We had a child 10 months ago, billing was screwed up by the hospital, then by insurance and we are still in process of getting it resolved. I have now spent at least 8 hours on the phone.
I had a surgery, called insurance and verified it was pre-approved and in-network. After procedure I receive $22k bill. I was young and did not care about my credit back then and never paid. 5 years later I received a new bill, for $300 as the provider sued the insurance company.
I hate going to the hospital and AWAITING a shower of bills. This grinds my gears SO hard. Every hospital stay and bills just keep coming for a few months.
As someone who likes to budget and plant expenses, I just cannot stand the US medical system. I never know how much a simple wart removal my cost. $100 or $2000? I'm happy to have good insurance, don't require to use the medical system a lot and have enough money. However, if you are extremely ill you seriously need to move to a "FIRST" world nation or have a good insurance with low max out of pocket. However, you still are going to deal with bills like its your full time job.
Several scans, and a few hours later, my SO was discharged.
I then got to spend something like 30 hours on the phone over the course of a couple of months fighting a bill for around $100k because of a typo during the admissions to the hospital.
That's bad enough on the face of it, but there were real Kafkaesque moments. Like where I was explaining to the insurance company that this was not an automobile incident just because there were cars nearby, not once, not twice, but five times, once with a form that asked for pictures of the intersection and made me describe why cars would be stopped at a red light.
Medical transcribing has a high error rate.
Several hours and CT scans later, I was informed my brain was fine and I just have a strange retina, and will need annual follow up.
I've been sent a letter every year since, inviting me back to the hospital, and every year they tell me it's still fine.
So far I've paid £25 for the eye test (which I completed at a later date!) as I do not get my eye-tests subsidied by the NHS. However my employer reimbursed me for that too...
Goldman Sachs asks in biotech research report: ‘Is curing patients a sustainable business model?’
<https://www.cnbc.com/2018/04/11/goldman-asks-is-curing-patie...>
this is some quote...
what's next: "people, what is their true ROI.."
When I work, I get paid. I expect pharmaceutical companies feel the same way.
And if you look at how the world dealt with the hep c cure, it was pretty much trying as hard as possible to pay as little for a cure because the cost was front loaded.
Imagine how many cheap cures we would “suddenly discover”.
From decades of observing the system, it seems extremely unlikely to me that it was deliberately engineered to be this way. Rather, different parts of it grew and changed organically and the parts and changes that benefitted moneyed interests in power stayed, while those that did not were discarded.
It does not take a deliberate will behind something for it to be pulled toward this sort of inequality, and presenting it as if that's what's happened suggests that if we could only defeat the Evil People who "engineered" it this way, we could make it better. It's a very compelling idea, and it makes for a nice dramatic narrative, and humans love good stories.
Unfortunately, it's not the case. In order to make it better, we need to take a good, comprehensive look at many aspects of our systems of economics and government, and redesign them deliberately and with a strong intention to inhibit the flow of money upward from the 99% to the 1%. It's hard, it will take a long time, the people with the most wealth and power will fight us every step of the way, and there's no silver bullet, but there's also very little that's more worth doing.
There is no other industry like it except, perhaps, the mafia.
I was unemployed for our second daughters birth (I started a new job a week after she was born) and her birth and subsequent care was all covered by Medicaid. So I guess the best financial decision is to time job changes for births, which really shows how messed up the system is.
When my wife takes our baby in for a visit, we wait 2-4 hours and get a $200 bill for a routine visit. We get charged if we cancel an appointment with notice or late.
They are always fumbling around with bills. Pay $150 at the visit and get a $80 bill in the mail, and then they bring up a $60 charge from last time.
I have the money, but am thinking of fighting it even though it’s such a small sum.
Either their accounting is incompetent or fraudulent, but either way, I’m annoyed enough to push back. I suspect they are trying to fleece as many people as possible to make up for the 2020 budget hit they took.
There were literally made up charges they admitted to billing everybody for, but can waive if somebody's insurance doesn't cover it.
