Burdizzo said:docb said:austinAG90 said:docb said:austinAG90 said:docb said:Aggie95 said:
Long story short…daughter was involved in a car accident 2 years ago and was not at fault. She had some minor neck pain and headache so we went to the hospital as a precaution.
Days later we find out the driver had given expired auto insurance (State Farm). We later get a bill that I sent my auto insurance, also State Farm to cover the $900 hospital bill. Turns out they never did and they are coming after us daily. Do they do this to illegals that inundate hospitals?
Maybe I'm in the wrong and should just pay it, but since this was part of the accident, I don't feel responsible to pay out of my pocket.
I think you should pay the hospital and then fight your insurance company. Why should the hospital do this stuff for free?
Dumb
So the doctor/hospital should eat the costs? If you think this then you are no better than the illegals not paying.
It's the insurance company's responsibility, and to a fault the hospital for not following up on their billing. Has nothing to do with illegals, that is another issue. One X post @statefarm and a call to the Texas Insurance Dept will take care of it.
Well at least y'all get a feeling of why health care costs are so high. I really can't think of a single other business that has to eat so much costs. The problem is with the insurance companies and the unfunded that drive this up. The reform needs to take place there. Honestly this is one of the main reasons I no longer pull trauma call at the hospital. In the end everyone likes to get paid for their services. I don't see how anyone could argue against that.
My brother had emergency surgery to remove his gall bladder removed about 15 years ago. He is self-employed and self-in insured. When they gave home the bil, he said he was going to pay cash. They immediately cut his bill in half and even offered to let him pay in installments. I know of no other business model that offers a 50% cash discount.
I mentioned above I had a medical procedure that is now encountering billing snafus. The anesthesiologist sent me a bill and said I could pay it online. I went online to pay it, and amount due was different from (more than) the paper bill. I paid the paper bill amount. Two weeks later I got another bill from them for an even larger amount. Both of these bills differ from the statement of benefits I received from my insurance company. This procedure was pretty routine, and my carrier is fairly common (not like JimbobMutual of Mars), yet these asshats can't get their records straight. I have little sympathy for insurance companies or larger medical enterprises.
You shouldn't. They have little sympathy for you either.