Decker Sharp was born with congenital heart defects that left his heart filled with holes and the pulmonary valve too narrow.
NASHVILLE, Tenn. — A Tennessee family is fighting to get their 7-year-old son, who was born with congenital heart defects, a lifesaving medical device.
At 8 months old, Decker Sharp had his first open-heart surgery to repair an atrioventricular septal defect and pulmonary stenosis, which means that his heart was filled with holes and the pulmonary valve was too narrow.
Again at 3 years old, he had another open-heart surgery because a mass had developed leading to his aorta and that was affecting the pressure and blood flow to his heart.
Looking at Decker, one wouldn't know anything is wrong, but there's another problem lurking. Decker's ascending aorta is essentially thinning and there's pressure building in his heart, the family said.
Decker is smart, athletic, funny and gives the best hugs, his mother said CBS News.
Decker also loves to play sports, which is something that runs in his family. His father, Doug Sharp, was a US Olympian who won a bronze medal in bobsledding in 2002. Decker's pediatric cardiologist is allowing the boy to play sports, but she told his parents that they need to carry around an automated external defibrillator, or AED, at his sports events. The device is used to shock someone's heart.
The cardiologist, Dr. English Flack, who works at Monroe Carell Jr. Children's Hospital at Vanderbilt, believes Decker may be at risk for sudden cardiac death while exercising because of his aortic stenosis, which is the result of his congenital heart defect. She told the family that she worries Decker's first cardiac arrest would be a big one — and the last as it could kill him.
But Anthem, the insurance company for Decker and his family, denied the doctor's prescription for an AED.
In a statement to CBS NewsAnthem said it decided after carefully reviewing the case, its medical policies and the medical literature regarding the use of AEDs for atrial septal defects.
"The existing medical evidence does not support that AEDs offer benefit to patients with atrial septal defects, and as a result, these devices are not a covered benefit under the family's health plan," the statement reads.
CBS News' David Begnaud noted that if Flack were to say that Decker needs to have an AED implanted in his chest, which is not what she's recommending at this point in his life, the insurance would cover it. But her prescription for the parents to carry around an AED to save their son's life given his high risk of sudden cardiac arrest has been denied.
An AED is not used to fix a heart defect, but it is used to save someone's life if a person with a defect goes into sudden cardiac arrest. That's why an AED is needed. The device, which costs between $1,000 and $3,000, is also recommended by the American Medical Association and can be found in almost every ambulance in America.
"We are disappointed in Anthem's decision, but unfortunately not surprised," Decker's family said in a statement. "Our hope remains that this will start a conversation to set parameters around when AED coverage is appropriate. They certainly save lives. Moreover, we wholeheartedly believe doctors should lead healthcare decisions, not insurance companies."
The family is hoping their fight to get a lifesaving medical device for their son highlights the need for doctors — and not insurance companies — to make crucial health care decisions.
"We understand Decker's parents' concern given his condition. Our clinical team has carefully reviewed and re-reviewed Decker's case, our medical policies, and the medical literature regarding use of AEDs for atrial septal defects. The existing medical evidence does not support that AEDs offer benefit to patients with atrial septal defects, and as a result, these devices are not a covered benefit under the family's health plan.
"Anthem Blue Cross and Blue Shield's appeals process does afford the family additional review from an independent physician should they want to exercise that option. This process provides further opportunities for new or additional facts and circumstances to be considered in the coverage decision. Anthem's coverage policies are based on evidence-based medicine utilizing medical society position statements, leading peer-review medical journals and input from physician specialists across the country."