Tag Archives: health insurance

10 Things Your HMO Won’t Tell You

So, you’re thinking about purchasing, or you currently have, an HMO health insurance plan. you read the nice brochure and the coverage looks like just what you’ve been looking for. They tell you great things up front, and show you pretty color pictures of happy people using their plan. So what could be wrong? why not purchase their plan? There are a number of things that they tell you that are 1/2 truths, and the most important things they won’t tell you at all. If you already have an HMO, compare the 10 points below to how you have been treated with your plan. It should help make sense of it all. If you are thinking of purchasing one, beware.

1. the less your doctor sees you, the more he earns. – One of the great things about joining a health maintenance organization is the convenience. you visit the doctor, the HMO pays for it. Most of the time there isn’t a single form you fill out. but how is your HMO doctor really getting paid? you might be surprised.

Sixty percent of all managed-care plans, including HMO’s and preferred provider organizations, now pay their primary-care doctors through some sort of capitation system, according to the Physician Payment Review Commission in Washington, D.C. this is, rather than simply pay any bill presented to them by your doctor, most HMOs pay their physicians a set amount every month- a fee for including you among their patients. at Chicago’s GIA Primary Care Network, for instance, physicians get $8.43 each month for every male patient between the ages of 25 and 44, and $10.09 for every female patient between the ages of 20 and 24.

You could argue that these capitation programs are an incentive to keep you healthy: Even if you don’t need your doctor, he or she gets paid. but what you need to look out for are the additional financial incentives that come with some capitated payment systems. Some HMOs, such as Oxford Health Plans, Cigna and Aetna, have withhold Systems, in which a percentage of the doctors’ monthly fees are withheld and then reimbursed if they keep their referral rates low enough. others, like U.S. Healthcare, pay bonuses for low referral rates. Still others, such as Health Net, have so-called risk pools, whereby primary doctors get a lump sum on top their capitation rate to pay for any patent test or specialist referrals. Anything left over is their bonus. Capitation is the strongest reason not to recommend a patient to specialist, contends Carolyn Clancy, director of the Center for Primary Care Research at Agency for Health Care Policy and Research in Rockville, Md.

The pressure to avoid specialist can be considerable, says Dr. Lee fisher, a family physician in West plan Beach, Fla. When he was with CareFlorida, a regional HMO, it was withholding 20 percent of his pay every month, coughing up the money only if he kept referrals low or didn’t order too many test or X-rays. Ultimately, Fischer decided to drop out of HMOs altogether. We were devoting more and more time to a small pool of patients, and we weren’t getting paid very much for it, he says. a spokesman says that when CareFlorida merged with Foundation Health in 1994, it overhauled its capitation system. It’s likely that he would not have this same issue if he were contracting with CareFlorida today, the spokesman claims.

2. your primary-care doctor is your specialist. – Everybody wants a doctor who’s versatile, but sometimes, in their effort to rein in cost, HMOs really overdo it. how? by pushing their primary-care doctor to take on the additional duties of being a specialist. Specialist immediately attack a problem with expensive procedures, says David Scroggins, a medical=industry management consultant with Clayton L. Scroggins Associates. consequently, HMOs put in the primary care physician’s contract a broader scope of responsibilities.

Dr. David Himmelstein, a Boston-area primary care physician, has seen these contracts time and time again. It’s typically vague, you’re-responsible-for-everything type of language, he says. Some are even set up to reduce a doctors monthly pay if he refers you outside for work that was reasonably available in his own office, says Scoggins.

The result is that you’ll have primary-care physicians either doing procedures for which they’re not adequately trained or, more commonly, just cutting corners. They’ll do a flexible sigmoidoscopy-in-serting a tube for a colon-cancer check-instead of referring you to a gastroenterologist. or maybe they’ll aggressively prescribe antibiotics for ear or sinus infections instead of sending you to an ear, nose and throat specialist. What can you do? Speak up. If you don’t pester your primary-care doctor for specialist referrals, you may never get them.

3. your health is a numbers game to us. – Everybody knows HMOs have guidelines for the types of treatment they’ll allow and the length of care you’re entitled to. That’s how they keep their cost down. but did you ever wonder where most of them get those guidelines? Actuaries.

That’s right: Number crunchers at actuarial firms such as Milliman & Robertson collect historical care data and perform outcome studies on different procedures and lengths of stay. then they provide the information to HMOs to be used industry standards. So never mind how you’re feeling. If you’ve had a Caesarean section, according to Milliman, you should leave the hospital within 48 hours. You’ve had a stroke? You’re typically headed home within three days, even if you can’t walk out on your own.

It sound more than a little cold, well, that’s because it is. There’s no scientific basis for actuarial guidelines, says Carolyn Clancy. any guidelines are based on someone’s ‘expert opinion,’ and that may come from a variety of perspectives.

