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Health Provider Arrogance

Posted on October 5, 2011 Written by The Nittany Turkey

I haven’t bitched about the health care morass for a while, so I should rectumfy that straight away. This is a story of something that happened to me recently. There’ll be some editorial comments at the end.

Back in July, I scheduled some minor sinus surgery, which was to be performed by my ENT guy at a local same-day surgical facility. It is that surgical facility that is the subject of this post; since it won’t mean anything to my mostly out-of-town readers, its name is unimportant.  I’ll save that for my megabitch post on Angie’s List.

The surgery was to take place on July 18. A representative of the surgical facility called me a few days after I scheduled the surgery with my ENT’s scheduling person, asking me to pick a time and date to “pre-register.” For those of you who don’t know what “pre-registration” in advance of a procedure might mean, they want to do some blood tests, read some vital signs, and most importantly, collect an estimated amount that the patient would be required to pay after whatever his or her health insurance pays their coinsurance. Knowing all too well what they were up to, I snickered at the medspeak euphemism “pre-registration.”

Having been to same-day surgical operations before, I had set my sights low regarding what I would encounter on pre-registration day, which was July 12 (far enough in advance to ensure that if my check bounced, they could call off the surgery). I was pleasantly surprised by the aesthetics of the building’s exterior and the spaciousness of the waiting room. My first order of business, of course, was to pay. God forbid they should incur the expense of weighing me and drawing some blood if I hadn’t prepaid! OK, so I sat at the pre-registration window where the nice lady on the other side told me that after consultation with my insurance company, I would have to fork over close to $800 of pre-registration money. Because I was close to my deductible limit, I thought that the amount was probably pretty accurate. If not, I anticipated a timely refund of the excess.

My surgery went well. The medical personnel were great, and the recovery room was large and well attended. I was happy with the service I received there and with the friendly competence of the employees.

Along about the second week in August, I received an Explanation of Benefits from my insurer, which covered the surgery facility charges. They were just under $200, which meant that I was owed approximately $600. I decided to wait for a refund, so I set the issue aside. Alas, being absent-minded (if not feeble minded), I unwittingly ceded control to them and relegated myself to their back burner.

On September 29, I found this thing sitting at the bottom of my “pending” file. I called to ask about my refund. The billing person I spoke with said she would have to call their billing office in Texas to get the “status”. I told her that I didn’t want a status; I wanted a refund. She said that her manager was out, and it would have to be her manager who could give me a better idea of when I might receive a refund. I told her that she could also tell her manager that holding onto my money for this length of time without a show of interest of any kind went so far against my grain as to preclude me from considering using their facility in the future. The powerless clerk empathized with me. We agreed that her manager would call me the next day, which was Friday. As there was nothing else she could do, I bid her au revoir.

I was not surprised that I didn’t hear from the manager on Friday. Medical administrative people think that their customers are insurance companies or government Medicare/Medicaid, and that patients are just incidental to the whole circle of cash flow, pains in the ass who carry the plastic key to the insurance company or government coffers. If they are forecast to owe any money, it must be collected in advance. One might have a FICO credit score of 800 and huge credit limits all over the business world, but only the medical industry has the chutzpah to put creditworthy customers on an automatic C.O.D. basis with no exceptions. So, I would give the manager all day Friday to prove by not calling me, as expected, that I was just a pain in the ass.

I called her on Monday. She told me to wait while she checked on the “status.” (Oy, enough with the status, already. I had been statused to a frazzled, hair-trigger anti-personnel device.) After a couple of minutes, she came back to tell me that the refund had been “processed” (I guess that’s one of the “status” categories) on September 29. Last Thursday. That happened to be the day I spoke to the powerless clerk in the absence of the manager. Was it a coincidence that the refund was processed that same day? I think not. The powerless clerk somehow initiated what she told me she didn’t have power to do. I had apparently made clear my degree of disgruntlement.

I told the manager I would expect the check in the mail in the next day or so, or I would consider doing a charge-back with the credit card company that handled my pre-registration fee. Before I asked her why it took so damn long (almost two months), she told me that the reason was that they were short-staffed and things were prioritized as necessary to deal with the short staff. I told her that my money was priority one, as should any customer’s. After all, if you piss off enough customers in any other business, you won’t be in business long. But the usual rules don’t apply to the medical industry.

“Hell, there’s a recession going on out there with millions of people unemployed and on the street,” I said, “and you’re telling me that you’re short staffed. I’m assuming that it’s by choice that you are.” I reiterated my position that I wouldn’t deal with any outfit with such a cavalier attitude about patient’s money. I told her to pass that on to whoever decides the priorities.

I actually did receive the check in yesterday’s mail. It was indeed postmarked at a Dallas, Texas ZIP code on September 29.

