Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I live in Maryland and am on Hopkins' side on this one after seeing the reimbursements paid to my super-cardiologist--actually an electrophysiologist--for a cardiac ablation.
Carefirst reduced his bill by more than two-thirds, paying $113 out of $700 for his medical services and $16 out of $200 for his x-ay services (required for this procedure).
That's just ridiculous. I would never defend Hopkins as a paragon of moral virtue--it's a Byzantine bureaucracy with sometimes sketchy motives--but declining to pay reasonable rates to the doctors is insulting to them and dangerous to people like me who need them.
I'm wondering if people even pay attention to the rates insurers are paying doctors and hospitals. Maybe that's what the insurers are relying on, hoping we'll blame the greedy medical establishment rather than them.
If you belong to Carefirst, read your EOBs. You might be surprised.
That's in the contract that hospitals make with insurance companies, though. Then they purposely overbill even though they know what insurance will pay them. I'm not defending Carefirst, those amounts are very low. That's just the stupid game we all have to play.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A. Single payer health care systems do not pay doctors the big bucks
B. Carefirst is a nonprofit organization while Johns Hopkins made $200 million in profit last year
What that means for this discussion is up for debate but I think this is a complex issue.
My wife's side of the family has a few of people in the medical industry and they make really good money. Unsurprisingly, not one of them will be in a room with a patient this week.
CareFirst may meet the IRS definition of a non-profit but they feed a lot of money to a lot of millionaires.
Is the American healthcare system more complex? That's the intention. More pockets to be stuffed. It's the same reason the F35 jet fighter uses components from over 200 Congressional districts. I cannot imagine how many billions they spend to assure that we never convert to a single payer system. Besides, it would put my relatives out of work.
My doctor works for Hopkins and made a weak argument for me to stay with the practice. Alas, we have the golden handcuffs to BCBS so off we go.
Anonymous wrote:A. Single payer health care systems do not pay doctors the big bucks
B. Carefirst is a nonprofit organization while Johns Hopkins made $200 million in profit last year
What that means for this discussion is up for debate but I think this is a complex issue.
Anonymous wrote:I live in Maryland and am on Hopkins' side on this one after seeing the reimbursements paid to my super-cardiologist--actually an electrophysiologist--for a cardiac ablation.
Carefirst reduced his bill by more than two-thirds, paying $113 out of $700 for his medical services and $16 out of $200 for his x-ay services (required for this procedure).
That's just ridiculous. I would never defend Hopkins as a paragon of moral virtue--it's a Byzantine bureaucracy with sometimes sketchy motives--but declining to pay reasonable rates to the doctors is insulting to them and dangerous to people like me who need them.
I'm wondering if people even pay attention to the rates insurers are paying doctors and hospitals. Maybe that's what the insurers are relying on, hoping we'll blame the greedy medical establishment rather than them.
If you belong to Carefirst, read your EOBs. You might be surprised.
Anonymous wrote:I live in Maryland and am on Hopkins' side on this one after seeing the reimbursements paid to my super-cardiologist--actually an electrophysiologist--for a cardiac ablation.
Carefirst reduced his bill by more than two-thirds, paying $113 out of $700 for his medical services and $16 out of $200 for his x-ay services (required for this procedure).
That's just ridiculous. I would never defend Hopkins as a paragon of moral virtue--it's a Byzantine bureaucracy with sometimes sketchy motives--but declining to pay reasonable rates to the doctors is insulting to them and dangerous to people like me who need them.
I'm wondering if people even pay attention to the rates insurers are paying doctors and hospitals. Maybe that's what the insurers are relying on, hoping we'll blame the greedy medical establishment rather than them.
If you belong to Carefirst, read your EOBs. You might be surprised.
Anonymous wrote:I live in Maryland and am on Hopkins' side on this one after seeing the reimbursements paid to my super-cardiologist--actually an electrophysiologist--for a cardiac ablation.
Carefirst reduced his bill by more than two-thirds, paying $113 out of $700 for his medical services and $16 out of $200 for his x-ay services (required for this procedure).
That's just ridiculous. I would never defend Hopkins as a paragon of moral virtue--it's a Byzantine bureaucracy with sometimes sketchy motives--but declining to pay reasonable rates to the doctors is insulting to them and dangerous to people like me who need them.
