"As needed" means that the OP was putting her baby in the nursery from time to time during those two days, as needed. Like when she needed to sleep, I imagine. Sigh. Why are the biggest idiots always the smuggest? |
| Could've saved $1000 if you had gone unmedicated. |
|
Why are you posting here instead of calling your insurance company? All the time you spent on this thread you could've been on hold with insurance rep.
They will have a better answer than any of us can give. It could be as simple as improper billing codes from the hospital or something more complicated. |
OP may have had a C-section, you know. In which case anesthesiology is kinda required. Hard concept to grasp, I know...but you'll get there eventually! |
. . . and what the patient will pay without a challenge. Agree. |
+1 I think they do this too and anticipate you calling them up to haggle or negotiate. Sorta like buying a car from the dealership. They almost expect you to argue the price. |
| Is Obamacare supposed to make this kind of thing less likely to happen? Or more likely? |
+2. Also, be sure baby was added to the appropriate insurance plan, and that they are sending his charges to that plan. Doc offices auto-generate bills, and no one checks before they go out to see where insurance is in the process. **never pay a medical bill without first checking your EOBs. Even then, sometimes charges are billed incorrectly. |
Less likely. I'm fairly certain that full maternity/L&D coverage has to be standard after the law goes into effect. But don't quote me on that. |
| lesson to those who haven't had their babies yet: don't put your baby in the nursery if you can avoid it. It is better for you and the baby in many ways - your health, baby's health, bonding and also financially. |
You are Same jerk as an earlier pp or another, why the hell are you on this board, we share, we learn from others, maybe OP could have gotten tips from us on how to deal with insurance. Jeez. |
Jeez, many many reasons why someone may need to, its only a couple of days. Does not make someone a bad mother. |
This. So if say you give all your insurance info and then after 30 days you move baby to DH insurance then your insurance while they will pay for OB, anesthesiologist, hospital charges, may not pay for baby testing, baby nursery. Send to DH insurance if that's the case, just throwing it out there to help. |
Also, they charge you for the nursery even when the baby is just in there getting checked over, getting their heel stick, etc. My baby roomed in with me for 99% of the time I was in the hospital and we still had thousands of dollars in nursery charges...thankfully covered by our insurance. |
Baby testing maybe her DH insurance will cover if baby is now on DH insurance but nursery charges cannot be separate, OP needs to call hospital not insurance. That much is clear! |