And make no mistake: These guidelines are strictly enforced. Lee Wesner, an electronics-manufacturing manager with Comsat, had a pinched nerve and needed back surgery. the condition was so bad that he was losing the use of his foot and was actually dragging it. Delaying an operation could cause serious damage said his orthopedic specialist, Dr. Neil Kahanovitz, who asked Wesner’s health plan, Jefferson Pilot, to approve the surgery. Kahanovitz was told that the condition had only persisted for four weeks and that Wesner had to wait the recommended six weeks.

The denial was based on a nontreating physician’s interpretation of guidelines, Kahanovitz contends. the other doctor Failed to appreciate that the guidelines were designed to be used as exactly that, i.e., guidelines for proper, timely and appropriate care. Kahanovitz later performed the operation and Wesner recovered. Still, the surgeon says; my patient needlessly suffered for two more weeks. a Jefferson-Pilot spokesman responds that the company looks at each case individually and that it considers its guidelines appropriate.

4. our exclusions could kill you. – willing to try an experimental medical procedure? If you’re in an HMO, good luck. many not only frown on experimental or non-FDA procedures, they strictly forbid them. Take bone-marrow transplants. In general they’re performed for leukemia patients, says Dr. Martin Malawer, a Washington, D.C., orthopedic oncology surgeon. but for the last 10 years they’ve also been proven to be effective treatment for breast cancer, although it’s not an FDA-approved treatment. Because of this, many HMOs he deals with won’t pay for it. Malawer thinks the logic is flawed. Standards of care developed over time, and these HMOs are impeding such developments. he says. by all means, you should spend a few minutes scanning the fine print of your enrollee contract. That’s where your HMO’s rules about these procedures are spelled out. Chances are your contract will also explain that the policy covers only medically necessary treatments.

Unfortunately, that phase is wide open to interpretation, notes Dr. Laura Sudarsky, a plastic surgeon practicing in new City, N.Y. She recently saw an asthmatic patient whose Oxford Health Plans primary-care physician recommended breast-reduction surgery. It’s not uncommon for asthmatics to have breast reductions-it alleviates some of the weight on the chest wall- but before Sudarsky could operate, the HMO denied the procedure. Oxford said it did not meet their criteria for reconstructive surgery, Sudarsky says. Tom Travers, vise president of health xcare delivery at Oxford, declines to comment on that case specifically. However, he adds, There’s no little black box into which we’re putting health care and coming out with 20-30 percent savings. It’s got to come from squeezing unnecessary services out of the health care dollar.

5. You’re not sick until we say you’re sick. – Most HMOs Demand Pre-approval for just about any care you get. for just about any care you get, whether it’s simple referral to see a specialist or an emergency. why? It’s clear that the approval process is a hurdle to reduce procedures and referrals, says David Himmelstein. It’s not the turndown that’s the issue. It’s the hassle it makes for the doctors.

Eric Jung, a Bellcore computer programmer, knows this firsthand. last summer, he was on his way back to new Jersey from Rhode Island when disaster struck. After stopping to eat, he was overcome with sudden and extreme diarrhea. I realized I wasn’t going to make it home, he says. then I realized I wasn’t going to make it to the bathroom. After the initial onslaught, he says, he passed out by the side of the road and, delirious, he was taken by his girlfriend to an emergency room in Summir, N.J.

Jung thought he followed all the claim-filling rules of his HMO, PruCare: he called his primary doctor within 24 hours of his ER visit and left a detailed message. Yet a month later, he got a $541 bill from the hospital and one for $259 from the doctor, saying that PruCare had denied it. the HMO’s explanation: the emergency-room visit hadn’t been pre-authorized.

In the end, Jung got reimbursed for the hospital charges. but it took five months of phone calls and letters, and, as of mid-January, there was still some dispute as to whether PruCare had followed through on its promise to finally pay the doctor’s bill. Responds Kevin Heine, a spokesman for Prucare: When he field his appeal, PruCare said they would notify him of the decision. In early December, he was informed that the facility portion would be taken care of and that PruCare was still examining the doctor portion of the bill. Would we have liked this process to have been quicker? the answer is yes.

6. your ignorance is our bliss. – Managed-care providers are all too happy to tell you about some things, like their coverage on well-baby care or their $125 reimbursement for new eyeglasses. but for the most part, they treat the really important information like a state secret.

How many patients have dropped out of their plan in the past year? are doctors paid on a capitation system? how good are the doctors? We ask these questions of six different HMOs and only two – United Healthcare and Oxford- could provide any answers. you would like to know that you percentages for surviving a heart attack, based on all the variables, are better with one plan that another, says Robert Krughoff, president of the advocacy group Consumers’ checkbook. this is exactly the kind of comparison shopping you won’t be able to do among plans.

About the only place for general information on HMOs right now is the National Committee for Quality Assurance. this Washington, D.C., managed-care-industry watchdog collects various performance data on HMOs and provides it to employers. the group, which is just beginning to market its information to consumers, also runs a reasonably helpful World Wide Web sire (http;//www.nega.org), where you can look up when your HMO was last audited and whether it has the NCQA seal of approval. but it pretty much ends there. want to see your HMO’s actual performance data? sorry, that’s not available to the public. another negative: only about half of all HMOs have volunteered fro an NCQA audit so far. It’s an evolving field, and it’s very young, concedes Barry Scholl, an NCQA spokesman. I mean, it’s embryonic.