No idea how they get away with this stuff. Every hospital in America must have some very good lawyers on staff.
It’s time consuming, and confusing, and people will fob you off. But it’s necessary unless you want to get taken for a ride.
I'm not trying to justify the system overall, but please don't take a $150k bill at face value, if you can't reasonably afford to pay it.
I asked the hospital who the anesthesiologist would be and they said they had no way of knowing because you use whoever is on duty when you give birth.
So there was literally no way to figure out if all of the birth would be covered. And it turns out, the anesthesiologist that happened to be working that day was not accepted on our plan. They billed us for $4k (even though he botched the epidural, causing us to need an emergency c section.)
We had to decline to pay it a few times before they said they would work it out and accept the lower amount from our insurance.
That's why I got hospitalization-only insurance as soon as Trump allowed it... Obama-care was a joke... except for the pre-existing condition clause, maybe.
The whole point of requiring everyone to get insurance is so that you don't have just the sickliest and oldest people getting insurance. Insurance is meant to spread the risk amongst everyone who pays premiums.
Additionally, not having insurance for primary and non-emergency care will make it much less likely that people will even end up in the emergency room. (No checkups, no outpatient)
Even worse, having emergency room coverage only encourages people to use the emergency room more often than they should.
Though I wouldn't expect our last president to have much of a handle on economics and business, considering his track record. Either that, or he was purposely trying to destroy the program (he was, but it was probably both reasons).
They hire people right out of medschool with the offer to pay their entire student debt if they stay with them for 8 years. They have massive burn out.
That said, Kaiser is still my gold standard for the US.
The only issue I’ve heard is mental health care which is apparently quite lacking at Kaiser.
Sure, maybe the billing part of it is still great, but the care itself is not.
I can just go to whatever walk-in clinic, urgent care provider or emergency room I need, depending on the severity and get treatment (I do try to go to my GP if possible, but I have many options if that's not practical for some reason).
from the perspective of some people in the US, this is exactly what socialized medicine looks like, except you can't change the company.
In the case of joint replacement, each insurance provider has negotiated a fixed block payment for all costs related to the surgery. If the surgeon makes a mistake, or the patient doesn't follow along with physical therapy, or something goes wrong for whatever reason, the care provider is financially responsible for any corrective actions on the procedure. This means any complaint in a follow-up visit is usually met with some kind of platitude to make you go away, like "here is a prescription for some pain medication, let us know if the problem persists". There is no incentive to do any scans or tests, since this would eat into the profits that the hospital has made on this patient.
For certain GI surgeries, patients are instructed not to eat solid food for a week or two after surgery. A certain percentage of people ignore these instructions and end up in the hospital ER requiring another surgery. In the last couple years, providers of these treatments have learned how to bring that percentage down by hammering post-op patients with daily email/SMS messages to ensure they are educated about their procedure. These systems were not put in place by someone at the hospital who wanted patients to be better informed, they were put in place because someone noticed that percentage and calculated how much money the hospital could be saving for each percentage point in reduced readmission.
I have heard good arguments against Medicare-for-all, but I have never heard any logical argument to defend the status quo.
Problem is, I don’t think it’s going to last. The ageing population means health costs will spiral, and health budgets will consume an unsustainably large proportion of revenues.
The cost is never zero. Doctors, nurses, don’t work for free. Infrastructure isn’t maintained without money. It comes from somewhere.
The Medicare incentives to kick patients out of rehab is very effective, to the point that it’s a cruel game for families operating under the mistaken assumption that healing is a goal.
In the hospital, the only urgency outside of acute/intensive care that I saw was when my family member was readmitted due to incompetence on the part of the hospital, and ended up costing them thousands of unremimbursed dollars.
So the provider "hammers" me with reminders which makes that less likely to happen. Sure, they might not be doing it out of the kindness of their hearts (I've worked in a hospital and many people definitely do want patients to be healthier, but that's neither here nor there), but it seems like they're "incentiv[sized] for you to emerge healthier."