High-deductible health insurance policies and Health Savings Accounts (HSAs) were a step in the right direction, thinks this Turkey. First and foremost, it gives the patient a dog in the fight. If enough people were to participate in this type of shared responsibility, I am convinced that this country would see a reduction in health care costs. People have been used to their employers’ insurance plans paying for most of their medical expenses, so they tend to overuse services. Doctors, undercompensated by government and private insurers who follow Medicare’s lead are gaming the system by prescribing superfluous testing for patients to be performed in facilities they partly own or from whom they receive kickbacks. And patients are pawns who are lucky if they get decent care, because they are significantly outside the revenue loop.

Enter the high-deductible health insurance policy. The patient now participates in a greater share of the costs and is therefore more careful with his or her own money, questioning the need for tests and procedures, and also avoiding providers who treat him or her poorly. It works just like your CPA or your attorney, assuming that you don’t have  accounting or legal insurance. You see these professionals only when there is a clear need for their services. You don’t go to your lawyer every time you need to write a nasty letter to someone. You don’t go to your CPA to balance your checkbook every month. Why, then, should you visit your doctor for each case of the sniffles that will resolve itself in two weeks regardless of what the doc does? Answer: if it’s your $75 for the appointment, you might take some Sudafed and hope for the best.

(I’m referring to non-emergency services here, where you have a choice in the matter. If you’re run over by a bus, under indictment by the IRS, or arrested for drunk driving, you have little choice other than to get the necessary services.)

But instead of the sane and rational scenario I’ve just described, Obamacare (and whatever your Congress has in mind as a follow-on) takes steps to severely limit individual participation in the system. After all, if people are wards of the state, they’ll be beholden to their saviors, which in this case are the Democrats. Never mind that anything government touches winds up tainted by huge administration cost and eventual fraud and abuses, our leader’s solution is to have a panel of cost-oriented bureaucrats deciding what is necessary and what is not. This aggregate, one size fits all approach has been tried in other countries with socialized medicine, and it has created unwelcome compromises by removing the individual patient from the decision process. Eventually, because government funding priorities are largely dictated by other non-discretionary budget items such as the interest on the growing national debt (part of which is related to Obamacare), health care will be put in the squeeze, with more and more medically desirable tests and procedures being disallowed. If we were paying for these things with our own money, our own personal budget would dictate what we could spend.

Which way would you rather have it? One size fits all, where you’re denied a procedure that would improve your life because too many people are going to the doctor to suit the bureaucrats (which they’ll call “waste, fraud, and abuse”) or making that decision yourself, perhaps having to take out a loan or work another job to get what you want? Too many people are buying into the smooth-talking sales pitch of our schlocky president, who never talks about the downside of socialized medicine: namely, that you’re even more of an anonymous lemming than you were before.

But I digress.

I got my refund. I should be happy, right?

 

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Filed Under: Health Tagged With: abuse, health insurance, high-deductible, HSA, medicine

Pills, Pills, Pills!

Posted on February 19, 2011 Written by The Nittany Turkey

A couple of years ago, my friend Charlie postulated, “We’re not getting old. We are old!”

When you’re old, you take pills. My life seems to be defined by which pills I take and when I take them.

Many of you who are over sixty will identify with my pharmaceutical morass. If you do not, then congratulations on having led a healthful life, free from the chronic ailments that require drugs. I’m jealous.

Forthwith, a day in my pill life.

Morning comes and I wake. Foggily, driven by habit, I find myself by the bathroom medicine cabinet reaching for the four different pills I take at first light. One of them is a low-dose aspirin. I shouldn’t really take that on an empty stomach, but I get the enteric coated ones, so I do it anyway. Another is a thyroid pill whose instructions tell me to take it a half-hour before eating. Under its spell, I can make the bed, get showered and dressed, and catch up on the latest news. (Alternatively, I can write a blog about pills.)

There’s another one that tells me I must take it with food. I can eat breakfast, take my vitamins and supplements, which I keep in the kitchen, and return to the bathroom to brush my teeth and take the “with food” pill. Then I’m done until lunch time.

My urologist has me on a two-week course of antibiotics, taken twice a day. I take one at noon and one at midnight. It cannot be taken within a certain number of hours of consuming foods containing calcium, particularly milk and yogurt. So, that’s why I take it at lunch time, so I can have milk with my cereal at breakfast. As for the yogurt, well, I’ll take acidophilus pills to replenish my intestinal flora, thankyouverymuch. More pills to take!

Mid-afternoon is time for my happy pill, which must be taken with food. That’s a good excuse to have a snack, so it isn’t all bad. Of course, that one makes me drowsy, so it immediately starts working on me to amplify the somnolent effects of the Zyrtec I take for allergies. I inevitably feel the need to crash sometime between four and seven o’clock. That nap helps a lot, as I don’t sleep well at night, which is undoubtedly exacerbated by the antibiotic, which lists insomnia among its least scary side-effects.

