Anonymous wrote:Both husband and I were at Inova for two separate MRIs a couple of months ago. Both of us received an estimated prepayment amount which we ignored and told them to bill insurance. No one forced us to prepay, and insurance covered everything. No copay was necessary at the end.
Anonymous wrote:This is normal for plans with deductibles
Anonymous wrote:While they've undoubtedly been stiffed a few times, this sounds like a profit-driven policy.
If the OP was forced to pre-pay $1,000 for a procedure, let's assume Inova gets that cash 60 days earlier than billing the OP's insurer and letting the EOB process play out.
If Inova puts that money into a simple high-yield (5%) savings account, that $1,000 with compounded interest becomes $1,102.50 after 60 days. Inova makes another $102.50 in profit off of just one patient.
Now multiply that by the thousands of patients they're forcing this on, and you're talking about a new revenue stream worth millions.
It's completely shady and a sign of all of the things that are wrong with for-profit health care.
Anonymous wrote:Hospitals like Inova are getting killed financially. I audit hospitals for a living - for-profit and non-profit, doesn't matter, none are doing well. Many of my hospitals earn 20 cents on the dollar for each service provided. Truly, they have no choice but to collect from you up front when the service is provided and this is definitely becoming the norm.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I honestly don’t understand-and find it disheartening- how May people come on here to defend business practices which at at the expense of individuals.
It’s ridiculous how much people support policies that are profit driven, and at the expense of regular people who have a NEED (not a want) re their physical health.
What is wrong with you people? Like the people who cheer dorms with RTW policies that only benefit corps and not their employees.
There are a lot of things that are outrageous about our healthcare system. Paying what you owe at the time you get service/treatment is not one of them IMO.
But a lot of the times it's not what you owe it's an estimate of what you owe because they haven't processed the claim. And then you're overpaying for a service they're making money off of it and you're out money for 30 to 60 days while the claim gets processed and don't get me started on how long it takes for them to write you a check to refund the amount owed.
Anonymous wrote:With over $2.7 billion in annual revenue, Inova is not using a high-yield savings account.... they are investing their money into higher yield portfolios to help pay for that new $182 million campus they bought from ExxonMobil a few years ago. They have an entire department dedicated to making financial investments.
Supposing Inova made just half of its 2+ million annual patients pay in advance, even a few bucks in profit per patient adds up quick. If there wasn't a clear cut business case for doing this, they wouldn't be paying for an entire "estimating department" to support the operation with their accounting magic.
The existing system is complicated, but that's reflective of the industry. The payment terms of how long the insurer has to pay the bill submitted by Inova are negotiated between the two entities. If Inova's not happy with whatever payment terms they negotiated, they shouldn't be taking it out on the little guy. Sorry no sympathy for them.
The 20 cents on the dollar line is also misleading. The list price of their medical services is grossly exaggerated and the actual price is always negotiated with the insurer at a fraction of the list price. They are getting the majority of that negotiated amount from the insurer, and billing the patient for the remaining fraction. If they don't get that remainder from a deadbeat patient, then they sell the debt to a collection agency for 20 cents on the dollar. The number of non-paying uninsured patients which Inova gets zero money from is a small percentage of their overall patients.
I'm surprised at how many people here seem to be supporting Inova. Let's see if their posts seem to stop after the end of the work day.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I honestly don’t understand-and find it disheartening- how May people come on here to defend business practices which at at the expense of individuals.
It’s ridiculous how much people support policies that are profit driven, and at the expense of regular people who have a NEED (not a want) re their physical health.
What is wrong with you people? Like the people who cheer dorms with RTW policies that only benefit corps and not their employees.
There are a lot of things that are outrageous about our healthcare system. Paying what you owe at the time you get service/treatment is not one of them IMO.