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ck4829

(35,091 posts)
Wed Dec 14, 2022, 05:32 AM Dec 2022

Half of ambulance rides yield surprise medical bills. What's being done to protect people?

When people dial 911, perhaps the last thing they think about is how much the ambulance ride will cost. 

But a report released Tuesday by U.S. PIRG Education Trust shows ambulance companies routinely bill out-of-network charges. This happens when an insurance plan's network doesn't include the public or private ambulance company.

Even after an insurer pays a portion of charges, about half of consumers are billed more. These extra charges add up to about $129 million each year, according to U.S. PIRG.

Congress passed a law creating an arbitration process as of January 2022 to protect consumers from surprise bills during emergencies or when an out-of-network doctor provides care at an in-network hospital. The federal law, called the No Surprises Act, also protects consumers from costly air ambulance bills — but it doesn't address more common ground ambulance transports.

https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/health/2022/12/13/ambulance-surprise-medical-bills/10866349002/ 

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Half of ambulance rides yield surprise medical bills. What's being done to protect people? (Original Post) ck4829 Dec 2022 OP
And did you know that even if *you* didn't call them, you're still on the hook intrepidity Dec 2022 #1

intrepidity

(7,336 posts)
1. And did you know that even if *you* didn't call them, you're still on the hook
Wed Dec 14, 2022, 05:53 AM
Dec 2022

Found this out in early 2020, fell down outside and dislocated my shoulder, and my neighbor--against my wishes!--called 911. They came and wouldn't do anything except offer to take me to hospital, which I declined (covid? no thanks!)

Got a bill for $300!! Unfuckingreal.

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