I have never had an issue paying for dialysis. Like you, I work full time and carry my own insurance (Blue Cross Blue Shield). When I started dialysis last year, I had already met my OOP maximum for the year so I never had to pay any co-payment for my dialysis sessions.This year, I put the amount of my OOP maximum into my FSA account. I still haven't had to touch it because I have not gotten any bills from my provider - I believe that they write off anything that they don't get from the insurance company above and beyond the amount Medicare would pay. I have to verify this though - I don't want any surprise bills coming out in the next few months.
i have united healthcare. and i have been paying quite a few bills this year yet somehow the yearly maximum is barely moving! i wonder how they calculate that stuff. i have an yearly maximum of 2000 before all of it is covered. i mean i have gotten 3 paracentesis treatments this year in addition to all kinds of blood work and doctor appointments. and the yearly max is moving at worms pace. so that's why i am assuming i am going to have to pay some from pocket for each session. for example, i get an epo shot once every two weeks and i have to pay 110 out of pocket for it. each time. i am totally clueless on how this insurance works. it did pay for the transplant work up though. that was a giant relief. thank God for that.
Medicare becomes primary and your plan becomes secondary for three years. Then your plan will be primary for , I think three years- then it goes back to medicare with your being secondary forever.