Welcome to DU!
The truly grassroots left-of-center political community where regular people, not algorithms, drive the discussions and set the standards.
Join the community:
Create a free account
Support DU (and get rid of ads!):
Become a Star Member
Latest Breaking News
Editorials & Other Articles
General Discussion
The DU Lounge
All Forums
Issue Forums
Culture Forums
Alliance Forums
Region Forums
Support Forums
Help & Search
General Discussion
In reply to the discussion: If you suddenly found yourself working for an insurance company and received a claim that looks like this for MRI-- [View all]Silent Type
(7,339 posts)59. In my opinion it's the doc's office responsibility. They have all the information, they under codes,
they can understand if a change on codes is needed, have the medical records and diagnoses info, etc. Most of time the office does it electronically, few phone calls.
On any denial the patient should call the provider.
Calling insurer is a waste, unless your doctor isnt responding to you. In most cases docs have incentive to appeal because they know most patients cant afford the whole bill.
Edit history
Please sign in to view edit histories.
Recommendations
0 members have recommended this reply (displayed in chronological order):
87 replies
= new reply since forum marked as read
Highlight:
NoneDon't highlight anything
5 newestHighlight 5 most recent replies
RecommendedHighlight replies with 5 or more recommendations
If you suddenly found yourself working for an insurance company and received a claim that looks like this for MRI-- [View all]
Silent Type
Dec 12
OP
It's not denied in the sense they will never pay. It's denied because they ain't gonna cut a check until they get
Silent Type
Dec 12
#5
There are also denials regarding valid claims and treatment approvals with delay tactics
Meowmee
Dec 12
#16
In my opinion it's the doc's office responsibility. They have all the information, they under codes,
Silent Type
Dec 12
#59
They've gotten care in most "claim" denials. Preauthorization is much the same. For example, Medicare's policy on MRIs
Silent Type
Dec 12
#8
You need to understand something. I have been for Medicare/caid-for-All since 1982. If I were to dig through my addict
Silent Type
Dec 12
#24
I'm saying insurance companies are not worse than other aspects of our healthcare system -- doctors, hospitals, big drug
Silent Type
Dec 14
#82
Medicare wouldn't ask you, they'd ask providers if claim wasn't coded well enough,
Silent Type
Dec 13
#71
I'm all for something like in other countries. I just don't see any Congress person with guts to tell millions of people
Silent Type
Dec 13
#74
I have had the same satisfactory experience with just plain Medicare, no supplemental no advantage
Walleye
Dec 14
#77
Hospitals and insurance companies work hand-in-hand on thousands of claims a week....
Think. Again.
Dec 12
#7
Yeah sure. That's how Medicare or private insurers end up paying claims to providers who don't even exist.
Silent Type
Dec 12
#9
One more time. Those are INITIAL denials -- similar to examples above -- that are overturned in over 80% of cases
Silent Type
Dec 12
#13
Oh, okay, so this doesn't even address the 34% of final claims denied by UHC.
Think. Again.
Dec 12
#15
Because 80+% of initial claim denials are reversed exactly as outlined in the OP. Have a good night.
Silent Type
Dec 12
#25
It happens with Medicaid because the government hires unscrupulous people to deny claims
questionseverything
Dec 12
#36
Good point, it ain't just private insurance. Medicaid and Medicare are government programs and likely model
Silent Type
Dec 12
#37
I'd have to see the bills. He might have been submitting improper bills, that were changed
Silent Type
Dec 12
#43
Like Wendell Potter, got rich supporting denying claims and felt guilty. Ask him if anyone died from his
Silent Type
Dec 12
#48
Yes. The actual claim form submitted electronically has a Units column. But, good example of claims not always making
Silent Type
Dec 12
#14
Example in OP includes meds. The type sedation -- xanax or something -- is pretty cheap. Well, unless provider cheats.
Silent Type
Dec 12
#20
If you are uninsured, someone might charge you $50 K. Insurance will not approve $12K, including Medicare.
Silent Type
Dec 12
#31
Let's say $12 K is going rate. Should insurer, including Medicare, pay $17K, or deny and ask for additional . . . . . .
Silent Type
Dec 12
#32
Give me a break. You know who Luigi shot and his rationale. Heard tonight Luigi was apparently never insured by UHC.
Silent Type
Dec 12
#30
So if he was never insured by them he certianly wasnt denied a payment claim by them.
Eko
Dec 12
#40
OK, guess his manifesto said nothing about denials, claims, pre authorization. And UHC never insured him
Silent Type
Dec 12
#46
Read the last paragraph. I explain that. But very few here are going to understand what an electronic claims looks like.
Silent Type
Dec 12
#21
I answered your question since you didn't read the note in OP. Have a good evening.
Silent Type
Dec 12
#44
I didn't ask you any questions. Your notes in the OP are inadequate. Good night. eom.
vanessa_ca
Dec 12
#49
Got a good laugh out of that, actually. I do care about shooting someone in the back while being misinformed.
Silent Type
Dec 12
#26
Get it and envious. But lot of the blame is on greedy providers for prices. I've never seen Medicare or private insurers
Silent Type
Dec 12
#33
Fun fact: UHC employees have been ordered to defend their murders. N/t
Hellbound Hellhound
Dec 12
#52
Considering the misinformation, Luigi cult, etc., don't blame them too. When people catch on government programs
Silent Type
Dec 12
#54
So what do think a typical insurer might pay? Three times Medicare, 1.5, even less than Medicare by requiring
Silent Type
Dec 12
#56
Not "defending" anyone. Trying to point out not just insurance. It's also Congress, Medicare, Providers,
Silent Type
Dec 12
#61
Think we ought to put blame where it belongs, Congress primarily for failing us.
Silent Type
Dec 13
#63
No, not in insurance business. There are federal guidelines too, not just state insurance laws. In fact
Silent Type
Dec 13
#70
You can look up the cost some procedures on the Medicare site (example for MRI below).
rog
Dec 14
#76
If a hospital charges $1800 for an MRI that is what the insurance company should pay
Autumn
Dec 14
#80