7. We’re loose with the facts. – you call your HMO’s toll-free number and get a cheerful-sounding representative who answers you claim question promptly and with authority. but when you do what she suggests, the HMO denies your claim.

Sound familiar? It happens all the time. a recent study of HMOs by the new York City public advocate found that the companies; telephone representatives often gave out badly misleading advice. five of the 12 HMOs surveyed, for instance, claimed that all of their physicians were board-certified, an exaggeration of up to 25 percent. When a customer-service representative at one HMO was asked if she understood what board-certified meant, she replied, It means they graduated from medical school. (In fact, it means the doctor has completed a period of post medical-school training and passed an exam in his or her specialty.)

The study pointed out at number of other problems. Representatives gave inconsistent information about the number of allowable specialist visits for instance. And they gave out wrong advice about how soon you have to notify the HMO after an emergency.

Robert Krughoff, for one, wasn’t terribly surprised by the study’s findings. his group has done its own surveys and found, among other things, that doctor turnover is often much higher than the numbers claimed by HMOs. you should never accept their statements at face value, he says. without auditing, HMO data is meaningless.

8. We use second-rate parts. – top shelf doesn’t quite describe the hip or knee replacements you may get from an HMO. In fact, generic may be more like it. HMOs will often use less-expensive versions of medical devices, observes surgeon Malawer, who consults with several medical-device companies. In fact, there are entire product lines developed for the HMO market.
Although there’s a constant stream of new devices coming into the marked, don’t count on getting the latest rechnology, either. There are often better medical devices on the market than are being used, but HMOs are engaged in a policy of silent rationing, argues Steve Speil, a spokesman for the Health industry Manufacturers Association. They don’t tell the patient about the alternatives because they would have to spend the extra money.

How can you tell if you’re getting the real thing or a house brand? Ask how it’s made. Most implants are made by either a forging or a casting process, says Dr. Charles Miller, professor of orthopedic surgery at the University of Virginia Health Sciences Center. Forging is much, much stronger. for major work, such as hip replacements, these less expensive cast implants are not appropriate, he adds.

9. Send you to an expensive therapist? are you Crazy? – Treating mental health is one of the trickiest issues for any insurer, whether it’s a fee-for-service plan or an HMO. how much therapy, after all is really enough?

Unfortunately, some HMO critics say, managed-care companies have an easy answer to that question: very little. Their response is often to prescribe medication instead of therapy, because it’s so much less expensive, says Russ Newman, an executive director at the American Psychological Association. Medication is not an improper treatment, he adds. It’s just that [in some cases] therapy is being completely excluded.

Dr. Edward Gordon, president of the new York State Psychiatric Association, cites a recent case involving a severely dysfunctional family enrolled in the Physicians Health Services HMO. the father had drug and alcohol problems and was threatening his wife. Their child was suffering from learning disabilities and chronic depression. Gordon would have recommended family counseling at least once a week. but the HMO- whose mental-health care was administered by a separate company, CMG health allowed only four visits each for the mother and child during a three-month period. Meanwhile, the two were put on antidepressant drugs. CMG has a reputation for being single-mindedly focused on reducing services, says Gordon. Responds Alan Shusterman, chairman and CEO of CMG, We are hard-nosed, but not about cost; [not are we] antipsychiatry. We’re very aggressive about trying to get patient the most efficient and effective care possible.

10. Unhappy? go ahead, just try to sue us. – since doctors have long been a magnet fro mal practice suits, you might think that HMOs-which often dictate treatment- would now be taking their share of litigation hits. but not so, for most HMOs have been cloaked with a protected status rivaling that of the spotted owl.

For many HMOs offered through large or midsize employers, state law is superseded by the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 (Erisa). Because Erisa was originally intended to regulate employee pension plans, there isn’t much specific to health-plan regulation and, as a result, the legislation makes lawsuits against a health plan an uphill and unprofitable battle.
For starters, any suit against your Erisa-governed HMO is properly a matter of federal law. being federal law, it’s more-ambiguous legal terrain and there are fewer [plaintiff's attorneys available, says Mark Heiplerm a California civil litigator who has successfully sued several California HMOs. Worse, under Erisa you have no chance at any punitive-damage award. All the HMO has to do is pay for the disputed claim with no interest paid, says Carol O'Brien, a senior attorney with the America Medical Association. There's only the possibility of attorneys fees and cost (of treatment) but no damages.

Three exceptions: If you're a participant in a government plan or a plan sponsored by a tax-exempt organization, or if you buy your health insurance n your own (not through an employer), you plan is not covered by Erisa. under these circumstances you have the potential to be awarded both bad-faith and punitive damages, says Hiepler. otherwise, you're out of luck.

