Skip to content
  • Categories
  • Recent
  • Tags
  • Popular
  • Users
  • Groups
Skins
  • Light
  • Cerulean
  • Cosmo
  • Flatly
  • Journal
  • Litera
  • Lumen
  • Lux
  • Materia
  • Minty
  • Morph
  • Pulse
  • Sandstone
  • Simplex
  • Sketchy
  • Spacelab
  • United
  • Yeti
  • Zephyr
  • Dark
  • Cyborg
  • Darkly
  • Quartz
  • Slate
  • Solar
  • Superhero
  • Vapor

  • Default (No Skin)
  • No Skin
Collapse

The New Coffee Room

  1. TNCR
  2. General Discussion
  3. Pretty soon you're talking about real money

Pretty soon you're talking about real money

Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved General Discussion
88 Posts 20 Posters 1.7k Views
  • Oldest to Newest
  • Newest to Oldest
  • Most Votes
Reply
  • Reply as topic
Log in to reply
This topic has been deleted. Only users with topic management privileges can see it.
  • H Offline
    H Offline
    Horace
    wrote on 22 Jul 2020, 00:16 last edited by Horace
    #36

    I don't know from pre-approved. The estimate I was given before the surgery indicated uncertainty but a specific number was quoted that I would be expected to pay within 15 days of receiving the statement. Which I have never received, for some reason. There was a number to call, on this estimate. I called it and a recording told me to email them because they're not in the office because COVID. The email address is "collections@<blah>.com". Collections, of all things. I guess they want you to know they're not messing around. I emailed them last night and received this in response this morning:

    Good Morning,

    Because we are out of network, as a courtesy to the Provider and the patient we are accepting the carrier payment, you are only responsible for $1,444.23, as per the agreement this needed to be paid 15 days after the procedure.

    Kindly call me to make your payment.

    So this person doubles down on the "out of network" aspect. Of which I was never apprised prior to surgery, and which would seem to preclude any pre-approval from my insurance company.

    Note also that the email says I needed to pay within 15 days of the procedure, while the written estimate indicated 15 days from when I receive the statement. Which I have never received.

    Education is extremely important.

    1 Reply Last reply
    • R Offline
      R Offline
      Rainman
      wrote on 22 Jul 2020, 01:58 last edited by
      #37

      So, good news, right?

      I wonder if they ignore the dates of process, realizing this only becomes an issue if it ends up in court, in which case a good lawyer would use their lack of adhering to specified timeframes to your advantage.

      1 Reply Last reply
      • A Offline
        A Offline
        Axtremus
        wrote on 22 Jul 2020, 02:00 last edited by
        #38

        @Horace Just a thought, consider sharing your medical bills with https://www.npr.org/sections/health-shots/2018/02/16/585549568/share-your-medical-bill-with-us

        1 Reply Last reply
        • X Offline
          X Offline
          xenon
          wrote on 22 Jul 2020, 04:36 last edited by xenon
          #39

          The US has a weird system.

          The insurers are the customer, patients just a necessary input.

          My understanding is that often the physicians and practitioners have no idea what the procedures they do ending up costing. There’s no mechanism in the system to understand the cost / benefit of treatment A vs treatment B.

          As in treatment A maybe be 10x more expensive than treatment B, but only slightly more effective in trials. (Or even essentially the same level of effectiveness)

          The system is set up that way though. An analogy I heard on an econtalk podcast was that it’s like going to dinner and splitting the bill. You know everyone else might order steak, so you order surf and turf too. Everyone does. We all split the bill and insurance pays. So everyone gets the absolute best that money will buy, at all times.

          There’s few market mechanisms in place to keep the cost down. The hospital often doesn’t even know its cost for procedures.

          It’s not a market system. It’s a system where we have unlimited private money going in to a system without cost controls.

          C 1 Reply Last reply 22 Jul 2020, 14:36
          • J Online
            J Online
            jon-nyc
            wrote on 22 Jul 2020, 10:44 last edited by
            #40

            That podcast was excellent. If depressing.

            Only non-witches get due process.

            • Cotton Mather, Salem Massachusetts, 1692
            1 Reply Last reply
            • D Online
              D Online
              Doctor Phibes
              wrote on 22 Jul 2020, 10:51 last edited by
              #41

              I've told the story before about my FIL having a back problem when he was visiting us, and the hospital recommended a scan. He asked the doctor the price, and was told 'about $1000', so he went ahead. They sent him a bill for over $10,000. We weren't at all sure the insurance would cover it since it was a pre-existing condition, thankfully they did.

