Guest guest Posted February 14, 2004 Report Share Posted February 14, 2004 Dolly asked about how one handles having a procedure when your doctor does not accept insurance. Important question and I first want to clarify something that I wish I had known earlier on. IF you have a plan that covers (partially) your seeing a doctor who is out-of-plan, that also includes doctors who do not accept any insurance. Accepting insurance means that the doctor accepts whatever the insurance is willing to pay as full coverages. But any doctor's expenses will be partially covered by coverage that allows you to go out-of-plan. I was fortunate that my discomfort was mild enough to allow me to research my options, and change insurance plans (which is only allowed to happen once a year; at a set time). My government job gave me about 7 different insurance companies to choose from. I spent months (YES, months!) looking into them and talking to the office of the doctor that I was planning on having perform my surgery. I asked the woman who handles his insurance claims " Which plan tends to pay the best? " and she knew. In my case, in NYC, it was GHI with a catastrophic-benefits rider, although it is still unclear to me how much extra that rider helped. The insurance companies are extremely unhelpful in predicting how much they are likely to pay and they cannot promise, they can only guess. I had my surgery with Dr. West. His office handled all the details with the insurance company. Starting with getting the pre-approval. I needed to pay $2,000 upfront, with the clear understanding that I was responsible for paying anything that the insurance did not cover. Once the insurance kicked in, and paid about $8,300, I was responsible for the rest. Yes, his fee his high. Then again, my surgery took a long time (I think it was 4 hours; I don't remember anymore). Over 40 fibroids. I don't think there are many doctors around who could have done a myomectomy on that many fibroids. And I think that some who could have done it, would still have chosen to switch to a hysterectomy and told me it was medically necessary. So it was well worth the $3,750 that I paid myself, to be certain that I would wake up with my uterus still inside me. Especially after what I learned at the HERS conference last weekend, which I still intend to post about. R. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.