Health Insurance can be very tricky. Arm yourself by reading the policy exclusions and limitations before you buy their plan. Most insurance companies will reluctantly give you a sample policy before you buy if you ask them. Always remember. they are in business to make money, anyway they can.

This article would seem funny, except for the fact that it is true.

I have written several other articles on related subjects for your information and caution. Shop wisely.

10 Things Your HMO Won’t Tell You

Finding Excellent Medical Care in Ankara, Turkey

Ankara is the capital of Turkey, therefore the seat of the government. this important commercial and industrial center houses all the foreign embassies in the country. the old city has quite a few tourist attractions and shares its name with Angora wool.

Ankara hosts a number of world-class hospitals in both government and private sector. most of the private hospitals accept various international health insurance plans.

Let’s take a look at some of the facilities:

Guven Hospital is trusted (Guven means trust in Turkish) private hospital in the city that gives modern and effective health care. this hospital located at Paris Cad. Simsek Sok 29 Kavaklidere, is one of the first private hospitals founded in Ankara in 1974. this Joint Commission International (JCI) accredited hospital has eight well equipped surgical theaters and 156 beds and puts great emphasis on patient care and comfort. this is a favorite hospital for the international community. Tel: 0-312-468-7220

Ankara University, Faculty of Medicine (AUFM) is one of the top rated hospitals, as well as training and research centers in the country. this public institution was founded in 1945 and has a 2500 bed clinic at Ibni Sina Hospital, Sihhiye. AUFM provides high quality medical service to thousands of people and graduates about 300 young doctors every year. Tel: 0-312-310-3333

Mesa Hospital is another hospital in Ankara patronized by the expatriate community located at Yasam Cad, No.5 Sogutozu. this JCI certified hospital employs eminent medical professionals in all departments and is best known for cardiology and cardiovascular surgery. Mesa Hospital also specializes in neurosurgery, the treatment of Parkinson’s disease and orthopedics. their department of gynacology and obstetrics is also preferred by many. Mesa Hospital has also established separate section for international patients. Phone: 292 9900

ankaya Hospital is another renowned medical center in the capital city and is placed at Bulten Sokak No.44 Kavaklidere, Ankara. this famous hospital, established in 1968 was the first private surgery hospital in Ankara. the hospital is well-known for its medical expertise and modern equipments used. Tel: 4261450

Hacettepe University Hospital located on the main campus of the university and is a major hospital and teaching center in public sector. Hacettepe University Faculty of Medicine was established in 1963 and later separate faculties of dentistry, faculty of pharmacy, pediatrics and oncology were also established in the same campus. Tel: 0-312-305-5000

Civas Clinic in Ankara is the most famous Plastic Surgery Center in Turkey. the hospital is managed by a well reputed, certified plastic surgeon and a certified dermatology surgeon. the hospital provides the most advanced methods for a complete range of cosmetic and plastic surgery procedures.

Finding Excellent Medical Care in Ankara, Turkey

Bad Credit Cosmetic Surgery Loans: Poor Credit Can’t Stop You From Looking Better

Bad Credit Cosmetic Surgery Loans: Poor Credit Can’t stop you From Looking Better

Bad Credit Cosmetic Surgery Loans: Poor Credit can’t stop you From Looking Better

With the arrival of better technologies these days, it has become both easy and possible to appear the best one can. you might know that a cosmetic surgery cost does not come under the health insurance so cosmetic surgery loans has become the key choice to go for a surgery. But bad credit should not stop you from availing this loan. Your bad credit can be due to numerous reasons but itâ??s not an offense. it might be due to slipping of some payments or failure to return a loan. the only important to be remembered is to make timely repayment which will also improve your credit record.

Amount, rate and repayment:

These loans are available up to $25,000 or in some case slightly more. They are normally taken for periods from 24 months to 60 months. Before one applies for these loans a good deal of discussion with your sources is strongly recommended, so that he/she can know the right price. These loans are available at rate as low as 14%. one important thing to be kept in mind is that as this bad credit cosmetic surgery loans are easily available so one should not get frantic and take a loan from any lender.

Some facts about bad credit surgery loan:

Bad credit surgery loan can be given for various options such as gastric implants, breast implant, liposuction, face lift, tummy tucks, Lasik surgery, dental reconstruction, hair transplant and many more.

The rate of surgery depends on various surgeries which can be of minimum rates or the maximum depending upon the requirement of an interested person and the financial capability. in most of cosmetic surgery loans, you have freedom to choose the doctor and hospital among the option available. Even in some of the case you can have the surgery from a known person which is more comforting as the person knows the exact expense requirements.

Thus bad credit cosmetic surgery loans are easily available but at slightly higher rates than the good credit ones. there are some points of which borrower must take care of: one should look for the best option available by different lenders.Borrower should be aware of option of selecting the doctor and even hospital and decide the package.

They should go through the fine prints of the loan document and make sure that the lending company makes an entry into the credit records. the borrower should plan for timely repayments and work on improving the credit history so that he can get further loans at lesser interest rates.