              I'd probably get fired if I was so clueless about what we charge for services.

              I was only joking

              1 Reply Last reply
              • 8 Online
                8 Online
                89th
                wrote on 22 Jul 2020, 11:25 last edited by
                #42

                No kidding, @Doctor-Phibes !

                Not the same at all, but when my first daughter was born two years ago, she was 7 weeks early. I can tell you, maybe out of pure ignorance, but both during the labor as well as the 3 weeks in the NICU afterwards, not once did I think about the cost. I presumed our insurance covered it all. Luckily it did, but again...I didn’t think about it, nor would I understand how it works if someone told me.

                Later I found that the NICU stay was like $90,000 pre-insurance.

                1 Reply Last reply
                • X xenon
                  22 Jul 2020, 04:36

                  The US has a weird system.

                  The insurers are the customer, patients just a necessary input.

                  My understanding is that often the physicians and practitioners have no idea what the procedures they do ending up costing. There’s no mechanism in the system to understand the cost / benefit of treatment A vs treatment B.

                  As in treatment A maybe be 10x more expensive than treatment B, but only slightly more effective in trials. (Or even essentially the same level of effectiveness)

                  The system is set up that way though. An analogy I heard on an econtalk podcast was that it’s like going to dinner and splitting the bill. You know everyone else might order steak, so you order surf and turf too. Everyone does. We all split the bill and insurance pays. So everyone gets the absolute best that money will buy, at all times.

                  There’s few market mechanisms in place to keep the cost down. The hospital often doesn’t even know its cost for procedures.

                  It’s not a market system. It’s a system where we have unlimited private money going in to a system without cost controls.

                  C Offline
                  C Offline
                  Copper
                  wrote on 22 Jul 2020, 14:36 last edited by
                  #43

                  @xenon said in Pretty soon you're talking about real money:

                  The US has a weird system.

                  The insurers are the customer, patients just a necessary input.

                  My understanding is that often the physicians and practitioners have no idea what the procedures they do ending up costing. There’s no mechanism in the system to understand the cost / benefit of treatment A vs treatment B.

                  As in treatment A maybe be 10x more expensive than treatment B, but only slightly more effective in trials. (Or even essentially the same level of effectiveness)

                  The system is set up that way though. An analogy I heard on an econtalk podcast was that it’s like going to dinner and splitting the bill. You know everyone else might order steak, so you order surf and turf too. Everyone does. We all split the bill and insurance pays. So everyone gets the absolute best that money will buy, at all times.

                  There’s few market mechanisms in place to keep the cost down. The hospital often doesn’t even know its cost for procedures.

                  It’s not a market system. It’s a system where we have unlimited private money going in to a system without cost controls.

                  Where do you come up with this stuff?

                  Almost none of what you say is true.

                  Maybe you have one or two anecdotes.

                  But of course there are cost controls, and audits and accounting rules.

                  There is lots of competition in insurance and services and medicine.

                  Your post is not anywhere near reality.

                  X 1 Reply Last reply 22 Jul 2020, 16:54
                  • J Jolly
                    21 Jul 2020, 20:20

                    They just need to refile. Errors like this are common.

                    M Offline
                    M Offline
                    Mik
                    wrote on 22 Jul 2020, 14:43 last edited by
                    #44

                    @Jolly said in Pretty soon you're talking about real money:

                    They just need to refile. Errors like this are common.

                    Yep. I'm dealing with one now for my cataract surgery last fall. Likely coded wrong or incorrectly denied. It helps that I have a background in both healthcare billing and insurance.

                    “I am fond of pigs. Dogs look up to us. Cats look down on us. Pigs treat us as equals.” ~Winston S. Churchill

                    1 Reply Last reply
                    • H Offline
                      H Offline
                      Horace
                      wrote on 22 Jul 2020, 15:58 last edited by Horace
                      #45

                      I assume the insurance guy would have been able to tell me that this place was in network and that it was a simple mistake that it was billed as out of network. Also the email I posted above affirms the "out of network" billing. The guy at the insurance company wanted to be included in the conversation when I called the surgery center. He apparently expects this to be a negotiation rather than a simple fix of a clerical error.

                      Education is extremely important.

                      1 Reply Last reply
                      • C Copper
                        22 Jul 2020, 14:36

                        @xenon said in Pretty soon you're talking about real money:

                        The US has a weird system.

                        The insurers are the customer, patients just a necessary input.

                        My understanding is that often the physicians and practitioners have no idea what the procedures they do ending up costing. There’s no mechanism in the system to understand the cost / benefit of treatment A vs treatment B.

