I don't pretend to know the answers to the broken healthcare system, but here are some of my recent personal experiences. The dollars quoted are what insurance paid (rounded, I don't remember the exact figures), not what was billed. Draw your own conclusions:
Go in for 12 week initial prenatal exam. My doctor's out delivering a baby, so they set me up with somebody else who can't find the baby's heartbeat. $700 for emergency ultrasound. Ummm . . .could we have maybe tried another doctor first? There were lots there . . .
Dh has a really really really bad back spasm that he suffers through all weekend so he can see the doctor on Monday. Calls the doctor's office who tells him to call 911 to request a non-emergency transport to the hospital. Ambulance ride? $1050. What would it have taken for him to avoid the ambulance ride? 2 perocet. I know perocet is a control substance and all, but it's not like the ER doc didn't give it to him anyway . . . Maybe we could have tried that first?
20 week ultrasound finds a cleft lip that leads to 5 more ultrasounds. Umm . . .Ultrasounds are fun and all, but you really can't do much about a cleft until the baby is born . . . (Don't remember what they cost . . .something like $250 each)
And then there's grandma. My grandma is a great person and she lives a really full life. She'll also be 90 in May and had quadruple bypass surgery when she was 80. It's pretty safe to say grandma knows her heart isn't the greatest. Grandma can't get an appointment with her normal doctor, so she ends up seeing somebody else in the clinic. This doctor listens to grandma's heart and sends her on an ambulance ride to the hospital where she gets to do all sorts of tests including a stress test. Grandma isn't a big fan of hospitals or tests. Moreover, I'd not real sure she'd accept treatment if they found something treatable. I don't know how much all of this cost, but I'm sure it wasn't cheap. Grandma also had an MRI for something. . . .they didn't tell her what . . ."something with her lungs" . . . Before all these kinds of things grandma also had years of pap smears -- after all of the vital organs had been removed.
Go in for 12 week initial prenatal exam. My doctor's out delivering a baby, so they set me up with somebody else who can't find the baby's heartbeat. $700 for emergency ultrasound. Ummm . . .could we have maybe tried another doctor first? There were lots there . . .
Dh has a really really really bad back spasm that he suffers through all weekend so he can see the doctor on Monday. Calls the doctor's office who tells him to call 911 to request a non-emergency transport to the hospital. Ambulance ride? $1050. What would it have taken for him to avoid the ambulance ride? 2 perocet. I know perocet is a control substance and all, but it's not like the ER doc didn't give it to him anyway . . . Maybe we could have tried that first?
20 week ultrasound finds a cleft lip that leads to 5 more ultrasounds. Umm . . .Ultrasounds are fun and all, but you really can't do much about a cleft until the baby is born . . . (Don't remember what they cost . . .something like $250 each)
And then there's grandma. My grandma is a great person and she lives a really full life. She'll also be 90 in May and had quadruple bypass surgery when she was 80. It's pretty safe to say grandma knows her heart isn't the greatest. Grandma can't get an appointment with her normal doctor, so she ends up seeing somebody else in the clinic. This doctor listens to grandma's heart and sends her on an ambulance ride to the hospital where she gets to do all sorts of tests including a stress test. Grandma isn't a big fan of hospitals or tests. Moreover, I'd not real sure she'd accept treatment if they found something treatable. I don't know how much all of this cost, but I'm sure it wasn't cheap. Grandma also had an MRI for something. . . .they didn't tell her what . . ."something with her lungs" . . . Before all these kinds of things grandma also had years of pap smears -- after all of the vital organs had been removed.
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