My insurance plan allows for payment $4,648.32. My co-pay is $516.48 which Medicare will pick up. My question to my insurance company and DaVita is "who the hell is going to pay the other $35,000?" They may as well just submit 2 billion dollars because my insurance is only going to pay $4,648.32! There answer was it is "contracting or something, I don't really understand." As I understand it the term is "contractual adjustment". That is the amount of the difference between the submitted charge and the eligible charge with the contacted providers. In this case your insurance carrier and Medicare. Health care providers agree to accept the eligible charges in full payment for the services provided and write off any difference rather than charge the patient.
Quote Please see this thread to learn how to "quote" someone.http://ihatedialysis.com/forum/index.php?topic=463.0- EpomanQuoteThanks, I'm new here and learning! Hope this works right.
So, the providers are escalating, animating, exaggerating, whatever term you want to use (lying) so they can write off HUGE amounts for tax breaks? That is FRAUD!
I spoke with my supervisor and she said that a session in our hospital costs US$500 (our legal tender here is the US dollar) for visitors and that would be what the insurance would have to pay. I can't imagine that dialysis is now costing about $6000 per month!!!I am only hoping that the insurance pays the full cost. If not, I will be in the soup!
In my neck of the woods, clinics get roughly $300 U.S. per treatment. That then has to be split up between employee wages, machine repair costs, dialysis supplies (everything used during the treatment), rent or mortgage, and facility maintenance. That's not a lot to go around. It makes it very difficult to provide extra amenities to the patients. We currently have satelite TV for the patients (all chairs have their own TV w/headphones) with 26 channels to choose from and a DVD player hooked to the TV system as well. Beyond that we have little contests that we run every few months for best KT/V or fewest missed treatments. The prizes are nothing huge ($25 Amercian Express gift certificates), but the patients seem to like it. The thing is that it all cost money. There have been several times when we have been in the hole at the end of the month, and the company has to eat those extra costs. But that's just what has to be done to care for the patients in a proper manner, and give them some extras so they don't completely dread coming every other day. What is paid out by the patient treatments goes back into the patients care, not padding pockets. At least in my clinics case, I can't speak for any other entity that also gets paid from the insurance companies for your care.
Is your center trying to get more patients out of the clinic and doing dialysis at home to lower their overhead?
I'm surprised that anyone could even afford to pay for dialysis. If I had to pay Id be dead