Let'sgoflying!
Touchdown! Greaser!
I just finished a battle with an imaging provider billing office, and it struck me that the insurance co. was the true culprit; wanted to bounce it off people here, as many have interactions with the medical billing industry.
Before procedure, Med office says they need preapproval from ins (to see how much they will pay), after this, med office then tells me $900 is mine, and that is a final turnkey price (unless Dr orders more pics or complications of course...none of which happened in this case.
At check-in, I pay and re-establish this is my total responsibility for the procedure; 'yes that's it, you are paid in full'. Same discussion on check-out.
After 6 months, Med office is sending bills; you owe $900. I thought they must failed to record my payment, they can't really want to be paid twice, esp after our conversations.
I call, they say nope you really owe the same amount again as insurance did not pay that amount.
I recount the above story and we go back and forth a bunch before they finally capitulate and agree to write it off. (tip: didn't look like they would budge, but they did an about-face once I said I would be happy to share my story with the judge in small claims. {I said this very politely, but plainly})
At one point in the convo, they said the ins co originally said one thing to them and after my procedure, offered the Med facility another, lower payment. (how they can do that is mystifying)
Hearing this, I could not help but wonder if that is one of their (ins co's) tricks to pass on costs to the customer. Bait and switch. Then the customer is battling a fairly powerful med billing office which is desperate to recoup their costs because the ins. co is not living up to their earlier agreement. The med billing office finds patients a way easier target than the ins co so why not chase the patient instead? They already have patients sign a forms saying pt is ultimately responsible if the ins co reneges, so why not use that tool to ensure payment?
Conspiracy theory or onto something?
Feeling jacked around and tired of 'large company bullying & theft'.
Before procedure, Med office says they need preapproval from ins (to see how much they will pay), after this, med office then tells me $900 is mine, and that is a final turnkey price (unless Dr orders more pics or complications of course...none of which happened in this case.
At check-in, I pay and re-establish this is my total responsibility for the procedure; 'yes that's it, you are paid in full'. Same discussion on check-out.
After 6 months, Med office is sending bills; you owe $900. I thought they must failed to record my payment, they can't really want to be paid twice, esp after our conversations.
I call, they say nope you really owe the same amount again as insurance did not pay that amount.
I recount the above story and we go back and forth a bunch before they finally capitulate and agree to write it off. (tip: didn't look like they would budge, but they did an about-face once I said I would be happy to share my story with the judge in small claims. {I said this very politely, but plainly})
At one point in the convo, they said the ins co originally said one thing to them and after my procedure, offered the Med facility another, lower payment. (how they can do that is mystifying)
Hearing this, I could not help but wonder if that is one of their (ins co's) tricks to pass on costs to the customer. Bait and switch. Then the customer is battling a fairly powerful med billing office which is desperate to recoup their costs because the ins. co is not living up to their earlier agreement. The med billing office finds patients a way easier target than the ins co so why not chase the patient instead? They already have patients sign a forms saying pt is ultimately responsible if the ins co reneges, so why not use that tool to ensure payment?
Conspiracy theory or onto something?
Feeling jacked around and tired of 'large company bullying & theft'.