It looks like you're using an Ad Blocker.
Please white-list or disable AboveTopSecret.com in your ad-blocking tool.
Thank you.
Some features of ATS will be disabled while you continue to use an ad-blocker.
originally posted by: johnwick
a reply to: Mugly
Yes because they should charge you $500 for a$6 bedpan $20 for a $0.05 aspirin and then rape the money out of you.
Didn't you know, for profit medicine is more about profit and less about medicine.
I hate this world, there is scant good left in it.
It just shocks me they fail to see the obvious problem.
If they charged what it actually cost, plus a little extra for them to make money on, then people would pay their now reasonable medical bills.
Instead they charge you for stitches, what heart sergury costs in most countries.
You can literally build and have a satellite launched into space, for the cost of some medical services.
originally posted by: SlapMonkey
originally posted by: johnwick
a reply to: Mugly
Yes because they should charge you $500 for a$6 bedpan $20 for a $0.05 aspirin and then rape the money out of you.
Didn't you know, for profit medicine is more about profit and less about medicine.
I hate this world, there is scant good left in it.
It just shocks me they fail to see the obvious problem.
If they charged what it actually cost, plus a little extra for them to make money on, then people would pay their now reasonable medical bills.
Instead they charge you for stitches, what heart sergury costs in most countries.
You can literally build and have a satellite launched into space, for the cost of some medical services.
It is quite well documented that a large portion of the ridiculously inflated costs for medical services is due in part to both frivolous lawsuits against doctors/hospitals and those who, without insurance, us the E.R. for everything from a headache to a cold and then don't pay the bills (and don't even get me started on the costs passed on by hospitals by those who are here illegally and don't even use real addresses when getting medical services and can't even be found in order to send them a bill).
I'm not saying that greed isn't a part of it, but there are quite a few legitimate reasons as to why those of us who are responsible in paying for both insurance and medical care pay so much.
originally posted by: J.B. Aloha
I have always been of the opinion, that the major expense and abuse happens at the ER. A lot of people who go to the ER do not need to be there, and could wait the 24 hour to see an urgent care clinic or family practitioner. Leave the ER for what our hospitals actually do better than anyone: Trauma. Life, limb, or eyesight. Snotnosed fussy brbritches, can wait to see the pediatrician on monday. The ER is also heavily used by the uninsured for non life threatening ailments.
Personaly, I love my local urgent care clinic. Having joined their 'perferred cash payers' club, yes, most have these unadvertised, I get substantially discounted costs, and none of the hastle of proving banking or insurance information. As an example, I raked the flesh down a knuckles length on two of my fingers building a storage annex for my shop, was in and out in an hour hour, and only paid $300 cash for wound irigation, ensuring no nerve and tendon damage, and sutures. Whereas a similar ER visit would have been close to $2500 cash.
On the other hand, I am running into brick walls trying to find a urologist who will do a vasectomy for cash... And that is strictly an elective out patient procedure. They want in network referrals, a physical, insurance info, blah blah, blah, blah... I just want to give them 10 crispy hundos for the snip and 2 followups to ensure it took.
Definitly a backasswards system.
ETA. Also the massive increase in 'Medical Administrator' hiring to navigate all the bureaucracy, which may be more than the ER abuse in retrospect.
originally posted by: SlapMonkey
a reply to: Mugly
Go to a different lab--I'm uncertain where you live, but within comfortable driving distance from me there are many labs that can do this kind of work.
Take your money elsewhere.
And if you can't, then, yes, start a medical savings account and give them that card number and go from there. You can still dispute the charge, because you'll still get a bill, and they'll refund anything that needs refunded when the dispute is resolved.
But I do agree--it's a sucky business practice, regardless.