The Norman Parathyr.Thoughts anyone? Should I be contacting the Medicare fraud office?
First about the Medicare is a money looser for doctors and hospitals, if was a money looser why do so many doctors and hospitals advertise for Medicare patients on tv. The truth is the Medicare rates are calculated to provide a modest profit for the provider. But in this day in age many like the jerk head of the hhs want obscene profits. This is one example of the Trump administration shearing the sheep who elected them. A move to Canada is looking better every day these hookless are trying to run the government.
A move to Canada is looking better every day these hookless are trying to run the government.
The Norman Parathyroid surgery center (www.parathyroid.com) already balance bills.It takes the form of a mandatory pre-surgical consultation with one of the center MDs. The terms are - surgery covered by Medicare, but surgery will not be performed unless one of their staff MDs evaluates you (no, they will not accept an evaluation from another MD), and this evaluation is not covered by any insurance. They further warn the patients that they are not to submit a claim or attempt to collect for this fee from their insurance carrier. The fee varies by residential location (local; in-state; out of state) even though the patient goes to the center for evaluation and treatment.This smells like "balance billing" under another name, and the caution to "not attempt to collect insurance payment" makes me suspicious that this practice understands this and is trying to keep off the radar.Thoughts anyone? Should I be contacting the Medicare fraud office?
I'm not sure this is balance billing. I think this line on parathyroid.com covers them "All patients have the right to come to Tampa for an in-person consultation and thus the phone consultation would not apply--so just let us know if this is what you want." If it is optional then I think Medicare allows it.
Insurance Companies' made contract agreements to pay 'Allowable charges' which resulted in often significant reductions to each individual charge listed within that 'Final Bill'.
Same with dialysis. If the centers weren't making an incremental profit on additional dialysis patients, they would not accept Medicare. No law requires a provider to accept Medicare, however, there are rules that come into play once a provider starts accepting it. On the other hand, there is a good chance that medicare centers would be running at a loss if all patients paid the Medicare rate.
I knew the center saw dollar signs when I arrived.
Quote from: Bill Peckham on March 12, 2017, 01:33:43 AMI'm not sure this is balance billing. I think this line on parathyroid.com covers them "All patients have the right to come to Tampa for an in-person consultation and thus the phone consultation would not apply--so just let us know if this is what you want." If it is optional then I think Medicare allows it.Interesting point I missed. Probably there as a work-around so they can claim it is not balance billing while doing it.QuoteInsurance Companies' made contract agreements to pay 'Allowable charges' which resulted in often significant reductions to each individual charge listed within that 'Final Bill'.