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Showing posts with label healthcare. Show all posts
Showing posts with label healthcare. Show all posts

Thursday, July 31, 2014

Counting the Cost of Healthcare

My niece went to the dentist the other day. She's new to this adult thing, and like many of us (even those much older!), trusts healthcare providers to help her make good decisions. They told her they needed to take x-rays because it had been a while since she had them taken. She agreed....they are the experts and they said it was necessary. Later on, after the x-rays had been taken, the dentist told her that her insurance "probably" wouldn't cover the additional panoramic x-rays they had taken. They never told her what it would cost her, never explained in advance they weren't covered by her insurance, and never talked to her about why they found them necessary until after they were taken.

I was a bit frustrated when I heard her accounting of it. Knowing insurance as I do, I know that panoramic x-rays are covered....if necessary and usually on a schedule that is consistent with (or more generous than) the guidelines established by the American Dental Association. Essentially they were telling her they couldn't make a case for the coverage of it with her insurance company...but they assumed that she (a college student) would just pay for it. Without knowing the cost beforehand. Without consideration of her having a voice in the decision at all.

I had a situation that was somewhat related a couple of years ago when I was in the process of deciding what kind of braces I was going to get....either traditional wire or Invisalign. I had been told the result would be a bit better with traditional, but I would need to see an oral surgeon before I did that because I would need teeth pulled. I made an appointment for a consultation with the oral surgeon.

I admit I am a bit of  pain-in-the-rear patient for a provider who does not like an involved patient. I see myself as an integral part of any decision that concerns my health....so ask a lot of questions and want to, as much as I am able, understand what is going on with my body and exactly what is expected from my treatment. Luckily I have found providers who respect my questions and don't make me feel like a weirdo for asking them. Well OK, sometimes they think I am a weirdo, but they humor me!

Having been in the insurance industry in some capacity for over 30 years, I also see myself as a consumer of healthcare. Yep, I often ask how much things cost. Before they deliver the service. I also try to determine if I think the service is necessary. Yes, I trust my providers, but I also know I look at life differently than a lot of people. What they may see as necessary, I may feel is not. There are risks with most procedures.....do I want to take that risk? I want veto power over everything, and also the ultimate responsibility for what is done to me. I believe if I am passive, not only can my care possibly not meet my needs, but I know healthcare can become more expensive for all of us. I am passive too often (it's exhausting)....so I apologize for those times I don't question things....not for the times I do.

Anyway, my oral surgeon visit....I was there on time, a copy of my panoramic x-ray in hand. No one was in the waiting room, but it took a very long time for them to call me back. In fact, I thought perhaps I was in a ghost town. When they finally did call me (and no other patient seemed to be in the office at the time), the oral surgeon seemed to only see my mouth. He didn't introduce himself or talk directly to me. He ordered his assistant to take another panoramic and quickly left the room. Not a word said to me. I was stunned.

The assistant appeared shocked herself when I said "Did he said he wanted another panoramic? I just had one. No....I don't want another one. My insurance won't cover it and I don't want the extra exposure to radiation." She told me I would have to talk to him about it. Thirty minutes later he came back into the room. He acted like I was being unreasonable. Maybe I was....I didn't care. I believe in myself when it comes to this stuff. He finally said he would do the panoramic without charge. I said "Can you also do it without radiation?" He got angry. I knew by then he was not a doctor I could respect....so I just left as quickly as possible. Livid that I felt that he disrespected me and probably many other patients. I went for the Invisalign braces and never regretted that decision.

I once went to visit an allergist and was charged for an "intermediate" office visit. I didn't even sit down in his office. What would have been a "short" office visit with that guy? He didn't examine me at all. I went in, he asked what my problem was, I said I was having severe headaches, he said allergies don't cause headaches, and wrote me a referral to neurologist. (I never did see that neurologist. It turned out the sweetener in some sugar-free mints was causing the headaches and I figured that out myself. Isn't that an allergy of sorts? I never saw that allergist again. I am allergic to grass, I mow grass, and get headaches. Don't tell me they are not related.)

When diagnosed with restless legs syndrome I was given a new medication that was also used for multiple sclerosis. It was very expensive and very strong. I knew day one it was not good for my body. The doctor told me to stay on it for a month. I lasted two weeks....maybe. I decided the treatment was worse than the condition. It was a couple of years later that my regular nurse practitioner (who was out of the country at the time I got the other medication) prescribed another medication for me.....it costs me less than $3 a month. It changed my life. (I began to sleep again!) Why wasn't that drug the first one that was offered?

We've become a nation that will drive across town to save a quarter on a gallon of milk, but we don't ask what our MRI costs before we get it. We don't ask the cost of a prescription. We don't seek the least costly treatments first. We don't know what the cost of an office visit with our doctor is compared to the doctor next door. Many of our doctors often don't know the cost of our office visit or the medication they prescribe either (trust me....I have asked.) I understand it is complicated....the charge depends on whether you have insurance or not and which insurance you have. Oh....and the cost is not your copay. What is important is the total charge. I guarantee if you ask, you will be surprised at how much some things and how little is paid for others.