This is the gist of American healthcare.
A good read from someone who had a medical crisis, from a series of medical errors, is "Our Malady" by Timothy Snyder. He took great notes in his personal diary when the whole ordeal occurred and was able to trace back the errors, unlike most people. He also nearly died. He is a renowned American historian who is a scholar of European history, and particularly of eastern European history.
Anyways, the third leading cause of death in the US is believed to be preventable medical errors (you can also google "3rd leading cause of death preventable medical errors" and find other sources which corroborate the findings of this peer-reviewed journal article): https://www.bmj.com/content/353/bmj.i2139
When it comes to longevity of the human lifespan, as in life expectancy, by country, the US is about to soon mirror Croatia (I am a dual US|EU [Croatian] citizen). You know, that war-torn eastern European country that went through a nasty war in the 90s. Anyways, I am proud of my country, I mean Croatia. But, as Americans, we should be ashamed.
U.S. life expectancy will soon be on par with Mexico’s and the Czech Republic’s: https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/to-your-health/wp/2017/0...
(non-paywalled version: https://archive.md/3EpBi)
Anyways, there are countries with national health insurance ("socialized medicine") and there are also countries that have universal health insurance coverage (guaranteed issue health insurance, which you are required to have under law).
From an access perspective Germany is very similar to the US, and has universal health insurance coverage. Switzerland has a system closer to what we have in the US, with respect to both access and privitization, and they do not seem to be having the problems that we have in the American healthcare system.
Just some food for thought...
Medical lobby benefits from high barriers to entry, suppressed competition (from foreign doctors or medical tourism companies able to fly their customers abroad) and opaque pricing. Uninformed consumer forced to shop locally is rarely able to extract best pricing.
You can look at the annual fear-mongering fairs where medical lobby has been attempting to insert itself as a rent-seeker into kidney dialysis services in California. It's not like those industries are run by altruists, but on TV concerned serious faces in white coats would tell you in alarmist tones how those centers are run without professional supervision and people with no medical training, but when you vote properly, some [highly paid] individual with medical credentials would make things so much better [albeit more expensive in the long run].
This is a true believer, few people suggest we need no regulation in healthcare.
How far are you willing to go, should we remove fire safety and return to the fun days where entire cities burned down like in the great fire of london.
Should we deregulate the nuclear industry and let the market decide which reactor design is best and who should be allowed to enrich uranium
This is about more than 'free markets', it's arguably more about regulatory capture by the major entities in health care.
The health care industry is hand in hand with education as top of the 'scam index' industries.
Yet criticism of health care is relatively 'off limits', and there's low competitive incentive to correct/draw attention to this.
'e.g. you're evil for wanting more efficient health care: why? doctors/nurses are already overworked & efficiency will mean jobs cuts of those at the lowest rung'
In the US, it’s the most regulated service we offer.
1. the supply and instruction of doctors are regulated
2. the supply of hospitals are regulated (often by other hospitals!)
3. service for insurance is regulated
4. pharmaceuticals are regulated
5. physical medical tools are regulated
6. hospital facilities are regulated
I for one would not be too upset to see the government hold a gun to the metaphorical heads of various bodies and organisations and tell them that they'd better start delivering a free market pretty damn quickly. Given a political class in the US that seems so obsessed with "free markets" (they're mostly not, of course - it's just sloganeering bullshit to enable weakening of protections and increased screwing over of everyone but the ruling classes), sure is a shitshow of captured, unfree markets.
It's like food. If you're starving, you'll do or pay whatever you have to to get nutrients.
If one were to sit down and try to create the most absurd approach to healthcare that guaranteed high cost and poor outcomes you couldn't come up with the idiocy that our system has become. It's completely untenable, a failure at every single level from medical school to funeral services. The fact that there are so many smart people working in healthcare defies belief in the absolute fucking disaster it is.
