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Medical Bills You Shouldn't Pay - Balance Billing

Submitted by: Tip Hero  09/01/2008 7:07 AM
 
Millions of Americans are being hit with medical bills that are highly inflated and often illegal altogether. The practice is known as balance billing, where a hospital or medical provider bills the patient for the portion of a bill the patient’s insurance company doesn’t pay. This was the subject of an informative article by Business Week and a piece on CBS News (links below). Billing a patient for any part of a bill that is not paid by the patient’s insurance provider is sometimes legal, but in many cases is not. Many states have laws against balance billing and there is also a federal law against balance billing Medicare patients. Still, millions of patients are being hit with balance bills.

There are no national statistics on balance billing but the Business Week article highlights a study by a health insurance trade group in California:

The California Association of Health Plans, a trade group in Sacramento, estimates that 1.76 million policyholders in that state received such bills in the past two years, totaling $528 million. The group found that 56% paid the bills. "Patients think they owe this money, and it causes tremendous stress and anxiety for people," says Cindy Ehnes, director of the California Managed Health Care Dept. "It is inappropriate to put the patient in the middle of this."
Part of the stress and anxiety Cindy Ehnes is referring to comes from the fact that once patients are balance billed, sometimes illegally, the medical providers may turn the bill over to a collection agency who then threaten the patient with bad credit.

The Business Week article written by Chad Terhune gives an excellent rundown on balance billing and is well worth the read. link to BW article


One Woman's Experience with Balance Billing

A CBS News piece (clip below) tells the story of Linda Burdick who was hit with a $60,000 balance bill for the portion of a hospital bill her insurance company wouldn’t pay. Mrs. Burdick fought back hiring two medical billing advocates who reviewed her bill and felt Mrs. Burdick was being overcharged by $40,000. One example from an itemized bill they requested from the hospital showed charges for six surgical screws at $1,720 a piece.

CBS News clip on Balance Billing. (short ad precedes clip)



Medical Related Bankruptcies

A 2005 study conducted jointly by Harvard Medical and Law schools found that nearly 50% of personal bankruptcies in the United States are caused by illness and medical bills. The study estimated about 2 million Americans each year are impacted by medical related bankruptcies. What’s even more eye-opening from the study is that many had health insurance and the majority come from the middle class with 56% of filers owning a home, as well as attending college.


What to Do If You Receive a Balance Bill

Here are some options if you’re hit with a medical balance bill:

  • Research the balance billing laws in your state

  • Ask for an itemized bill from the hospital or medical provider

  • Speak with your insurance company. Many times they have contracts in place with approved providers forbidding them from balance billing patients.

  • Hire a medical billing advocate

  • Bring it to the attention of your state’s Attorney General

  • Dispute the charges with the hospital or medical provider

  • If hit with a significant sized bill you may want to consult an attorney that specializes in medical billing disputes.


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    Photo credit: sonyone703's

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    Comments:
     
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    I was rushed to the hospital because of pain in my arms. I have coronary heart disease, they performed an angio gram on me, but I was fine. I went home, it was a Holiday weekend. I stated to cough and the whole in my groin popped out, and I was bleeding, so I had to call an ambulance to take me back. When I received my bill, my Insurance wanted me to pay the $500.00 for being admitted again, unless I could prove my 2nd trip was related to my first visit. I did, and I didn't have to pay it.
     
    Posted by Rosemarie M. Deitz on September 26, 2008 11:54 AM
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