Until we get single payer

We’re still screwed:

The Center for Public Policy Priorities recently analyzed ER billing by the three biggest insurers in Texas — Humana, Blue Cross and United Healthcare.

“ In an emergency department we see everyone, and we’re not even legally allowed to ask if they’re going to pay their bill. Large numbers of people pay nothing.
– Dr. Bruce Moskow, president, Texas College of Emergency Physicians
The report found that in more than half of Humana’s Texas hospitals, none of the ER doctors who see patients there were within Humana’s network.

The same was true at just under half the Texas hospitals that take United Healthcare insurance, and at about a fifth of those that take Blue Cross.

Stacey Pogue, a health policy analyst and the report’s author, says that sort of arrangement is unfair to patients.

“No other consumer services are sold to us this way,” she says. “It would be like going into a restaurant, and ordering a meal and then getting a bill from the waiter, and from the restaurant separately, and the cook separately and the busboy separately. And some of them will negotiate with you on the price, and some of them will accept coupons, and the others don’t.”

Texas insurers have said they would like emergency room doctors to join their networks, but can’t force them to.

The ER doctors counter that insurance companies often don’t pay them enough, even if they do join the network.

The economics of ERs are complex, explains Dr. Bruce Moskow, president of the Texas College of Emergency Physicians.

“In an emergency department we see everyone, and we’re not even legally allowed to ask if they’re going to pay their bill,” Moskow says. “Large numbers of people pay nothing.”

There is a mediation process in Texas for some of these out-of-network bills, but it’s only for certain types of insurance, and for certain situations.

Some other states have tried to tackle the problem. In California, ER doctors aren’t allowed to send a separate bill to HMO patients. In New York, a newly passed law requires out-of-network doctors and insurers to hash out payment on their own, and leave patients out of it.

Texas legislators have held hearings on this issue recently, but the discussions haven’t yet led to any new regulations.

Jennifer Hopper says she spent weeks appealing her bill, going back and forth between the doctors and the insurance carrier. Eventually she filed a complaint with state regulators. After that, she says, the bill simply disappeared.

Pogue says the typical advice — for patients to “do their homework” ahead of time and know who’s in their network and who isn’t — isn’t always possible, especially in the middle of an emergency.

“If you’re wheeled into the emergency room door, you can’t ask the emergency room physician who runs up to stabilize you, ‘Are you in network or out of network?’ That physician needs to be concentrating at that point on giving you lifesaving care, not rattling off the list of insurance companies that he or she contracts with,” she says.

Jennifer Hopper tried to do her homework by figuring out where to go for a possible future ER visit. Online, she searched her health plan to find ER doctors who were actually in her insurance plan’s network. But she found fewer than five at the hospitals her plan uses in Austin. She doubts the odds of getting those doctors the next time she or a family member needs care.

“So the reality,” she says, “is that all the transparency in the world doesn’t change the fact that — knowing everything — I could not be sure I would get a different outcome.”

3 thoughts on “Until we get single payer

  1. If the ACA was r-e-p-e-a-l-e-d and replaced with Medicare for all then most of these problems would disappear. Unfortunately for us the Democratic Party has locked itself into the ridiculous position of having to defend the ACA to the last man and woman. But that’s what happens when you pass a huge piece of legislation on Christmas Eve with no ‘yes’ votes from the other party that nobody read or even understood. The leadership of the Democratic Party are idiots and need to be replaced ASAP.

  2. And basically the only reason I carry insurance is for emergencies.
    So I and my employer pay thousands of dollars a year when I have only had medical care about three times in the last 20 years (the first of which would have cost *less* if I paid cash out of pocket – at least according to what I was quoted – that it did when I decided to wait until I had insurance (Mail Handlers – ICYWW, I ditched them fast after that experience. Almost *nobody* is in their damn networks, so if you find a doctor in their network, you are still going to pay out the ass for all the lab work, etc).

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