Even in the interaction between health providers and insurance companies, the billing practices have moved so far beyond fraud and are so widespread that nobody can even comprehend or describe how fucking broken just that one part of it is.
Without getting into details, the healthcare industry is absolutely mortified of a law that requires them to provide patients expected costs before care and to publicize those cost for comparison. I can't believe that some startup hasn't glassdoored billing practices yet by patients simply uploading screenshots of their bills when they get them.
note we just went through a bizarre medical experience where surgery was billed out at a total of something like $70k, the "negotiated" price was more like $7k, and we payed out of pocket something like $700.
At one point the insurance company turned down the bill from the surgeon, who promptly simply submitted a bill from a "surgical assistant" who we never met or knew existed for the exact same dollar amount which was also denied, and then resubmitted the original bill which was approved and promptly "negotiated" to 10% of the original bill amount in the end. In the meanwhile we had absolutely no idea if we owed $30k for this bill, $30, $300, or $300k. No idea at all.
It beggars belief that congress, who is mostly made up of people who are obviously experiencing their own medical journeys, can't put together some easily bipartisan approaches to price visibility.
If you look at the predicted life expectancy of an American in 2045 for example, you would know it is time to be "making plans". You would also know that the price differential on salaries between America and other places in the world as a person in STEM is not worth the payoff long-term. Plus, you cannot put a price on your health. This is just one eerie statistic, for example: Medical error—the third leading cause of death in the US https://www.bmj.com/content/353/bmj.i2139 You cannot evade a statistic like that by going to the "best hospitals" or by receiving the "best healthcare" in America, or by having "good insurance".
By the way, I did become a dual US|EU citizen over American healthcare, as somebody who is chronically ill with 2 rare immune-mediated neurological diseases affecting my peripheral nervous system, plus type 1 diabetes (autoimmune and insulin dependent).
My point being, there are plenty of smart people in this system building cool features and chalking it up as progress, but we don't have any power to institute any kind of fundamental change. No healthcare leader will ever acknowledge the flaws in the system, because the people who get promoted up the bureaucracy are the ones who know how to play the game. The people at the top are the champions of collecting the maximum amount of money for the minimum amount of care.
You pay 5% of your income for example. If you're traveling they pay the other hospital, either at the normal ins. rates or the rates that hospitals...
Example: All the hospitals in utah join. I live in a small town with 45k people.
Only hospital in the county, which is about 60k people.
So the hospital gets 60K * 5% of income - Medicare/Medicaid who would be billed normally.
They get this monthly so they could budget their bills by this income.
Anyone traveling who gets sick in their location the hospital they are subscribed to pays their bill. Hospitals in the network all agree on pricing schemes that are fair so there's really no gouging or alternative prices. Since the payee is other hospitals and they could be on the other side of the price for patients it makes sense to make it reasonable.
Localities could require all residents move to a hospital as insurer model to make the system more streamlined. A tech provider would create software / erp that automatically does the billing so basically you replace billing people on both sides of insurance.
There's probably a lot of small quirks I'm unaware of... but this seems like it could work the larger (multi-state/all 50 states) the network as a whole they could even have significant power to bring down drug prices and equipment purchases for MRI machines/etc as basically a big union of healthcare providers.
Primary care physicians would basically get a "cut" of the subscription monthly + co-pays.
You could pick your "regular" Dentist, PCP, Eyecare, and other "centers" you go to at least a few times per year, and they could divy out funds to them on a recurring basis for the same goal of creating MRR for small healthcare providers locally.
I believe this is what Sidecar Health is working on: https://sidecarhealthinsurance.com
I wouldn't say the Republicans are fully responsible for the state of things, but they can't seem to agree within the party on a basic concept. I recall John Boehner saying he laughed at Republican promises to swiftly repeal the Affordable Care Act, commenting "Republicans never ever agree on health care". And, well, he was proven right.
If you can't unite your party on a big fix, then the only thing you can pass is some sort of limited fix, which tends to just add more complexity to the whole thing over time.
