... I listen to Registration Reps who call insurance companies daily to get 'authorizations' for dialysis treatments and sometimes get asked 'is this a medical necessity?'...
Quote from: dialysisbiller on February 21, 2009, 06:44:26 AM... I listen to Registration Reps who call insurance companies daily to get 'authorizations' for dialysis treatments and sometimes get asked 'is this a medical necessity?'...When the dialysis center is trying to get $2,000 per treatment, no wonder the insurance companies balk.
If you look at your EOB (explanation of benefits) that comes from your insurance, look at the 'charged/billed' amount, then look at the 'approved' amount and/or 'paid'.... it's standard with ALL medical billing.
How about another layer of compliance for patients? I'm speaking of being forced to be tied down in a chair next to patients who fail to shower. Or wear their shoes. Or scream into their cell phones about their anal warts. Or throw their feces all over the bathroom walls.You get the idea.There should be certain requirements that speak to common sense and courtesy.Try putting up with weekly treatments at my clinic with the animalistic antics I'm forced to deal with and you'll demand these type of rules.
Dialysisbiller, please answer a question that I have been asking for nearly 4 years, and have never got an answer.Why is it that we buy our equipment, medication, supplies from the US, yet dialysis is much cheaper in the Caribbean - $500 per session here, $300 per session in Barbados, $320 in St.Lucia?Here we have no reuse, get sureseals, heparin, Epogen, etc., etc.Why does it have to cost so much in your country???Isn't it that someone is really profitting from this?
Quote from: bajanne2000 on February 26, 2009, 09:52:32 AMDialysisbiller, please answer a question that I have been asking for nearly 4 years, and have never got an answer.Why is it that we buy our equipment, medication, supplies from the US, yet dialysis is much cheaper in the Caribbean - $500 per session here, $300 per session in Barbados, $320 in St.Lucia?Here we have no reuse, get sureseals, heparin, Epogen, etc., etc.Why does it have to cost so much in your country???Isn't it that someone is really profitting from this?as with most medications in the US, the pharmaceutical companies are to blame, the services for dialysis being cheaper in other countries such as in the Caribbean, I have no idea why it would be cheaper other than the government runs it and it is not private like the US medical industry.... i have family in both Canada and US and are just freaked out at the way our health system is here, my family went almost 3 years without health coverage.... in Canada, that's unheard of, i got lotsa questions 'why didn't your government pay for your health care when you couldn't afford it?'.... well, apparently unemployment is making TOO much to qualify for Medicaid.... but if i was an illegal alien, i could easily qualify and get top care... go figure... trust me, I have issues with how the medical industry operates in this country... i have illegals at my centers that get their treatments pd 100% by state medicaid programs or hospital charities... or sometimes, not and who's left footing that bill when they run off after a center has taken them in and given dialysis treatments to help them?.... oh yea, it's not always a profit at some centers in some locations
One cost containment company told the story of guy who was withdrawing from dialysis because he was going to burn through his family's coverage limits.
Quote from: Bill Peckham on April 19, 2009, 04:40:08 PMOne cost containment company told the story of guy who was withdrawing from dialysis because he was going to burn through his family's coverage limits.Another reason why the 30 (or was it 36?) month Medicare Secondary Payer (MSP) period was an awful idea.We can partially thank those "Caring Kidney" folks.One of the main arguments advanced by members of the group was 'people shouldn't be forced to drop their private insurance (in 24 months) for Medicare.'I never read anything from any of the members of the "Caring Kidney" folks about the possibility of people on dialysis reaching their lifetime limits as a result of the extended private insurance provision. This is a terrible shame ... for all of us.
If all the LDOs charged was $800 per treatment then there wouldn't be a need for Dialysis Cost Containment Companies yet there is an entire industry. There are numbers in the public record via the NRA v. BCBS of GA law suit. $2,900 per treatment/ up to $9,000 when separately billibles are included
Sorry Bill, I was referring to the 2007 push for the 42 month extension.I have now edited my original post to reflect the point I was trying to make.
Quote from: Bill Peckham on April 19, 2009, 07:27:57 PMIf all the LDOs charged was $800 per treatment then there wouldn't be a need for Dialysis Cost Containment Companies yet there is an entire industry. There are numbers in the public record via the NRA v. BCBS of GA law suit. $2,900 per treatment/ up to $9,000 when separately billibles are includeddo you know who's charging over $2K per treatment(NO drugs included) not where i'm at, as i said a flat charge across the board just over $1,500.... when you include meds, sure that amount sores pretty fast, but when you're talking high dollars like that it's the meds that inflate the claims to the higher dollar.Cost containment would be having insurance companies use contracts for dialysis patients. ie: BCBS plan gets charged $1,500 plus all meds, there's a contract that calls for 'all inclusive' rate of reimbursement of $500..... IF the patient rec'd high doses of EPO or other meds, no big deal, the contract is 'all inclusive' and no matter what meds they get, once flat reimbursement rate. that's cost containment. No contract, yes, that price for the treatment and drugs in a single day could definitely shoot up to $9K
The administrators at the self insurance conference named names and the name that came up most often for extremely high charges - 100k/month - which lacking any leverage the self insurers have to pay, was DaVita. DaVita's high charges are widely known and commented on in their industry.