I see both the good and the bad of our healthcare system, and have no brilliant solutions for how we can make things work perfectly, but one thing we can each do....we can become better consumers. We can ask what things cost. We can ask why we need particular services. We can question ourselves as to whether we think that the benefits are worth the cost of the treatment. We can be our own advocates, and trust that we are an expert on ourselves.  And we can challenge our providers, as very busy and stressed as they are, to know the cost of the care they give and the drugs they prescribe.

I believe my niece is going to be a great healthcare consumer. She is listening and learning with each encounter. Her dad is asking her a lot of tough questions that are not allowing her to look at it all passively, that are requiring that she question the system. I know she hates it. I still do, too. But it is important. Not just to her pocketbook, but to the pocketbook of us all. It's important to the quality of care she will receive. Positive change doesn't usually happen when we are passive, but when we get up on our high-horse a bit and require that it happen. Our healthcare system can use quite a bit of positive change. Let's make it better.

Monday, April 2, 2012

Superbowl for Geeks

One of the lawyers that works at my company called last week the Superbowl for Geeks.  Made me laugh, but also I identified with it.  Because I probably do have a geek-like fascination with the health reform law, known as the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (PPACA), that came into being about two years ago.  Its future, now in the hands of our Supreme Court, definitely has my attention.  Is requiring people to buy health insurance (or pay a penalty) constitutional?  The Court listened to the arguments for and against last week.  We'll find out what they believe soon.

That Americans have access to quality, affordable healthcare has been a passion of mine for some time.  In college I had that great benefit called the infirmary.  How wonderful it was to go and get all the Sudafed I could ever want, for free!  I recommended it to all my friends.  (Trivia:  Singer James Taylor's dad headed it up when I was at Carolina, and was my doctor once.) And yes, since Sudafed was free, I took more than I needed.  Just because I could.  (And no, there was no meth lab involved.)

Then I got my first real job out of college that offered insurance benefits, and I had to figure out things like what a deductible was.  Funnily enough, there were not a lot of people around who could explain it to me well.  It wasn't free, but still I found it quite cool to see how much of my bill my insurance covered! 

I've been in the insurance business since 1983.  My first job was paying claims.  It gave me a good idea of just why we need coverage.  While I wasn't a big health care consumer, some other people I paid claims for had bills that were astronomical!   Several years after I left the claims department for marketing, I met the daughter of a guy who worked at a company I had paid claims for.  He had major health problems.  I still knew his social security number five years later! He had that many claims and with every bill I needed to enter his social security number. (Don't worry....claims examiners don't know social security numbers today.   And most claims are paid without humans touching them!)  The money they saved on one healthy person like me wouldn't have covered this man's bills.  There needed to be a lot of mes in the pool.  In this day when bills can hit the millions, we need lots and lots and lots of mes.  High costs, high premiums.

While I can't say that I have read every sentence of the PPACA, which stands at over 2,000 pages, I have  read most of it.  Definitely more than the average American.   My personal assessment is that it is surprisingly a good law (though with too much unnecessary baggage attached.)  It is also a very integrated law.  For example, strike down the individual mandate, and you can't implement the part that says there will be no pre-existing conditions.  Insurance must always have a balance of risk, which means that there needs to be lots of healthy people in the system to pay for those who are sick or injured, and if someone can just wait until they need coverage to purchase it, none of us will be able to afford coverage.  And that will just be the first of the house of cards to tumble down.

I've wracked my brain over the years trying to figure out a way that we can improve our healthcare system.  Will this law do it?  I don't know.  But our current system has some breaks and we need to figure out a way to fix them.  There are a lot of people who are uninsured and under-insured.  Those of us who have health coverage are already paying extra for those who receive service and don't pay their bills and for shortages that appear elsewhere.  Other than the emergency room, there are not a lot of other options for the uninsured who are not wealthy.  Some doctors see some people pro bono, there are a few free clinics, but not enough to fully service all who need care. But everyone who is uninsured is not sick.  A lot of the uninsured are healthy.  For now.  That can change overnight.....and it's not insurance if they can wait until they need it to purchase it, so our system can't just wait until then to open the doors to them.  What happens to our system if all of the uninsured are added?  Theoretically they will be able to get care more efficiently and the cost of coverage will go down for us all.  That I would like to see.

I have no clue as to what the feeling of the court will be.  I am not even positive what I want it to be.  There are quite a few possible scenarios as to what can happen.  I am admittedly intrigued as to whether the system the PPACA lays out can work.  While not perfect, it shakes up our current system and that system needs to be shaken up.  But regardless of the court's decision, this geek will be paying attention and will be involved in making the aftermath as good as possible for as many as I can.  For I believe eventually we will find a solution to the healthcare problem.  And I know I am not alone in my passion.   I believe people in this country deserve accessible and affordable healthcare.  As good as we can give, to as many as we can give.   And I like the idea of us all being invested in paying for it.