I was wondering if anyone out there every looked at what your center is charging your insurance company for each NxStage treatment? The other day we had a nurse here from the insurance company going over my husbands medical history. My husband mentioned how when he was in center they only charge 360.00 a treatment 3X's a week but now that we are at home the center charges 720.00 a treatment and his insurance pay 100% all 720.00! She seemed shocked. we explained to her we questioned it and we were advised by the billing office that they called his insurance company and they said that is how much they can bill, so that it what they are billing. Is anyone else getting charged anywhere near that amount?
Hubby's NxStage runs around $75to 78 thousand dollars a month! I don't understand why either! Usually EPO is high when given but he hasnt had to have Epo since 12/2010. I do like the NxStage system, but they may very well be eliminated in the future, due to their extravagant prices. It definately should be cheaper than In-Center, cause like you said, they don't have the overhead and upkeep to deal with! Is $75,000.00 a month alot or what? Lord, I barely make a 1/4 of that at work!It is ridiculous, but husband wants it, so he shall get it until we can't afford it any more.lmunchkin
I wish we didn't have to get Medicare, were paying the premium for it and we have two private insurances, but we were told we had to get it. Seems to me to be a total waste of money we don't have. Wish I could cancel it.
Sample monthly billing for in-clinic big chain dialysis, circa 2010. This is NOT NxStage. Anyone with NsStage billing willing to post a snapshot is welcome.
Quote from: greg10 on May 13, 2011, 12:21:08 PMSample monthly billing for in-clinic big chain dialysis, circa 2010. This is NOT NxStage. Anyone with NsStage billing willing to post a snapshot is welcome.The problem is this: Medicare paid only $2753 out of $49070. The $2753 is not enough to cover the cost of the clinic. Where does the clinic get the money to cover the shortage? The only way the clinic can make a profit is to "rob" the private insurance. The charge of the clinic to the private insurance is not based on the "cost". It bases on how much the insurance can pay. Why the private insurances allow this practice is beyond my believe. When I was on PD, my clinic charged my insurance about 4 to 5 times of my reasonable cost, and my insurances paid all of them with a little discount. The worst, my clinic almost doubled my charges during a two-year period. I think any health reform would fail if such a robbery is still allowed.
Quote from: Jie on May 14, 2011, 08:15:36 PMQuote from: greg10 on May 13, 2011, 12:21:08 PMSample monthly billing for in-clinic big chain dialysis, circa 2010. This is NOT NxStage. Anyone with NsStage billing willing to post a snapshot is welcome.The problem is this: Medicare paid only $2753 out of $49070. The $2753 is not enough to cover the cost of the clinic. Where does the clinic get the money to cover the shortage? The only way the clinic can make a profit is to "rob" the private insurance. The charge of the clinic to the private insurance is not based on the "cost". It bases on how much the insurance can pay. Why the private insurances allow this practice is beyond my believe. When I was on PD, my clinic charged my insurance about 4 to 5 times of my reasonable cost, and my insurances paid all of them with a little discount. The worst, my clinic almost doubled my charges during a two-year period. I think any health reform would fail if such a robbery is still allowed.As I wrote earlier, any posting of a snap shot of actual payments by the insurance company to the clinic is welcome. I don't believe any US health insurance company will pay much beyond what Medicare pays. Insurance companies are in the business of making money in the US (in other countries, they are non-profit), and not go out of business. No insurance companies will pay $50,000 when Medicare is paying $3000. That is why Medicare and CMS is so important in keeping the cost down when no other market forces could.
I know of just one time that the rate paid by a private insurer for dialysis made it into the public record http://www.billpeckham.com/from_the_sharp_end_of_the/2008/01/law-suit-reveal.htmlthe BCBS lawsuit confirms what I have heard from dialyzors and the self insurance industry - I've spoken at their convention twice - that charges can run five figures per treatment, over one million a year.Greg I believe the dynamic at work is that the insurers' business model is to make a small profit on a big number. If the industry margin is 3% then to increase profits (and your CEO pay) you need to increase your expenses so then because your expenses went up you can increase your revenue (raise your prices) and earn 3% of a larger number. That's the underlying perversion of the private insurance system we have in this country. Not only does private insurance not keep costs down, their incentive is to see costs increase.
One more example for the high charge: I usually got EPO indenpent of my clinic. One time when the recall problem caused my shortage of EPO, I asked my clinic to help to get some. The clinic director asked the Pharmacy (belonging to the same dialysis com.) about the cost and told me it was $590, which was about right based on what I paid through other pharmacies. However, when the dialysis com. billed my insurance, I saw the cost was $2700 plus $47 shipping. It is consistent that charges are about 4 to 5 times as the normal cost.