                        As in treatment A maybe be 10x more expensive than treatment B, but only slightly more effective in trials. (Or even essentially the same level of effectiveness)

                        The system is set up that way though. An analogy I heard on an econtalk podcast was that it’s like going to dinner and splitting the bill. You know everyone else might order steak, so you order surf and turf too. Everyone does. We all split the bill and insurance pays. So everyone gets the absolute best that money will buy, at all times.

                        There’s few market mechanisms in place to keep the cost down. The hospital often doesn’t even know its cost for procedures.

                        It’s not a market system. It’s a system where we have unlimited private money going in to a system without cost controls.

                        Where do you come up with this stuff?

                        Almost none of what you say is true.

                        Maybe you have one or two anecdotes.

                        But of course there are cost controls, and audits and accounting rules.

                        There is lots of competition in insurance and services and medicine.

                        Your post is not anywhere near reality.

                        X Offline
                        X Offline
                        xenon
                        wrote on 22 Jul 2020, 16:54 last edited by xenon
                        #46

                        @Copper Is there cost competition on standard of care?

                        I thought there would be tiered healthcare in the U.S. when I moved here (as in better stuff for people who had more money and better insurance). But if you're insured, everyone seems to get the "gold standard of care". Your insurance just tells you how much out of pocket you're going to pay.

                        And the U.S. definitely has the best of the best in terms of equipment, drugs and services. (doesn't always equate into best healthcare outcomes though)

                        A lot of this perspective is from listening to a recent talk by Vivian Lee

                        The interesting insight for me is that on standard of care - typically physicians aren't looking at cost effectiveness, they're looking at efficacy.

                        We have physicians here - I'd love to hear from @George-K if he ever thought about treatments and made decisions on the dimension of how much they would cost?

                        There's competition in the system - but not necessarily in the places that are driving the cost increases.

                        C 1 Reply Last reply 22 Jul 2020, 17:48
                        • J Online
                          J Online
                          jon-nyc
                          wrote on 22 Jul 2020, 16:57 last edited by
                          #47

                          I think most of what Xenon said is defensible. At least if you allow for some exaggeration (e.g. there are some cost controls, not none, they're just very weak).

                          Only non-witches get due process.

                          • Cotton Mather, Salem Massachusetts, 1692
                          X 1 Reply Last reply 22 Jul 2020, 16:59
                          • J jon-nyc
                            22 Jul 2020, 16:57

                            I think most of what Xenon said is defensible. At least if you allow for some exaggeration (e.g. there are some cost controls, not none, they're just very weak).

                            X Offline
                            X Offline
                            xenon
                            wrote on 22 Jul 2020, 16:59 last edited by xenon
                            #48

                            @jon-nyc you're right Jon. It's too extreme to say there are "no cost controls at all"

                            But - the incentives don't line up to drive them down to keep them in check (as a competitive market typically would)

                            1 Reply Last reply
                            • H Offline
                              H Offline
                              Horace
                              wrote on 22 Jul 2020, 17:12 last edited by
                              #49

                              Yes I agree that Xenon makes valid points. I've been commenting on the grotesquery masquerading as a free market in health care for many years here on the TNCRs.

                              Education is extremely important.

                              1 Reply Last reply
                              • H Offline
                                H Offline
                                Horace
                                wrote on 22 Jul 2020, 17:18 last edited by
                                #50

                                I just paid the $1400. The place is indeed out of network, while literally all the surgeons they work with are in network. They have a strict 15 day policy from the date they mail the first statement, which I am unaware of ever receiving but which they say they mailed on June 29. They bill the insurance company as out of network. Their business model is apparently to get the tiny fraction that the insurance company pays out of network providers, and a little bit more from the patient. It is unclear to me whether my insurance company would have covered 100% of this had they been in-network - I think they would have, since my deductible is covered. The surgery center gave me a story the morning of the surgery that they would be charging 15k to insurance, who would cover 90% and I was responsible for 10%. That story was completely fabricated as far as I can tell.

                                Education is extremely important.

                                1 Reply Last reply
                                • X xenon
                                  22 Jul 2020, 16:54

                                  @Copper Is there cost competition on standard of care?

                                  I thought there would be tiered healthcare in the U.S. when I moved here (as in better stuff for people who had more money and better insurance). But if you're insured, everyone seems to get the "gold standard of care". Your insurance just tells you how much out of pocket you're going to pay.

                                  And the U.S. definitely has the best of the best in terms of equipment, drugs and services. (doesn't always equate into best healthcare outcomes though)

                                  A lot of this perspective is from listening to a recent talk by Vivian Lee

                                  The interesting insight for me is that on standard of care - typically physicians aren't looking at cost effectiveness, they're looking at efficacy.

