Besides the obvious reason—an unexpected injury or accident—people wind up incurring an emergency room cost for a number of reasons. Perhaps you are a Medi-Cal patient unable to find a doctor to treat you. (Doctors can opt out of treating Medi-Cal patients but ER doctors are required by federal law to treat every patient who comes to the emergency room, regardless of whether they can afford the ER charges.)
Say you are in between jobs and you aren't covered for medical insurance. Some hospitals have been known to charge individuals without insurance their "retail rates" yet bill insurance companies "wholesale rates." People with assets or concerned with their credit rating are subject to be charged outlandish amounts.
Some people go to the ER for a non-emergency or a simple procedure because the walk-in clinic is over-crowded, having no idea they will wind up with medical bills that could lead to bankruptcy!
Rose (not her real name) had a heart attack and ended up in the hospital with no insurance and a bill for more than $80,000. "My family was forced to file for bankruptcy," she says in an e-mail. "I don't recall exactly how much of that charge was for procedures I had in ER but I know I spent several hours there before being admitted. The hospital closed about a year later but I do have the same cardiologist, and he says the doctors have no idea what any hospital procedures cost."
Rose did manage to get her bill reduced before the hospital closed. "After several attempts to call the hospital administration and someone explained that the CT Scan was the most expensive ER charge. Anyway, she agreed to knock off the co-pay, reducing the amount to about $1,100…"
It is possible that with the help of an attorney, Rose could reduce her bill even further and possibly find ER overcharges. She is in the process of getting her medical records, documents that are imperative to an attorney—medical records will determine any overcharges. For example, sometimes the same procedures have been charged twice.
READ MORE EMERGENCY ROOM CHARGES LEGAL NEWS
"Sometimes hospitals will word the contract vaguely, such as, 'We will charge you a reasonable amount for an emergency room procedure,' but what is that amount?" says Kramer. "The charges are somewhat dependent upon the hospital's contract so if it doesn't spell out specific rates, everyone who went through that hospital is in the same boat as you."
Kramer explains that a vague contract. i.e., "reasonable charges," means that you have more leverage to dispute your ER bill. If you have been overcharged and being chased for the money or you have paid way more than was justified by the amount of treatment received, an attorney can seek reimbursement of the excess payments on your behalf.
READER COMMENTS
balaji
on
Recently my son (15 months) vomited twice in the middle of the night and we thought it was an emergency and we took him to an ER. By the time we got there he was alright and since we were there we thought of having him checked. The ER staff did a basic examination and we were made to wait in a room for observation. After a while a doctor came and we consulted. He prescribed medicine and after a while we were discharged. The total amount of time we were there was 2 hours. We got a bill from two entities, the hospital and the doctor. The hospital charged $625 and the doctor $320, totalling $945. As I mentioned earlier my son was alright by the time we got to the hospital and the level of severity was low. But we were charged for a intermediate level and I am disputing with the hospital, saying that it was an non-emergency case and we were there for 2 hours waiting in the room and nothing really happened. I was wondering if I can dispute this at the small claims court. I appreciate your response.
Thank you
Balaji
Jordan Haste
on
I recently had a cut on my hand and went into the ER to get it looked at. I spent about 3-4 hours sitting in the lobby waiting for my name to be called. Then spent another hour in the room waiting for the doctor to come in. The doctor that finally did show up was a student doctor. So he would come in, say a few sentences then leave for 20 minutes at a time to get another doctor to come in and verify that the doctor spoke to me correctly then leave me waiting another 20 minutes for the student doctor to come backand say a few more sentences.... rinse and repeat a few times and about 2 more hours. Then the student doctor came back and injected me with numbing agents. he also injected my veins with this same agent so I got a body full of the stuff. Anyways, after all was said and done the student doctor finally had me stitched up and white veined (due to the numbing agent that now was flowing through my veins) after a total of roughly 6 hours. A few weeks later I got a bill in the mail from the ER room. I went through weeks of giving them my insurance information, and them failing to type it into the computer, rinse and repeat. then I received a second bill from the physician. The ER charged me $1,353 for "ER" and $250.45 for "PHARM" then the physician also charged me an additional $515 for "ER." The physician also charge $685 for "REP SUPERFICIAL WND(S)" and $65 for "MED SERV."
This just doesn't seem right to me. I only spend a total of 20-30 minutes with the actual doctor, and that includes the time it took him to stitch. The other 5+ hours I was sitting and doing nothing but waiting. It just feels like this is extremely excessive for the service I received. Is there anything I can do about it? Please respond to my email if at all possible! I don't know if I'll be able to find this website and post again! Thank you in advance for any information I can get! Even if I'm just ignorant of the way things work and your just telling me this is all right! Thanks again!
Jelena
on
Jelena Cajkanovic
on
I had a routine colonoscopy in December 2010 and my doctor's office sent me to International Surgical Institute in Beverly Hills where the colonoscopy was performed. I thought this was preapproved by Cigna since they told me that my doctor is in network and this will be covered by Cigna but later I learnt that International Surgical Institute is not contracted with Cigna. I wasn't aware of it, since my doctor is in the network and I didn't realize that every person in the chain (the doctor, the anesthesiologist, the facility) has to have a contract with my health insurance Cigna. Anyway, International Surgical Institute submitted a claim with Cigna for $19,137.00 just for the bed and equipment used to perform colonoscopy. The doctor was paid separately $226.38 and lab $150.00. Cigna denied paying the facility International Surgical Institute, since my benefits do not include colonoscopy if done out of network. I appealed multiple times but CIGNA refused to pay. The International Surgical Institute didn't send another bill to me, but instead they send it to collectors. I have received a bill from Fidelity Creditor Service for $5,890.41 ($5,000 bill +$865 interest). I was shocked. First the average cost of colonoscopy (http://colonoscopycosts.com/) is $3k including doctor so original bill of $19,137 is outrageous. Second they have never sent me the second bill for $5,000. Instead they send it to collection. Obviously, to International Surgical Institute dropped the charges from $19,137 to $5,000 when charging me instead of insurance. I have never received an itemized bill so I don't know what they are charging me for (I am guessing bed and supplies)
I believe this is a huge scam! Why I am charged $19,137 for something that in average costs ~$2000? Does the International Surgical Institute have a right to send me to collection without sending me the itemized bill for $5000 first? Fidelity Creditor Service company even included an interest? Is this by law? Can I sue the International Surgical Institute? First, they haven’t worn me that I would have to pay such a huge bill out of my pocket since they do not have contract with CIGNA. They never sent me an itemized bill so I don’t understand what I am being charged for and they sent me to collectors before I ever seen the bill for $5,000. Do collectors have a lawful right to include $865 interest if I haven’t seen the bill before? Do I need a lawyer? Is this something that should be submitted to small claims court?
Thanks for your help!
Sincerely,
Jelena Cajkanovic