Talking about bombing stuff Wikipedia has:
>Charles Webster, official historian of the NHS, wrote in 2002 that "the Luftwaffe achieved in months what had defeated politicians and planners for at least two decades."
When I go get my car fix and I would go around to get an estimate for multiple body shop even if it is under insurance. But when it come to health care, you ask them for a cash price, they said they don’t know.
This is so astonishing cause you would assume they have NEGOTIATED the rate given its in network so there is little variability in what can be charged by the doctor and what can be thrust upon the customer. ex. if you charge $100K more than other in-network doctors, good luck, cause the insurance company is only paying the doctor $5,000 no matter what and the customer will be on the hook for X% of that (outside of deductible and other math required to quote a price)...
From the article:
> As of Jan. 1, hospitals must publicly reveal the negotiated rates reached with insurers for services, a landmark shift in the sector notoriously opaque when it comes to pricing. The data offer a peek behind the curtain, exposing prices long kept a secret.
The catch is that they can't guarantee what services you'll receive. If you have complications after your inpatient surgery, the price is going to be higher than the estimate due to additional services.
I'm not saying it's a good way to do things.
Opening a price list, it looks like one hospital charges ~$5000 for a knee replacement without major complications, and then the matching price for one with complications is $30000.
So how do they quote that when the complications can be unpredictable?
Which of course just says that maybe people shouldn't be put in the situation of trying to figure it out for themselves.
Note that mechanics don't particularly know what they're going to have to do to any given car before they really get into working on it. Yet the market functions perfectly fine with estimates, agreements on hourly rates, phone calls for decisions on surprise situations, etc.
The reason I'm curious is because using your car analogy, if I was a barely competent mechanic then management would probably be fine letting me perform oil changes, but when a classic Rolls Royce comes in with all original parts, management isn't going to let me touch that, right? They'll need to call in the big guns, whose rates are definitely higher than my "oil change" rate. I know that doesn't directly map with how medical procedures play out. I guess my real question is when and how does that balance out?
As with everything, "it depends".
You often can get an idea from your insurance company, who will often provide you with what's called the "usual and customary" rates for a given procedure (in-network). Depending on the procedure, though, it may be hard to pin down. The procedure you want may actually consist of 3 things, and you need to look at all 3 up.
Also, if you call some private practices, and if it's a standard procedure (ultrasound, etc), you will often get a quote if you tell them you'll pay cash without involving insurance (some people ask for the "uninsured rate"). Often that will be less than the insurance negotiated rate. The down side is that whatever you pay will not count towards your deductible.
My experience getting a COVID vaccination was eye opening. I walked into a large facility, provided ID, was asked screening questions, consulted with a provider about a medical issue and got the shot.
I work for an employer with a legacy PPO. I suffered a back injury, had a major surgery and 8 weeks of physical rehab. My out of pocket was a few hundred bucks. I didn’t lose a days pay because of sick leave at half pay and short term disability insurance. The people I was in rehab with were losing jobs, selling cars, facing complete ruin.
The lack of ethical standards and focus on profit over the general welfare of the people is gross.
The US health care system is so screwed up.
I can't wait to return there and be a medical tourist again! The facilities and level of care was superior to my local dive of a hospital that is chronically understaffed.
The hospital president make $980k while currently the nurses are on strike.
For knee problems, like you I went to SE Asia as a medical tourist. I was provided with a taxi waiting for me at the airport, a translator who stayed with me at all times, a dedicated hospital administrative assistant for more complex issues like obtaining a copy of my exams, having them send to the doctor of my choice, obtaining the CV of the doctors so I could decide on the best one etc.
But the best was the fine dining options, as I do not like hospital food.
And when I was tired of the hospital and decided an hotel would be better for my mood, the doctor I had selected visited me in my suite, every day - with a nurse. If I wanted anything, I still had the translator the rest of the time.
