Of course the listed prices will be the prices uninsured patients would normally be billed. Remember, this is all negotiable.Hospital prices are about to go public
By Kaitlin Schroeder, Journal-News.com
Prices hospitals charge for their services will all go online Jan. 1 under a new federal requirement, but patient advocates say the realities of medical-industry pricing will make it difficult for consumers to get much out of the new data.
A federal rule requires all hospitals to post online a master list of prices for the services they provide so consumers can review them starting Jan. 1.
Hospital prices go public, Jan 1st, 2019
Hospital prices go public, Jan 1st, 2019
The full article appears here: Hospital Prices Go Public
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Editor
Lawfulpath.com
Editor
Lawfulpath.com
Re: Hospital prices go public, Jan 1st, 2019
I looked at the prices posted for the Hospital I usually deal with and they are astronomical. For example a simple doctor visit to the clinic that was billed at $80.00 (uninsured) in the past is now listed online as $210.00.
Sláinte
Hospitals Make $120 Billion While Skirting Federal Transparency Law
Original article is from RealClear Policy
By the way, a note to all the advertisers who hound me about wanting to post product-placement articles on this website-- the above article is an example of how you can do it without your article being flagged as spam and taken down. Offer something of value, relevant to your product, and post it in the correct topic section.
Remember folks, none of this matters if you use the techniques taught in my book How to Survive Hospital Costs Without Insurance.Hospitals Make $120 Billion While Skirting Federal Transparency Law
By Adam Andrzejewski
April 11, 2022
Three of the largest for-profit hospital chains in the U.S. made a combined $120 billion in 2021, while violating federal transparency laws, according to an investigation by Patient Rights Advocate.
Beginning Jan. 1, 2021, the Affordable Care Act required hospitals to be transparent about what they charge patients.
The Hospital Price Transparency Rule requires providers to post prices for their medical services online in a “machine-readable standard charges list for all items and services for all payers and plans” as well as a “standard charges list or price estimator tool for the 300 most common shoppable services,” according to the report.
The idea was to promote competition between hospitals, thereby lowering prices.
The Patient Rights Advocate report found that only 14 percent of the 1,000 hospitals reviewed were compliant with these regulations, and only 0.5 percent of hospitals owned by the three largest U.S. hospital systems – HCA Healthcare, CommonSpirit Health, and Ascension – were compliant.
None of the HCA Healthcare system’s 118 hospitals were compliant, the report found, and those three large systems made a combined $120 billion (page 3).
Open The Books studied the largest non-profit health care providers in the country in 2019 and found that their revenues and assets continued to grow as consumer prices skyrocketed, all while receiving tax breaks for their “non-profit” status.
Patient Rights Advocate found that the cost to companies to comply with these transparency regulations would be $12,000 per hospital.
Why are hospitals so reluctant to post their prices? Fear of competition may play a role. If hospitals followed the law, consumers might shop around to find the best deals on their medical procedures.
The U.S. needs to enforce its laws to ensure hospitals are being transparent in their pricing, since they won’t voluntarily obey the law.
The #WasteOfTheDay is brought to you by the forensic auditors at OpenTheBooks.com
By the way, a note to all the advertisers who hound me about wanting to post product-placement articles on this website-- the above article is an example of how you can do it without your article being flagged as spam and taken down. Offer something of value, relevant to your product, and post it in the correct topic section.
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Editor
Lawfulpath.com
Editor
Lawfulpath.com