Khross wrote:
Xequecal wrote:
Before the law change, insurers had to pay this amount. Now, they don't. They still can do so if they want.
No, no, no, no, no.
That's not how it works; that's not how it worked before the ACA.
Prior to the ACAYou go to a health care provider for some procedure, consult, diagnosis, lab work, or other legitimately medical purpose. They send you a bill. Let's say it was $200. It then gets filed with your insurance. Your insurance reviews it, looks at the current regional Medicare/Medicaid Reference Price formulary sheet for that bit of health care, determines how much to pay the service provider, and then sends you a letter.
If the Medicare/Medicaid Reference Price was $20, and you paid a $20 copay, your insurance tells the doctor to stuff it; he is legally prevented from collecting the rest of the money ($180 in this case), regardless of how much it cost your service provider to perform the procedure. If the Medicare/Medicaid Reference Price was $100 and you paid a $20 copay, the insurance company reimburses the provider $80 and tells him to stuff it on the remaining $100.
After the ACANone of the above changes with respect to your insurances, except since the Exchanges are national, major metropolitan centers can now be referenced against rural West Virginia or low cost markets when determining what is "reasonable and customary." And, now, your doctor can turn around and tell you, "Well, your insurance only paid $0.00. Where's my other $180.00?"
Uhm, if this is the case, what is the original article even about? It says that "Obama just gave the go-ahead for reference pricing". Now you say they've been doing that all along? So what you're saying is that the only real difference between the health care here and the health care over in Europe is that over here the prices are fixed somewhat higher than they are over there?
Second, doesn't this only apply to providers that actually accept Medicare? I was under the impression that stuff like this was caused by Medicare's "equal pay for equal service" provisions that don't apply to doctors that don't accept it.
Also, if they've been doing this all along, how is the change going to drive providers out of business? It seems like providers being able to go after the patient for unpaid bills would net them a lot of money, especially if they're allowed to attempt to collect on the utterly absurd and fictional amounts they claim when they send you the first statement.