+1, and for doctors too. Beyond the ridiculous prior authorization hoops (which have been easy lawsuits the few times they’ve been pursued since they clearly cause actual medical harm), I’m a doctor in private practice and take several insurances but not Aetna. I considered adding Aetna and tried to find out how much they would pay me for specific services, because I am obviously not going to sign a contract with them without that information. There is no option to do this in writing. The phone number they give just puts you in a hellish loop of recorded messages with no option to speak with a person. Calling other Aetna numbers just results in being turfed to those recordings, like a satirical Soviet novel. Per their website, the only way to find out what they pay is to do the credentialing process with them (hours of paperwork and effort, getting recommendation letters, official copies of licenses, etc) BEFORE they will tell you what they pay. No thanks, so there’s another doctor not accepting Aetna. There is no other type of business that operates like this. Like if you could only see the prices of things at the grocery store when you are at the checkout counter, or even worse for patients, after you have already bought them. It doesn’t have to be like that and is another example of why health care and for-profit corporations are not ever a good combination. Medicare has set rates that are the same for all doctors in a particular zip code and are transparent and are published on the internet. i have worked in two other countries, both with socialized medicine, and it’s amazing how much more money is available for things like preventative care when you cut out all of the layers of profit-taking middlemen, and how much less opportunity cost there is for patients and doctors in not having to deal with them. |
You and the insurance company have a contractual agreement...their issues are not the responsibility of the doctors office. |
In order to take insurance, doctors enter agreements with insurance companies and become responsible for filing claims. The provider agrees to the rate that the insurance company pays. That is the entire point of taking insurance. |