I'm wondering if people even pay attention to the rates insurers are paying doctors and hospitals. Maybe that's what the insurers are relying on, hoping we'll blame the greedy medical establishment rather than them.
If you belong to Carefirst, read your EOBs. You might be surprised.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:thank the greedy doctors and big pharma.
Actually Hopkins doctors don’t get paid much at all.
+1
I used to be one.
I had 10+ years of experience in a speciality with moderate salaries (ie not peds or rheumatology or another low-paying speciality), and made 180K/year working 60-70 hours/week.
Many have family money or a higher-earning spouse.
Couldn’t swing it anymore financially, and left.
Also, because of the structure of medical reimbursement for Maryland Hospitals, costs are more contained in Maryland than in other states.
https://www.nytimes.com/2021/10/24/opinion/maryland-medical-bills-lower.html
Doctors in Maryland actually have fairly low salaries relative to the cost of living.
But the whole system is broken and needs to be burned down and rebuilt.
Essentially every physician I know who is 50 or younger wants single-payrr.
We are all burned out and miserable.
There’s a huge divide between old and young doctors when it comes to single-payer and private practice versus employed positions.
Then in the middle there's a bunch of doctors that had to drop a boatload of money to buy into a practice. And while they might prefer single-payer, they're going to be (understandably) nervous about getting screwed on the return from their buy-in.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So as consumers, do we call CareFirst and press them on this? I’m lucky I can go through DH’s insurance which isn’t CareFirst if they don’t reach and agreement… what are our best options here?
I am planning on contacting them about it. I can also switch to my husband's health insurance, but I'd rather not. I may as well tell them that I would. Also federal employees, which probably make up a big chunk of their local customers, have a lot of insurance options and can drop them for someone else. Not sure they give a shit but whatever...I'll try.
The weird thing about this is that I would think the set of people that would actually drop BCBS insurance over Hopkins would be money-losers (as a group) for BCBS. It seems like they’d have a financial incentive to encourage those people to switch to different insurance companies.
What makes you say so?
Because most people don’t go to the doctor so often that they care who they go to.
Said another way- the only people who care are those are sick- remove those from the pool and bam, rates are lower for the rest.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So as consumers, do we call CareFirst and press them on this? I’m lucky I can go through DH’s insurance which isn’t CareFirst if they don’t reach and agreement… what are our best options here?
I am planning on contacting them about it. I can also switch to my husband's health insurance, but I'd rather not. I may as well tell them that I would. Also federal employees, which probably make up a big chunk of their local customers, have a lot of insurance options and can drop them for someone else. Not sure they give a shit but whatever...I'll try.
The weird thing about this is that I would think the set of people that would actually drop BCBS insurance over Hopkins would be money-losers (as a group) for BCBS. It seems like they’d have a financial incentive to encourage those people to switch to different insurance companies.
What makes you say so?
Because most people don’t go to the doctor so often that they care who they go to.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So as consumers, do we call CareFirst and press them on this? I’m lucky I can go through DH’s insurance which isn’t CareFirst if they don’t reach and agreement… what are our best options here?
I am planning on contacting them about it. I can also switch to my husband's health insurance, but I'd rather not. I may as well tell them that I would. Also federal employees, which probably make up a big chunk of their local customers, have a lot of insurance options and can drop them for someone else. Not sure they give a shit but whatever...I'll try.
The weird thing about this is that I would think the set of people that would actually drop BCBS insurance over Hopkins would be money-losers (as a group) for BCBS. It seems like they’d have a financial incentive to encourage those people to switch to different insurance companies.
What makes you say so?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So as consumers, do we call CareFirst and press them on this? I’m lucky I can go through DH’s insurance which isn’t CareFirst if they don’t reach and agreement… what are our best options here?
I am planning on contacting them about it. I can also switch to my husband's health insurance, but I'd rather not. I may as well tell them that I would. Also federal employees, which probably make up a big chunk of their local customers, have a lot of insurance options and can drop them for someone else. Not sure they give a shit but whatever...I'll try.
The weird thing about this is that I would think the set of people that would actually drop BCBS insurance over Hopkins would be money-losers (as a group) for BCBS. It seems like they’d have a financial incentive to encourage those people to switch to different insurance companies.