In the never-ending saga that is my eyes, my retina specialist referred me to another specialist a few weeks ago, because of some peculiarities in my vision. I paid my usual $25 copay at the new specialist, and just got his bill the other day. Now, the total cost of the treatment, not taking account my insurance, was $855.00. But, below that amount, my insurance company CareFirst Blue Cross Blue Shield listed the "non-allowed amount" for that exam, in my case $525.
(I had to cut and paste the numbers to fit it all in a size you could read.)
Basically, the non-allowed amount is a portion of the doctor's charges that the insurance company is throwing out, and that the doctor agrees to throw out. So in my case, above, the insurance company got the doctor to accept $287 as payment for my exam instead of the full $855.
Anyone want to take a bet on whether my doctor is treating me at a loss?
Welcome to the bizarre world of your insurance. You pay all this money every year for the right to have your insurance company and the doctor collude to lower the cost of your treatment. Which of course begs the question: Why am I being charged a phony inflated amount for the treatment in the first place? Do people without insurance pay the full $855? Of course, people without insurance probably go blind in the United States, so the point is likely moot.
But it really is infuriating to see the absurdly high costs we pay for health care in this country, then to see an indication that the costs are simply phony anyway. Andrew Sullivan posted about this today, using another example a reader gave him, which motivated me to write about my recent bill.
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