and he worked to help support his mother.

For 16 years, he worked for Schuylkill Products, a company that made concrete highway bridge beams. In 2006, he took a job with Tredegar Performance Films, closer to his home, operating a machine that made plastic wrap for paper towels.

He was earning about $2,000 a month, with a raise due when he hit his one-year anniversary. He was paying $256 a month out of his check for health insurance for him and his wife.

In the summer of 2007, he had fatigue, fever and flu symptoms that he couldn't shake. He assumed this was just the consequence of working staggered shifts - nights, days, then nights again - which can wear a man out fast.

His doctor, Lynda Graves, suspected Hodgkin's lymphoma, a highly treatable cancer, and put him on medical leave from his job. He went on short-term disability pay, 25 percent of his salary.

An oncologist found a mass in his chest, took a biopsy, and confirmed the diagnosis.

That day, on the way home from the doctor, Daskus and his wife, Debra, 51, stopped at the animal shelter and brought home two cats, Dingbat and Morris.

"I thought a cat would calm him," said Debra Daskus.

"We got them as a distraction," said Dan Daskus. "Something to think about besides dying and cancer."

Doctors, he said, decided to give him chemo to kill the cancer, then do radiation to shrink the tumor.

Page:   1  of  4  View All
1 |   2 |   3 |   4      Next»
  • Jobs
  • Cars
  • Real Estate
  • Rentals
 
SEARCH JOBS
Find a Car | Sell a Car | Research | Loans
Spotlight Deal

North Penn Imports Vw Mazda
(877) 762-8158
'99 Ford Windstar SEL
$5,990
'01 Pontiac Grand Am SE1
$5,999
'05 Ford Freestyle Limited
$13,595
'09 Toyota Corolla LE
$17,995
SEARCH CARS Used  New 
Spotlight Deal
Jenkintown 19046
Spotlight Deal
Glenside 19038
SEARCH REAL ESTATE
Spotlight Deal
Rittenhouse Square 19103
Spotlight Deal
University City 19104
SEARCH RENTALS
find an event
Fr
Dec 5
Sa
Dec 6
Su
Dec 7
Mo
Dec 8
Tu
Dec 9
Venue search: - by name
- by cuisine
- by venue type, e.g. "movie theater"
Location search:
- Philadelphia, PA
- 19101
- Center City
Venue search:
- by name
- by cuisine
- by venue type, e.g. "movie theater"
Location search:
- Philadelphia, PA
- 19101
- Center City
Date search:
Select which day you would like to search events, or select Search all days
Event search:
Type in the name of the event, or event type, e.g. 'live music'
SPORTS
High Cheese: Phillies GM Ruben Amaro would not confirm or deny a report that the team has made a formal offer to starting right-handed pitcher Derek Lowe.
OBITUARIES
Nicholas Montos, the oldest prison inmate in Massachusetts and a career criminal who was the first person to make the FBI's Ten Most Wanted list twice...
Green
Sandy Bauers: Lighting experts are still tinkering with the technology to get LEDs that can replace the bulb in an end-table lamp. But where they really shine is in holiday lighting displays.
Philadelphia Inquirer
WASHINGTON - Humbled and increasingly desperate as car sales plummet, the heads of Detroit's Big Three automakers said yesterday that they were willing to accept government oversight of their spending in return for $34 billion in government loans to keep them afloat.
The Bucks County "Mom Gone Wild" case ended yesterday with a split verdict that cleared Angela Honeycutt of the most serious sexual assault charges with underage boys, but left her facing a possible jail sentence on lesser charges.