Self pay discounts are common, and often restricted to advance or very prompt, payments. This means you sometimes have to roll the dice - "Do I file the insurance appeal and pay $900 if I lose or pay $600 now?". Think of it like plea bargaining with the finance office.I have encountered this sort of discount when going in for scheduled (non-renal) surgery. The local hospital determines the copay/deductible as part of the insurance pre-authoriztion process and offers a 20% on the amount due if paid in advance. This is nicer than most hospitals that are "prepay or the procedure will not occur".The billed price is a farce, and a self-pay discount is typical. The problem is that the self-pay price is generally still WAY above what private insurance would pay and WAY, WAY above what Medicare would pay. Even with the discount, it is almost certain that the hospital is getting more than it would if the insurance claim were approved.The purpose is to reduce pushback, encourage payment, and get the customer who is only paying twice rather than three times what would be accepted as "paid in full" under the insurance carrier's contract to say "thank you".
I hear ya, MooseMom. I know that medicine is big business and the lawyers and bean counters are making it all work, but it is still somehow sad. After my transplant, I made it my 'business' to jump through all the hoops and pester the heck out of the billing department and got everything covered. I was no longer working and so every morning I would get up and decide,"Am I gonna call and wait on hold for Humana, Medicare or Barnes Hospital today" That took hours every week and about 9 months. I had a post op abdominal abscess with extra surgeries and protracted period of wound clinic appointments with a wound vac, and somedays those services were being covered by the prior auth for transplant related services, and somedays not. Depended on who you spoke to, what the weather was like, and whether the St Louis Cardinals were playing.I feel sorry for patients who don't have the time, energy, or intestinal fortitude to slog through that. I think this forum has helped me, and I hope it helps others.