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A good lawyer wouldn’t hurt, either.
So unnecessarily complex – and yes, so corrupt – has our health-care financing system become, that it is beyond the capability of an ordinary person of common sense and intelligence to cope with. Not only that, but the people who are being asked to pick their way through this diabolical labyrinth – on their hands and knees, as it were – are sick. They have better things to worry about than whether or not treatments have been properly coded or co-payments correctly calculated.
Let me share just one example. It comes not from my own cancer treatment, but rather from medical treatment being received by our 16-year-old daughter, Ania.
Last May, Ania was hit by a car as she was crossing the street at an intersection. She was knocked to the pavement, and lost three teeth. The police report indicates that the accident was 100% the driver’s fault. In any sane world, you would think the driver’s auto insurance would cover 100% of the damages, no questions asked – right? But no. This is New Jersey, home of the nation’s most dysfunctional auto-insurance system, located in the United States, home of the world’s most dysfunctional medical-insurance system.
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Sometime this past fall, after receiving State Farm’s payment, the oral surgeon’s office submitted a claim for the remaining amount to Highmark Blue Cross/Blue Shield – only they didn’t submit it directly to Highmark’s office in Pittsburgh. For some inscrutable reason, known only to the Blue Cross/Blue Shield bureaucrats, claims must be submitted first through the local affiliate. The doctor’s office has submitted the claim multiple times to Horizon Blue Cross/Blue Shield (the New Jersey affiliate), but has heard back absolutely nothing. Each time the claim is submitted, it seems to fall into some kind of administrative black hole. There has been speculation about an error by the doctor’s office in submitting my Blue Cross/Blue Shield member ID number, and also talk of Blue Cross/Blue Shield handling dental claims through some sort of mysterious, special unit. Whatever has happened, Highmark Blue Cross/Blue Shield in Pittsburgh says they have never received any claim in this case, and can’t do anything about paying the doctor until they do.
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The first collection-agency notice arrived while I was not feeling well, and ended up in a pile of unopened mail. I did not respond to it at the time, as I should have. In response to a subsequent notice, I sent a “dispute letter,” following instructions provided by the collection agency – only to receive a reply saying that I can’t submit a dispute letter after all, because more than thirty days have elapsed since the first notice. (Then why did they tell me I could? But why ask “why”?) Complicating the whole matter is the fact that the collection agency is claiming we owe the entire cost of the treatment. Their figure does not reflect the payment made by State Farm (our auto insurance) – which the doctor’s office acknowledges was paid more than six months ago.
I have been on the phone, in recent weeks, with Mindy, a special representative of the Presbyterian Church Board of Pensions, who has been trying very hard to resolve this. I feel like Mindy is the only reasonable person in this strange, Kafkaesque medical-insurance world. Indeed, she has tried very hard to make sense of an essentially nonsensical system. She has hooked me up, in three-way conference calls, with people at Highmark Blue Cross/Blue Shield and with the secretary in the doctor’s office. She has assured all parties concerned that the church wants Highmark to pay this bill, and wants everything possible done to expedite it. Highmark has given verbal assurances that they will pay it, as soon as they receive a claim. Yet the days drag on, and that claim seems to have vanished into the Horizon Blue Cross/Blue Shield system, accompanied by a loud, sucking sound. In two months, it will be a year since Ania’s accident, and she’s only one-third of the way along to getting her teeth fixed.
I’ve never met Mindy – she’s just a voice over the telephone to me – but I can somehow picture her standing across a flood-swollen river from us, holding up a wad of greenbacks and saying, “Don’t worry, here it is, we’re going to pay this bill.” But there is no footbridge across that raging river, and no boats. So near, and yet so far...
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What does an elderly or infirm person do, I wonder, with a mailbox full of such paperwork, with its baffling explanations and arcane codes? Probably nothing. Such a person may never be able to reconcile the various, competing financial statements – and therefore may never correct errors that may be hiding in them. The human cost of coping with this vast, unfeeling bureaucracy – a cost inflicted, in many cases, on patients too sick to bear it – is the dark and shameful underside of our health-care system.
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