It's not even a question of costs - that quality of service is just not available in the US, except maybe outside of some VIP setting where it may be shiny but the healthcare is mediocre (friends strongly recommended against such options)
Years later, I no longer have to care about costs, but I still won't go to a US hospital.
The US system is in the hands of the administrators. Not docs, not even the govt: administrators, usually belonging to a behemoth (private) company that has immense and intrinsic lobbying power due to the nature of the industry. There can be no shortage of buyers. Well, admins wanting to earn more just have one thing to do: reproduce by complexifying the system. Private healthcare is a garbage fire.
To give you a good example - 340b is a govt regulation that requires drug manufacturers to give a 23% discount off drugs to hospitals that treat a lot of low income patients. Great idea right?
Well, that just incentivized hospitals to buy up standalone oncology clinics, fold them into the hospital and then capture that sweet 23% margin on drugs without actually using it to help low income patients.
As a result there are almost no community oncologists now, they almost all work for hospitals and good luck starting your own clinic now.
Good intentions that just made the problem worse.
> As of Jan. 1, hospitals must publicly reveal the negotiated rates reached with insurers for services, a landmark shift in the sector notoriously opaque when it comes to pricing. The data offer a peek behind the curtain, exposing prices long kept a secret.
I called the Xray department. Apparently, they don't set appointments as Xrays are a walk-in procedure.
After almost two hours on hold and being handed around, I found someone who was able to tell me that the Xray billing department could provide me the information, provided that I was able to get an exact list of the Xrays that my doctor required. They could see my doctor's referral on their screen, but apparently, I still needed to reach out to my doctor and get the information from him, if I was to provide it to the billing department.
I messaged my doctor four days ago. He hasn't replied. Given that he squeezed me into his schedule at the last minute, and he usually replies to my messages after 10 pm, or during the weekend, it's clear that he's overworked, and I don't want to be an additional burden on him.
The last two weeks have been agony, and I haven't even been able to start to pursuing a diagnosis. This current week has also involved a lot of rage.
I've come to the conclusion that the system is so egregiously predatory that everyone involved - even those who are working within the system to ostensibly help me (such as my doctor) are ultimately culpable, since they are propping up the system.
Such that even if you tried to comparison shop across 2 hospitals, you can't really tell whether that is the "all in" cost of what you want to understand?
Or is it that even for the same exact procedure, two patients might be billed differently because of what insurance each allows in particular? Or is it even further, price discrimination? Or because the hospital has agreements with the insurer for other costs to be billed for on the side, complicating the issue?
Without knowing more about the methodology, it’s possible that a lot of the apparent variation in cost arises from different ways of paying for the same thing. Take a joint replacement surgery—the surgery itself will generate claims for both the surgeon and the hospital, and maybe also the anesthesiologist. Each of those claims could be counted as a bill. But there’s also the initial clinic visit before the surgery as well as the aftercare and rehab, which also generate their own bills. What’s more, some payment models bundle all of those costs into one bill for the entire episode of care. (See how there’s no range listed for the procedures performed at Kaiser?)
The problem arises when you try try to compare those individual claims to the episode of care bills. You can’t, because they’re basically apples and oranges. But if you’re not aware, that can make it seem like there’s more variation than there really is. Don’t get me wrong, though, there is way too much variation in what we pay for health care, but it’s important we measure it precisely.
Not that they are mutually exclusive, just that I wouldn't imagine a pricing service exists yet if it's just manually gotten.
I spent 24usd for an invasive procedure and meds in Taiwan. I’m honestly happy I left the States years ago because I’d probably be in debt at this point.
Honestly, by many measures Taiwan is more advanced than the US.
This is the only sensible thing I can recall to emerge from the Trump administration and it is a much bigger deal than most people realize.
I got billed extra taxes like 100$ (for a 80$ item), even though the seller said price included import fees to my country, so I bounced complaint emails all around to say no. After a while they stopped responding. Then 6 months later, lawyer official letter comes in. Threats of legal action.. I do the same email bouncing to them. After a while I suggested I paid 20$, the guy handling my case asked me to confirm that, a week later they sent me a new bill with 100$ fees and 80$ rebate.