I get a respite from pills until bedtime, when I regularly take three different meds. At the moment, though, it is four, because of the antibiotic. One of the night time pills makes me dizzy, so I can sleep dizzily. Another tweaks my liver overnight to reduce my serum cholesterol. Yet another inhibits the production of stomach acid to avoid the dreaded acid reflux.

Is it any wonder that I have strange dreams about forgetting to take my pills? They’re enhanced by the happy pills, which are known to cause vivid dreams.

That brings up the issues of side effects of drug interactions, and counterindications which I learned from Legacy Healing. I tried to make a chart to figure out when I should be taking what based on all these factors, but the ambiguities and the legal requirement to include all known negative effects and interactions in the literature conspired against me. Thus, I’m certain that my scheduling is suboptimal, with no hope for ever getting straightened out.

In the wake of my three-month bout of pneumonia, I have some remaining sinus and chest congestion symptoms. My last visit to the doc, for my annual physical, included a discussion of paths forward toward resolving these symptoms. The doctor suggested that I take Zyrtec in combination with Singulair for a month to see if that clears them up. I agreed, but that was before the urologist prescribed the antibiotic, at which time I decided to eschew the Singulair at least until I was done with the antibiotic. It, too, lists insomnia as a side-effect, as well as such delights as suicidal thoughts, aggression, and hallucinations. Holy crap! Too many damn pills!

I’m so weary of wondering what the combination of all these drugs is doing to my insides!

I was scheduled for a nuclear treadmill test in conjunction with my annual physical exam, but then that pesky urologist prescribed the antibiotic (Cipro), which is known to cause some heart rhythm irregularities. Thinking about that, I postponed the treadmill. Cipro is also known to cause tendinitis and ruptured tendons, particularly in people over sixty and particularly in the Achilles tendon. I visualized myself popping an Achilles while running on the treadmill — another good reason to postpone the test.

I know that I am not alone. I recently hosted friends my age from up north. They brought along at least five of those seven-day pill boxes. My 90 year-old mother, God bless her, is incapable of keeping track of her medicines and times, so she has a nurse stop by at the proper times to ensure she gets them. She’s fortunate in that she takes fewer drugs than many seniors — in fact, fewer drugs than I!

My attitude about medicine has changed considerably through the years. When I was much younger, I looked forward to getting drugs to fix what ailed me and then stopping them; however, now, as an old fart, I am taking a veritable plethora of pharmaceutical poisons presumably to remain viable. At what price, though? Aside from the aforementioned sleep issues, I have been through many side-effects. One drug I took a while back landed me in the hospital with a pseudo heart attack. Cardiac care units are not cheap, and I paid dearly for that episode. And let us not forget the fun intestinal issues associated with antibiotics. They hit me just when I needed them least — with house guests to entertain.

I think you get the picture. For you younger folks who are still immortal, take care of yourselves now or you will later find yourselves living for the pills, like me!

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Filed Under: Health, Television Tagged With: aging, chronic illness, drugs, interactions, pharmaceuticals, pills, side-effects

Overtraining Has Its Price

Posted on January 26, 2011 Written by The Nittany Turkey

The price paid by a dozen members of the Iowa Hawkeyes football team is a serious medical condition called rhabdomyolysis, which is a breakdown of muscle tissues that results in overloading the kidneys to the extent that they can be damaged severely. This is the same syndrome experienced by a small percentage of people who take statin drugs for control of serum cholesterol, the muscle cramps and weakness that you read about in the fine print in the information insert or hear about on the TV ad triple-tongued voice-over. But seriously, this is a bad situation. One player noted on Facebook that his urine had turned brown, which is one major symptom of rhabdo. Others started throwing up profusely. They’re all in the hospital being treated now, and they are said to be stable and recovering, but the university is pretty much stonewalling the whole thing. Coach Kirk Ferentz, who was out of town recruiting, was apprised of the situation and pledges to get to the bottom of it.

At what point does training go too far? Not long ago at UCF here in Orlando, a player named Eric Plancher died during a practice on a hot day. He was known to have the sickle cell trait. Last year, former Michigan head coach Rich Rodriguez came under fire for violating the NCAA maximum hours of practice per week.  What’s this all about? We’re all worried about concussions on the field, but some of the stuff that goes on in practice negatively affects the health of arguably more players. Presumably, schools competing at the highest level of college ball have exercise physiologists, physiatrists, and other medical personnel adding their input about intensity of practice. However, this Turkey has to wonder just how much the coaches abide by the doc’s recommendation. Pressure to succeed on the field means lots of money, and it comes at a correspondingly high price in human toil.

You can read more about this in the Washington Post’s article (but not much more, because the university is stonewalling it).

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Filed Under: Health, Penn State Football Tagged With: college football, Hawkeyes, rhabdomyolysis, University of Iowa

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