Bad Credit Cosmetic Surgery Loans: Poor Credit Can’t Stop You From Looking Better

Lap Band Surgery – How To Lose Weight Not Gain Weight After Lap Band Surgery – Nurse’s Guide

I often talk to women who have had adjustable gastric banding or lap band surgery only to find out that some of them have actually gained weight and in some cases gained a lot of weight instead of losing weight. This has led me to believe that some gastric banding patients think they can have the surgery and then go on to eat any diet they want.

Or they can easily cheat. if this is the case, why would one want go through this surgery and totally defeat the purpose. one may have good intentions also and not realize that they may have to make a commitment to a new type of diet or a diet that they’re not familiar with or don’t like. if you’re under the impression you can eat what you want make sure to check this out first.

A woman was talking the other day about the $14,000 she spent of her own money (the cost was not covered by her health insurance company) on lap band surgery and then found out she had to change her diet in such a way that she hadn’t planned on. as a result she started eating slider foods. if you’ve never heard about slider foods before they are foods that can slip or slide through the gastric band easily. Here are a few examples: mashed potatoes, cream of mushroom soup or other cream soups, ice cream, milk shakes, yogurt, pudding, etc.

You can also drink water and other beverages with solid foods and they’ll slip or slide through also. This can be a sure way to gain weight and drinking water or other fluids with meals is not recommended.

You can easily see that eating these foods could make you rapidly gain weight.

The lap band adjustable gastric banding procedure (lap band operation) is meant to help people with weight loss issues and to help you lose weight. It’s considered a temporary procedure in which the adjustable gastric band can be removed, not like gastric bypass surgery, which is permanent and can’t be reversed.

If you’re considering lap band surgery or this adjustable gastric banding procedure make sure you understand the diet restrictions and diet plan that will be a part of the process of maintaining after surgery. make sure to research all the risks and complications that go along with this and any surgery. There are also funds available if your health insurance won’t cover it. Certain qualifications apply regarding BMI, morbid obesity and other conditions. See your weight loss (bariatric) doctor for more information and research online.

Lap Band Surgery – How To Lose Weight Not Gain Weight After Lap Band Surgery – Nurse’s Guide

Complications from Plastic Surgery Insurance Program – Healthcare Global

RICHMOND, Va., May 22, 2012 /PRNewswire/ — Venture Specialty Insurance, LLC in partnership with Markel Insurance Company, announces the launch of www.INSUREmySURGERY.com, a new website offering patients a quick, easy, and effective way to purchase coverage to protect them from complications following elective plastic surgery.  INSUREmySURGERY.com is the only insurance program that covers complications following elective plastic surgery offered directly to patients.

(Logo: http://photos.prnewswire.com/prnh/20120522/NE12005LOGO )

Cosmetic Surgery: Unprotected

According to the American Society of Plastic Surgeons, there were 1.6 million cosmetic surgical procedures performed by Board Certified Plastic Surgeons in 2011. Complications from these surgeries are usually not covered by traditional health insurance plans as elective cosmetic surgery is generally not covered by health insurance plans…However, when prospective patients are asked if complications as a result of the surgery (such as: hemorrhage, infection, deep vein thrombosis, cardiac arrest) were covered, nine out of ten were unaware that their health insurance plan would not pay and the patient would be responsible for the out-of-pocket expense of the hospital or ambulatory costs associated with treating the complication.

INSUREmySURGERY: how it Works

INSUREmySURGERY is a web-based system for patients who want insurance to cover the cost of treating a complication following their elective plastic surgery. In three quick steps, patients can enroll online and select a plan that suits their budget and needs.  In the event of a complication, patients can download policy and claim forms directly from the website. After these forms are sent in, INSUREmySURGERY will work with the doctor and hospital, and facilitate the claim payment based on the patient's chosen plan. It's that simple.

Coverage will be governed by the terms and conditions of the issued insurance policy and covered complications must take place within 30 days of the date of elective surgery.

Where is it available?

INSUREmySURGERY is currently available in Arkansas, Colorado, Georgia, Kansas, Maine, Minnesota, Nevada, Oregon and Utah.

INSUREmySURGERY: Background

INSUREmySURGERY is marketed exclusively by Venture Specialty Insurance, LLC, a Richmond-based national insurance agency, and underwritten by Markel Insurance Company, a specialty insurance carrier, also based in Richmond. INSUREmySURGERY was developed by Venture Specialty Insurance.  Venture Specialty Insurance is a subsidiary of the Hilb Group, LLC.

For more information:Jason Angus, President, Venture Specialty Insurance, 804-521-2993 x 110

For more information on INSUREmySURGERY:http://www.INSUREmySURGERY.com

SOURCE INSUREmySURGERY.com

Complications from Plastic Surgery Insurance Program – Healthcare Global

Children’s hospital making changes following billing dispute

By Peggy O’Farrell, Staff Writer Updated 7:51 PM Wednesday, May 23, 2012

A regional children’s hospital is making changes as a result of a billing dispute between a man and one of its subcontracting surgeons.