There's no ground in their actions, at any point some dude can edit the documents and consider the issue resolved.
It's like if every road we drove on had a different toll every time we travelled on it, and we didn't quite know what the total would be (or what construction projects you might encounter along the way) at the end.
It's made worse by the high value people put on their health and their low knowledge of healthcare in general.
I worked in a hospital for 13 years, most of it on the billing and medical records systems. There was a single project I recall that tried to do price estimation for patients up front. It worked best for lab draws because a fixed number of vials were drawn for a finite number of predetermined tests. Anything beyond that involved human judgement at the time of service:
A doctor decides which X-ray views they want taken after seeing an injury, and may need to order more after the first results, and the radiology tech has some leeway in how they actually perform the imaging. A choice between X-ray, CT-scan, and MRI is pretty much an order of magnitude difference in costs between each, and determining whether an injury is bone, soft tissue, organs, etc. may require any or all of them.
Surgery is wildly unpriceable. The number of shots of anesthesia will differ for weight, metabolism, actual length of a procedure, and individual reactiveness to the medication, and the anesthesiologist may need additional medications to stabilize a patient's vitals. Each surgeon is making similar decisions as they go along; all of it has a cost and some tools/medicines are pretty expensive but no good surgeon will have price in mind during surgery; they'll use the best available method.
The article wants to blame insurance companies for price variation but that's a bit of a red herring. Every clinic and hospital does different numbers of various procedures and has different patient demographics so outcomes and severity will vary. ERs and cancer treatment are notorious cost-centers, whereas radiology services and outpatient procedures are the money makers. Hospitals and clinics have no choice but to pick and choose a set of services each year to raise or drop the prices for even before negotiating with insurance companies on actual reimbursement. Medicare and Medicaid also reimburse at (even lower) fixed rates so hospitals are always balancing costs for the number of commercially insured patients against government insured patients. Hospitals can't refuse emergency service to anyone, so they're also forced to eat the costs if they don't play the pricing game to cover ER and subsequent treatment costs.
The whole thing is a terrible mess and socialized healthcare is the solution.
US prices for imaging aren't based on the cost.
So the lower rate in the Chicago hospital of $4613? Quite possible the hospital is losing money when they bill that rate.
I don't know if there's some kind of a "price of the day" marketplace calculation that needs to happen for the provider to find out the current prices, but that's pretty odd. It's like buying stocks or a Dungeness crab dish at a restaurant.
From best I can gather, there are a handful of High-Level issues. But for the sake of brevity, I'll highlight what I think is the biggest:
The data requisite to make a confident estimate lives in many different parties' databases. To make an estimate, you would need: (1) Full List of Procedures and Services to be done (keywords here: CPT and ICD codes); (2) Contracted Rates between Payer and Provider; (3) Patient's Deductible, OOP Max, and Plan Benefits; (4) List of which services require Pre-auth
(1) lives with the Provider
(3) and (4) live with the Payer
(2) lives in between, but is also a huge problem because it's a many-to-many sort of relationship (many Payers have many contracts (e.g. annually re-negotiated contracts) with many Providers)
I became informed on additional tests they considered doing, and eventually arranged for related tests outside the hospital to determine if the tests they were going to do were necessary. They were not.
Bill was just under $60,000, ~$8,000 deductible, paid the deducible in one lump sum and negotiated a 25% discount. A partner at a medical firm told me they are only paid 75%, so it made sense to him that I could negotiate a 25% discount.
It removes the whole in-network/out-network scam. It removes the whole process of negotiating prices with insurers.
Transparent pricing is the baby step in this direction that reveals the problem. The hope was that it would at least provide negotiating power for payers when they see what the other payers are getting. Let's just take the next step and make them commit to pricing ahead of time.
And I think I have a cavity. Dang.