SparkyJJO
Lifer
- May 16, 2002
- 13,357
- 7
- 81
my brain surgery ran well over 100$k, and that was 10 years ago
Wow you got ripped off. I think they gave you the wrong brain
my brain surgery ran well over 100$k, and that was 10 years ago
UHC isn't perfect either. I've had better service using insurance in the US than when I was covered by UHC.
All people do in Canada is complain how expensive goods are compared to the US. Hmm I wonder why.
So kinda like a HMO without the HMO middleman? That works fine for many people who don't care who their doctor is or where she is as long as the care is free. For people like OP who have a specific doctor, or people who commute into metro areas, it wouldn't be a good solution.
Also I would be wary about what would happen if you needed emergency care while on vacation in a place where that medical system has no footprint. It seems like for this to work there would have to be a MAJOR consolidation of medical practices and care facilities, which to be fair is happening anyway.
Thank you for the link, I will read into it and see if any of my questions are answered.
Well, she can always pay cash for medical care.
The model of the future can be found at http://www.surgerycenterok.com. Clear transparent pricing at 1/8th the current market rate.
Get a new doctor or pay cash. Negotiate a rate with her current doctor if she must stay with him.
Wow, that's great!*
*The fine print include:
A list of what is NOT included in the fee is as follows:
Any diagnostic studies necessary prior to the surgery such as lab, MRI, X-rays, consultations with specialists to determine medical risk/management, physical therapy and rehabilitation.
Any hardware or implants necessary for completion of the procedure (plates and screws, e.g. for orthopedic procedures). This price information will be provided prior to surgery but subsequent to the surgical consultation. Our experienced surgical staff knows with almost certainty what will be needed to complete your surgery and this hardware or implants will be provided to you at invoice cost without any markup whatsoever. Copies of the invoices will be provided to you.
Any overnight stay at our facility can be arranged on a case-by-case basis for an additional charge. Lodging and travel expenses are not included in the price of the procedures.
Expenses or fees resulting from complications subsequent to the completion of the surgery and discharge from the facility are also not included.
And what, pray tell, happens when you don't have that $10k they want up front for your cardiovascular surgery (not including the aforementioned fine print) that your insurance and in-patient co-pays cover in a traditional medical environment?
Yeah, this model is a non-option for the vast majority of Americans who can't even afford to pay for a used car outright let alone necessary medical care out of pocket.
Wow you got ripped off. I think they gave you the wrong brain![]()
1) What requirements doesn't she meet? It's a guaranteed availability, guaranteed issue, guaranteed renewability world now, so she shouldn't be being denied.
2) "Short version: her doctor only accepts two insurance plans." Is that the insurers' fault?
Because SOMEONE has to be the adult, aka be the "bad guy," and ration care.
Simply put we have too many sick people and not enough top tier doctors, and that shortage in certain specialties will get worse as the baby boomers age. The insurance company acts as a barrier to entry for services for these doctors, plus acts as the "death panel" for patients when further care is a waste.
If we had politicians we could trust who could setup a system we would trust to fairly ration care it would be better, but in America that is a pipe dream. Any system would benefit whoever could donate the most to political campaigns (like our justice system), or whatever demographic swings elections (hello 50+ years of Cuba policy). So the middle ground of insurance companies becomes an unwanted necessity.
The problem in this situation is that your friend's doctor has set a higher standard than she can meet, which means in practical terms she needs to find another doctor. She is lucky this doctor even has any insurance company contracts, so many of the best doctors are going cash only.
Once everyone has to pay cash out of pocket for every piece of decent medical care you will miss insurance companies.
Sorry, but Fuck that! Please explain how the ability to afford more expensive things should have anything to do with paying for someone else's healthcare.
Yes, the insurance lobby is most powerful.
She's changing to a doctor that the insurance company approves of, but she really liked that doctor.
Replace "healthcare" with <government service of choice>. I pay for lots of roads I don't use. I pay a lot for bailouts of wealthy, corrupt banks that I don't use. I pay for bridges I've never even seen. I pay for warheads and aircraft that have never been used against an enemy military force.Sorry, but Fuck that! Please explain how the ability to afford more expensive things should have anything to do with paying for someone else's healthcare.
Act in the best interest of the cash incentive. It'll help pay for the lofty burden of malpractice insurance.For example, WellPoint, one of the largest private payers for health care, recently outlined designated treatment pathways for cancer and announced that it would pay physicians an incentive of $350 per month per patient treated on the designated pathway.
Everyone wants top tier healthcare. I do too. But there is only so much to go around.
We need different tiers of healthcare. Different tiers of quality so that everyone can afford some healthcare because some is better than none.
If you're poor, maybe you'll have to share a room with someone. An older building. Longer wait lines, etc.
This notion that we can give literally every human in the US top top notch healthcare is not logical. We need a "value" level of healthcare that can service the masses for a reasonable price.
It is economically impossible to give everyone the same healthcare a king or president would receive.
i would absolutely LOVE to put a price list out and charge people my rate. unfortunately, people dont want to pay for healthcare, theyd rather pay into some mysterious fund and then have that fund give them "free" care.
Psychology.i would absolutely LOVE to put a price list out and charge people my rate. unfortunately, people dont want to pay for healthcare, theyd rather pay into some mysterious fund and then have that fund give them "free" care.
She's not in the right age range for one
It's the insurance companies that set these restrictions.
Agreed. Transparency in pricing and the removal of the insurance layer does allow market forces to give competitive care to those who have cash. The issue is that the insurance companies often like to set reimbursement amounts for a region based upon the average local price, so if in a market many of the practices get competitive on the listed price they inadvertently take a haircut on their insurance checks.
In smaller markets I have seen the specialists collude with each other to keep prices high for this reason. The practical outcome is that if a procedure is not covered by insurance (say LASIK in your example) you get a competitive price, but in the exact same practice a covered procedure might have a list price 3 times what the doctor expects to get in cash. That is why places that do cash pay pretty much have to opt out of the entire insurance system completely, they can't afford a mixed clientele. Some basically just end up giving cash discounts on the backend- aka not turning people over to collections and cutting deals instead.
Mix this element with the entitlement of many people who expect health care to be free, and you have a situation where top tier care is going to be completely inaccessible for middle class America which is a shame. Already so many doctors don't take Medicaid that it is a major coverage problem in some states, so just cutting out the "middle man" of insurance may make things worse quickly.
Or maybe healthcare shouldn't have artificially inflated prices, insane regulations, and dumb business structures? The average doctor spends 22% of their time on useless paperwork when they should be focusing on patient care. Cut out the middlemen and you increase access for all.
In universal healthcare systems you can go to any doctor anywhere and be fully covered. Those systems are paid for via taxes which have the ability to capture enough money from everyone....
Or maybe healthcare shouldn't have artificially inflated prices, insane regulations, and dumb business structures? The average doctor spends 22% of their time on useless paperwork when they should be focusing on patient care. Cut out the middlemen and you increase access for all.
The thing is is that with insurance companies in control there's so much more unnecessary overhead. I think that's a big part of the reason health-care is so outrageousI agree with all that. But even with that, we need more "value" oriented healthcare for the masses.