In May 2011, Steve Mahoney of Oakwood took his youngest son, Ryan, then 6, to the emergency room at Children’s Medical Center of Dayton after the boy sliced off his fingertip in a door.

Doctors at Dayton Children’s — the region’s main pediatric hospital that often serves Springfield families — told Mahoney they’d have to call in a plastic surgeon to re-attach the boy’s fingertip.

But no one told Mahoney that the plastic surgeon, Dr. Stanley Edwards, doesn’t accept health insurance. Edwards doesn’t work for the hospital. He’s one of two plastic surgeons who currently serve on an “on-call” basis for the hospital, said chief operating officer Matt Graybill.

Hospitals are “somewhat constrained” in what they can tell families about payments and insurance coverage, Graybill said.

The same federal law that requires hospitals to treat anyone who comes to their emergency department whether they have insurance or not also limits what staff can say to families about paying for that treatment, he said.

“Hospitals can’t tell parents anything that might in any way encourage them not to be cared for there, anything a parent might construe as telling them not to be cared for at Dayton Children’s. and that includes telling things like, ‘you might have a big co-payment’ or ‘Your insurance might not cover this.’”

Edwards’ bill for the procedure, which included several follow-up visits, was $8,200. Mahoney’s insurance company paid $2,600 — 80 percent of what it considers to be the reasonable or customary charge for the procedure.

Mahoney said he tried to negotiate with Edwards’ office for the remainder of the bill, but was told to make monthly payments with 1.5 percent interest. he refused, arguing the charges were unfair.

Now he’s getting calls from a collection agency, and wants to warn consumers to ask questions before they sign any documents giving doctors permission to treat loved ones and agreeing to accept financial responsibility. he owes Edwards’ office about $6,000.

Edwards did not return calls to his office or home seeking comment for this story.

Edwards, whose specialties include plastic surgery and hand surgery, operates a private practice in Centerville. Physicians aren’t required to accept any kind of health insurance. many plastic surgeons in private practice don’t accept insurance; many of the procedures they perform are considered elective, and wouldn’t be covered by most insurers anyway.

Mahoney has no complaints about the treatment his son received either from the hospital or Edwards. His only complaint is that he wasn’t informed that Edwards doesn’t take insurance.

But, he adds, he didn’t ask. His son was injured and bleeding, and he signed the forms without thinking because he was worried about the boy.

And when he took Ryan to Edwards’ Centerville office for follow-up care, he said, “there’s a great big sign” informing patients that the doctor doesn’t accept insurance.

Mahoney said if he’d known that Edwards doesn’t accept insurance, he might have taken his son somewhere else to have his fingertip re-attached.

After Mahoney called the Springfield NewsSun, officials at Dayton Children’s told the newspaper that they’re making changes, even though they’re not a party in the dispute.

Because of the situation with the current on-call plastic surgeons, the hospital’s lawyers are in touch with the Department of Health and Human Services and the Department of Justice to find out staff can give more specific information to families who bring their children to Dayton Children, Graybill said.

The hospital has also contracted with Wright State Physicians, a Dayton-based physician group, to arrange for one of their incoming plastic surgeons to work at Dayton Children’s both in an on-call capacity and at some clinics at the hospital. That surgeon is scheduled to begin working in Dayton in August, and will accept all of the insurance plans the physician group accepts, Graybill said.

The real lesson, Graybill and Mahoney said, is that consumers need to ask the physician treating them or their loved ones whether they accept their insurance plan.

“It’s perfectly appropriate, when that physician comes into the room, to ask, ‘You’re going to work on my son. do you accept my insurance company?’ then the parent can make the decision whether to continue treatment or not,” Graybill said. “Our emergency department physicians, one of the roles they play is helping parents know who’s out there who can take care of their child, if it’s something that can wait.”

Children’s hospital making changes following billing dispute

Beneath the Knife One particular Way too many Times

Cosmetic plastic surgery can often be best for people. it has a speedy solution in case you have way too much beef for the bones for his or her own great. it will also help people overcome unpleasant mishaps by simply masking the actual actual monuments of those occasions. it could frequently even support someone overcome social nervousness by simply enhancing their own self-esteem. nonetheless, there exists a dark side to be able to plastic surgery. It’s a bad side which is both profoundly seated in a very persons emotional health insurance and able to absolutely wrecking an individual. Cosmetic plastic surgery patients can sometimes create the actual bad side regarding beauty enlargement, called system dismorphic disorder. in a few arenas, this issue may be known just since ? ?surgical dependency.? ?

Individuals with this kind of issue may not seem getting anything at all drastically wrong about the subject. at the very least, they don’t appear to be therefore at first. it will require more than simply a few surgical procedures to accomplish an individual’s ? ?perfect system.? ? This is because the body should be with time to be able to recover following a method, all night . a number of procedures completed at one time can be regrettable. nonetheless, the situation for people who have system dismorphic disorder is that they tend to be in your mind incapable of having this ? ?perfect system.? ? The place of these emotional well being will be askew in a way that there’s always something regarding physical aspect which needs to be set.

