We need an interpreter.
Quote from: Charlie B53 on July 12, 2016, 06:52:19 PMWe need an interpreter.You are dealing with an organization that defines an egress as an entrance to an exit, and describes bullet wounds as ballistically induced subcutaneous apertures.Of course, you could always dig into the tax code.
I see on our Medicare statement that they're being charged in excess of $4700 per treatment...and that's with ME doing it...no trained nurse or facility....we're at home, and I'm essentially "free" labor. It's outrageous.
My mother, who is in a "long term care facility" (nursing home), has her toenails clipped by a guy who goes around to all the homes to do this service. He charges Medicare $125, per patient, to clip the nails and another $125, per patient, to travel to the home. So if he does 100 patients, he charges $12,500 to clip and another $12,500 for travel. According to moms Medicare EOB, they only pay him $35 total. Gotta love government work.
Private insurance payers are the cash cow for the dialysis service providers. I remember for the few months prior to my wife going on Medicare, the insurance company was paying about $35,000 a month.
Curious, If Clinics BILL so much yet accept the smaller Medicare payment, then what becomes the difference?
General rule of big business: Charge as much as you can without frightening off the customer. If they got big bucks, give them the big tab. If they don't got big bucks, work out the maximum they can afford, and charge them one cent less than that. They'll think they got a bargain, and pay up with gratitude.
As such, it makes sense for clinics to accept medicare patients as long as they have enough private insurance patients to cover the fixed overhear.
From my reading I knew exactly how many Medicare slots I was keeping afloat with the astronomical amounts my private insurance was paying.
I also got the same spiel from the clinic medical director, she basically told me that I was signing my death sentence to go to NxStage.
Quote from: cattlekid on April 30, 2018, 05:18:04 PMFrom my reading I knew exactly how many Medicare slots I was keeping afloat with the astronomical amounts my private insurance was paying. Don't keep us in suspense ... how many.I've always thought the private pay rate warranted happy ending dialysis. QuoteI also got the same spiel from the clinic medical director, she basically told me that I was signing my death sentence to go to NxStage. Funny, the medical director at my clinic recently emailed me an article suggesting that more frequent hemo causes dialysis lifespan to approach that of a cadaver transplant. His point was that I should hold out for a good KDPI.
Let's say for argument's sake that a Medicare slot loses just as much as they are being paid.
Thankfully I worked for an extremely large multinational company so they never said boo about the amount of money I was costing them (we self insured).
You want to try the pricing method the British NHS use when contracting services. Basically they say to the clinic/hospital: "Work out the absolutely cheapest possible price you can do it for, then halve it."