Cancer-surviving judge blasts insurer for denying therapy before recusing himself
A logo sign outside of the headquarters of UnitedHealthcare in Minnetonka, Minn., on Oct. 25, 2015. By Meagan Flynn Meagan Flynn Morning Mix reporter Email Bio Follow May 1 at 6:27 AM Richard Cole has had a hard time finding a judge to hear his case, if only because they all keep recusing themselves.
In Scola’s own case, the judge said “top medical experts across the country” recommended the proton beam radiation therapy to him when he was diagnosed with prostate cancer in 2017, although he ultimately opted to have surgery. At that point, the cancer had already spread to his lymph nodes, meaning surgery wouldn’t be enough to stop it, he said. He consulted with doctors nationwide about what to do next, including the CEO and executive medical director at the Miami Cancer Institute. The consensus was decisive, he said: Proton beam radiation therapy was both less invasive and more effective, Cole said.
To go forward, he had to pay $85,000 out of pocket for the treatment — which he said he recognizes would likely not be a possibility for many people.
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