There are lots of aspects that may guide you to create system dismorphic disorder. a number of these aspects may come from the persons emotional well being or even atmosphere. Factors for example an anxiety disorder or even discontent with all the outcomes of weight loss supplements may not always lead to further problems to happen. it may be securely believed that will system dismorphic disorder is definitely an extreme reply to the above mentioned examples, nevertheless. This specific, combined with emotional well being outcomes of being exposed to the actual ? ?physical ideal? ? of the mass media, can bring about someone building this particular ? ?addiction.? ? The situation with this particular ? ?addiction? ? is that it might not be actually easy to be able to detect the situation in a very affected individual at the early stages.

The primary sign a thief gets the disorder is the fact that their own emotional well being is always telling them that there are a problem with their system. nonetheless, differentiating this particular from straightforward discontent having a persons physical aspect can often be hard in early stages. a female which visits any chicago plastic surgeon to get a breast enlargement method could contain the disorder. Generally, a patient which beverly hills cosmetic surgeon visits any chicago plastic surgeon often to get a various strictly beauty procedures could possibly be labeled as getting the disorder. nonetheless, because an individual will be obsessive about having this ? ?perfect form? ? will not automatically level that will persons emotional well being to be doubtful. “on June 7, 2012 We accept the love we think we deserve.”

In some instances, the actual procedures need not be distinctive from one other. You will find tales of folks in guidance due to the fact had been routed generally there since they developed a good ? ?addiction? ? to be able to liposuction procedures. The emotional health issues as a result of with this disorder can sometimes have a again couch for the physical health concerns. Some other concerns incorporate exactly what this issue can do to a persons associations. last but not least, there is the concern that will a few cosmetic surgeons might not alert patients when they’ve had way too many procedures.

Abnormal cosmetic surgery may place the system at serious chance, especially if just a solitary area has been precise. Abnormal focus on the actual sinus areas may sooner or later increase the risk for sinus cavity to break down, making that will area ruined over and above restoration. a dependancy to be able to liposuction procedures, while coupled with inadequate diet regime, may destroy this enzymatic region along with eternally angle the actual client’s actual shape.

The mental cost this will accept individuals across the affected individual also needs to be considered. Cosmetic plastic surgery is not a cheap thing, all night . a number of procedures completed within a short may substantially stress an individual’s budget. aside from that, many people with this particular disorder usually force or their loved ones aside by simply dismissing their own pleas to stop. in a single instance, any better half alienated your ex hubby and kids soon after the lady sold their apartment to fund ? ?just one last liposuction procedures.? ? it is really an extreme example, but it is a definite chance.

Presently there boasts to be a set restriction on exactly how much plastic surgery office buildings can certainly visit allow for their customers. It’s not easy to be able to discern whether someone truly has to endure cosmetic surgery, with all the specifications regarding attractiveness staying therefore very subjective. When really does ? ?just another nasal area job? ? turn into ? ?one nasal area work way too many? ??

Beneath the Knife One particular Way too many Times

Precaution of Cosmetic Surgery

Cosmetic surgery or plastic surgery is a best way to improve your physique or appearance of your personality. if you are not satisfied with you personality then you can take help of cosmetic surgeon to improve your personality. it helps you to not to look beautiful, but also to feel better and also give you personal satisfaction also. there are also some disadvantages of this facility. So, before taking the help of cosmetic surgery we have to consider the following factors like,

  • This facility gives you the improvement not the perfection. You don’t get perfect personality according to your expectation.
  • This surgery not able to cover most of the health insurance plans. So it is a risky matter.
  • Some times cosmetic surgery is not done according to the customer requirement. So, it creates dissatisfaction.
  • Surgical Complications are possible.
  • This Surgery needs times like need month, weeks, days for recovery.

So, if you want to do cosmetic surgery abroad then you have to choose the best cosmetic surgeons. choose the best one who is specializes in the procedure and in their specific area. Always beware of fake certified surgeons especially in those cases when you are going to do Eyelid surgery in Prague. it is always important to remember that not all referral are equal. Seek some recommendation from people you trust like your family elder persons, your family doctors, your friends. They always give you the right guidance. Always remember one thing that if you found best surgeon at affordable price then it is beneficial for you. Make sure that you are absolutely comfortable with your surgeon before proceeding to surgery.

Precaution of Cosmetic Surgery

Statistics Show That Plastic Surgery is Rebounding Despite the Economy

THE ECONOMYPlastic Surgery as Economic IndicatorBy BRAD TUTTLE | @bradrtuttle | February 14, 2012 |1

VERONIQUE BERANGER / GETTY IMAGESMost plastic surgery procedures are considered non-essential, or elective—as in, the patient can elect to have work done, just don’t expect health insurance to cover it. or as in: When the economy’s shaky and money is tight, it makes sense that fewer people elect to spend out of pocket for boob jobs, facelifts, and the like, mostly because they don’t have the money to spend. the fact that elective cosmetic procedures rose by 5% last year could be viewed as an indication that the economy is recovering.

