I once went to an emergency room near Philadelphia -- Bryn Mawr -- and I was there for tops 2 hours. They didn't do anything fancy, beside an EKG (if you can even call that fancy).
They sent me a bill for $15k.
Luckily insurance covered 80% of it... But still! It basically maxed out my out-of-pocket for the year. And for what? An EKG -- at the time -- cost, on average, less than $100...
I remember calling the billing office to try to figure it out. They sent me the bill for $15k directly, so I thought that's what I owed AFTER insurance. Needless to say, I was panicked. I remember telling them, I'd sooner leave the country and move to Europe than pay them $15k, if that's what it came down to. I remember the billing office basically threatening my life. And then when they found out I had insurance (not sure why they didn't know that I did already), they suddenly got much more friendly.
So basically it would be cheaper to fly to Canada (/Europe/Russia/where er) for $500 roundtrip and get an EKG for $100 there. You know something's weird when this is what a better solution looks like.
They sent me a bill for $15k.
Luckily insurance covered 80% of it... But still! It basically maxed out my out-of-pocket for the year. And for what? An EKG -- at the time -- cost, on average, less than $100...
I remember calling the billing office to try to figure it out. They sent me the bill for $15k directly, so I thought that's what I owed AFTER insurance. Needless to say, I was panicked. I remember telling them, I'd sooner leave the country and move to Europe than pay them $15k, if that's what it came down to. I remember the billing office basically threatening my life. And then when they found out I had insurance (not sure why they didn't know that I did already), they suddenly got much more friendly.