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by aamar
2003 days ago
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See here[1] for a pretty good explanation. Importantly, your insurer treating the visit as in-network does not force the provider to treat it as in-network; surprise bills come from the provider, not the insurer. From that post: If the insurer pays less than the out-of-network emergency room bills, the emergency room can send you a balance bill for the difference, over and above the deductible and coinsurance amounts you pay. That “if” condition is usually going to hold, so a lot of surprise bills come out even despite the ACA rule. [1] https://www.verywellhealth.com/get-in-network-rates-out-of-n... |
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What really got to me was it was ER visit and the Doc(extortionist) spent maybe 5 minutes with me before having the nurse fix me up. After insurance $250 to hospital, and $2000 bill for the Doc.