If you look hard enough at the data, you can find manifestations of the economy’s wellbeing just about anywhere. How often parents change kids’ diapers, and sales of everything from men’s underwear to hard liquor have been construed as indicators of the state of the economy.

(MORE: Cheers! Increase in Liquor Sales Bodes Well for Economic Recovery)

During the heart of the recession, one sign of the times was that people were scaling back by opting for cheaper cosmetic surgeries instead of pricier procedures. Last year, reports USA Today, the American Society of Plastic Surgeons (ASPS) statistics reveal that there was a 5% increase in overall cosmetic procedures, including a 2% rise in surgeries and a 6% rise in minimally-invasive procedures such as Botox, compared to 2010.

The ASPS’s press release welcomed the news, but at the same time the organization’s president, Dr. Malcolm Z. Roth, admitted that “the overall growth in cosmetic procedures is being primarily driven by a substantial rise in minimally-invasive procedures.”

The way in which cosmetic procedures are rising, then, may be an indication of continued economic struggle, with consumers electing to go with cheaper procedures (chemical peels, Botox, laser hair removal) partly because they don’t have the money for invasive, big-ticket surgeries like rhinoplasty, a.k.a., nose jobs, which were actually down 3% last year.

For that matter, none of the five most popular cosmetic surgeries for 2011 (breast augmentation, eyelid surgery, facelift, liposuction, nose reshaping) grew significantly for the year, experiencing increases in numbers of 5% or less. and in two cases (nose reshaping, eyelid surgery), there were more surgeries in 2010 than there were last year.

(MORE: the Science of Animal Friendships)

The growth areas for plastic surgery, if you will, are for pectoral implants, buttock implants, buttock lifts, cheek implants, lip augmentation, and chin augmentation. all of these surgeries experienced an increase of 38% or more in 2011.

Overall, though, the plastic surgery business is down quite a bit compared its booming, pre-recession heyday. In 2005, an all-time record of 2.1 million cosmetic surgeries were performed in the U.S. Last year, there were about 1.58 million such surgeries, a rise of 2% from the year before—but down by about half a million from six years prior.

I guess that’s one way we’ll all be able to tell when the economy is faring better: We’ll be able to see it directly on the non-expressive faces of people all around us.

Brad Tuttle is a reporter at TIME. Find him on Twitter at @bradrtuttle. You can also continue the discussion on TIME’s Facebook page and on Twitter at @TIME.

Read other related stories about this:Plastic surgery numbers rise with economy, stay below peak USA TodayRelated Topics: American Society of Plastic Surgeons, breast augmentation, cosmetic surgery, doctors, health care, health insurance, nose job, plastic surgery, rhinoplasty, Economics & Policy, Odd Spending, Saving & Spending, the Economy

Read more: http://moneyland.time.com/2012/02/14/plastic-surgery-as-economic-indicator/#ixzz1msoQ0BQ9

Statistics Show That Plastic Surgery is Rebounding Despite the Economy

Consumer Reports Offers Health Insurance Tips

PITTSBURGH (KDKA) – You may think you’re covered if you have health insurance, but Consumer Reports wants you to think again.

You can easily be socked with huge bills, which is what happened to one woman after her son ended up in the emergency room.

When Christine Knopp’s son, Brendan, got a deep cut on his face, the emergency room doctor offered the option of a plastic surgeon for the stitches.

The surgeon’s bill was $2,900. Christine had assumed her insurance would cover the surgeon, but that was not the case.

“we were pretty shocked. we had no idea that that was going to become our responsibility,” Knopp said.

The problem was that, while the hospital was in the family’s insurance network, the plastic surgeon who stitched up Brendan was not.

Consumer Reports said one of the most common causes of medical sticker shock is going out-of-network.

“A PPO plan might say that it will pay 60 to 80 percent of out-of-network care. that does not mean it will pay 60 to 80 percent of the actual bill, though. it means it will pay 60 to 80 percent of what the insurance company thinks the test or treatment ought to cost,” Nancy Metcalf from Consumer Reports said.

Consumer Reports found lots of examples of patients being hit with astronomical bills, including one woman who was charged $480,000 for back surgery.

“Bottom line, stay in your network. if you must go out of network, research ahead of time what your insurance company will pay,” Metcalf said.

Also, research what the test or procedure should cost.

Two services – HealthCareBlueBook.com and FairHealthConsumer.org — let you search the cost of medical services by zip code.

Sometimes you can use this information to negotiate with the non-network provider you want to use.

If you get a big bill, like Knop, don’t just complain to the insurance company.

Enlist your employer and your state insurance department to help resolve the matter.

Consumer Reports said you can end up paying more than necessary if you pay the first bill you get.

The charges may be the higher list prices, so wait until you get your explanation of benefit or EOB to see what you really owe.

You can get more information on your healthcare costs here.

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Consumer Reports Offers Health Insurance Tips