                                  We have physicians here - I'd love to hear from @George-K if he ever thought about treatments and made decisions on the dimension of how much they would cost?

                                  There's competition in the system - but not necessarily in the places that are driving the cost increases.

                                  C Offline
                                  C Offline
                                  Copper
                                  wrote on 22 Jul 2020, 17:48 last edited by
                                  #51

                                  @xenon said in Pretty soon you're talking about real money:

                                  @Copper Is there cost competition on standard of care?

                                  There's competition in the system - but not necessarily in the places that are driving the cost increases.

                                  Of course there is competition.

                                  And of course the better doctors cost more.

                                  Here is a program I used up until last year.

                                  It was not covered by insurance, I paid for it myself so I could have access to the doctor I wanted. Believe me, this was a cost increase.

                                  https://learnmore.mdvip.com/live-your-best-new?utm_source=google&utm_medium=cpc&st-t=google_&mdvip_campaign=Branded-+Top+Docs+CATCH+ALL&mdvip_term=%2Bvip+md&gclid=EAIaIQobChMIxJOE-7Th6gIVYQiICR3slg_nEAAYASAAEgLYz_D_BwE&gclsrc=aw.ds

                                  X 1 Reply Last reply 22 Jul 2020, 18:15
                                  • C Copper
                                    22 Jul 2020, 17:48

                                    @xenon said in Pretty soon you're talking about real money:

                                    @Copper Is there cost competition on standard of care?

                                    There's competition in the system - but not necessarily in the places that are driving the cost increases.

                                    Of course there is competition.

                                    And of course the better doctors cost more.

                                    Here is a program I used up until last year.

                                    It was not covered by insurance, I paid for it myself so I could have access to the doctor I wanted. Believe me, this was a cost increase.

                                    https://learnmore.mdvip.com/live-your-best-new?utm_source=google&utm_medium=cpc&st-t=google_&mdvip_campaign=Branded-+Top+Docs+CATCH+ALL&mdvip_term=%2Bvip+md&gclid=EAIaIQobChMIxJOE-7Th6gIVYQiICR3slg_nEAAYASAAEgLYz_D_BwE&gclsrc=aw.ds

                                    X Offline
                                    X Offline
                                    xenon
                                    wrote on 22 Jul 2020, 18:15 last edited by
                                    #52

                                    @Copper The most expensive thing we've done in the U.S. is have kids.

                                    In SF our OB gyn's resume was ridiculous (Harvard, Standard med school, head of OB at UCSF... lots of other prestigious positions).

                                    In Seattle our OB was fantastic - but a bit more "normal" on the qualifications and earlier in her career (we actually loved her, since she had more time to spend with us).

                                    Don't know what they cost - wasn't any different for us.

                                    1 Reply Last reply
                                    • C Offline
                                      C Offline
                                      Copper
                                      wrote on 22 Jul 2020, 18:49 last edited by
                                      #53

                                      I don't doubt it.

                                      One doctor's story doesn't define the USA healthcare system.

                                      And, by the way, there is no such thing as the USA healthcare system.

                                      1 Reply Last reply
                                      • 8 Online
                                        8 Online
                                        89th
                                        wrote on 22 Jul 2020, 18:51 last edited by
                                        #54

                                        @Horace thanks for the update. So you paid the $1,400. What else do you expect to pay out of pocket from here forward?

                                        1 Reply Last reply
                                        • H Offline
                                          H Offline
                                          Horace
                                          wrote on 22 Jul 2020, 18:59 last edited by
                                          #55

                                          That was just for the surgery center facility. There is another bill for the surgeon, another for the anesthesiologist. Those are all covered directly by my health insurance but there's always a portion I am responsible for, even after the deductible is covered. I figure the whole thumb thing will cost me about 10-15k out of pocket when it's all done.

                                          Education is extremely important.

                                          J 1 Reply Last reply 23 Jul 2020, 00:34
                                          Reply
                                          • Reply as topic
                                          Log in to reply
                                          • Oldest to Newest
                                          • Newest to Oldest
                                          • Most Votes

                                          45/88

                                          22 Jul 2020, 15:58


                                          • Login

                                          • Don't have an account? Register

                                          • Login or register to search.
                                          45 out of 88
                                          • First post
                                            45/88
                                            Last post
                                          0
                                          • Categories
                                          • Recent
                                          • Tags
                                          • Popular
                                          • Users
                                          • Groups