Politics | health care Healthcare Bill Boosts Pay for Prayer Insurance firms urged to cover praying healers By Mary Papenfuss Posted Nov 3, 2009 5:34 AM CST Copied Senate Finance Committee member Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-Utah. stifles a yawn on Capitol Hill in Washington, Wednesday, Sept. 30, 2009, during the committee's markup on health care legislation. (AP Photo/Harry Hamburg) A little-noticed provision in a Senate version of the pending health care bill would require insurance companies to consider paying for prayer as a medical expense. The addition was inserted by Utah Republican Sen. Orrin Hatch and backed by Democrats John Kerry and Ted Kennedy of Massachusetts, the home state of the Christian Science church. Officials of the church say their prayer treatments are an effective option to conventional health care. But critics charge the provision would be an unconstitutional merger of church and state. "When Congress mandates that health companies provide coverage for prayer, it has the effect of the government advancing religion," says a University of California law prof. A pediatrician at the University of Wisconsin criticized the plan as supporting payments for "unproven" treatments. Christian Science is not specifically named in the bill, though the church is a primary organizer of prayer healing services, reports the Los Angeles Times. Read These Next Andrew Windsor has an uncertain future as a commoner. Man wakes from coma, says girlfriend crashed car on purpose. Kid Rock has added the R-word to the list of slurs he still uses. Flight attendant fight delays United plane's departure by 4 hours. Report an error