Skip to main content

Medical Practice Hassles Torture Patients and Doctors

We do most of our colonoscopies in our ambulatory surgery center (ASC), which is attached to our office.  We are proud of the work that we and our staff do every day and are grateful for the outstanding feedback that we consistently receive from our patients.  Some insurance companies will not cover procedures in our ASC so these patients must get ‘scoped’ at the hospital instead.  For many of them, this means required blood tests a few days in advance of the procedure, which we would not have required for an ASC procedure.   On the procedure day, the patient and the driver will enjoy spending hours in the hospital for parking, checking in, interviews with various medical personnel, the procedure and the recovery period.  And, since it is a hospital, delays are inevitable.  Not only does this experience take hours longer than it should, but we are mystified that an insurance company would take on the expense for a hospital test that we could do more efficiently and cheaper in our ASC.  Can you make sense out of this?

It is typical for a physician’s prescription for a patient to be ‘denied’ by an insurance company.  Such denials, of course, are never issued by a medical professional, but are form letters kicked out automatically if the physician’s preferred drug is not included in the insurance company’s sacred formulary.  Appealing a denial – which we will attempt – is just as smooth and stressless as calling the IRS for questions on your tax return.  It is designed this way so that physicians and patients simply give up.  What physician has the time or fortitude to make several phone calls to hear repeatedly, ‘please listen carefully as our options have changed…”  Sometimes, my recommended drug is denied because my patient has not first tried a different medication, which I did not prescribe because it is not indicated for my patient’s condition.  Should I prescribe the wrong drug so that few weeks later when it is not effective, I can then hope that the correct medicine will be approved?  Can you make sense out of this?



The System Can Make Doctors and Patients Batty


Some insurance companies will only permit me to prescribe a 30 day supply of a medication.  Some of these medicines need to be taken indefinitely.  Why should these patients have to make 12 stops to the pharmacy every year?  Why can’t I prescribe a 3 or 6 month supply?  Can you make sense out of this?

A patient comes to me for a screening colonoscopy.  His insurance company covers this preventive service.  I do the exam and find a polyp, which I remove.  This changes the definition of the procedure from screening to diagnostic.  Why does this matter?  Because the insurance company may require that the patient pay a greater share for a ‘diagnostic’ procedure?  In other words, the patient gets penalized because his gastroenterologist removed a polyp, which is the goal of a screening colonoscopy.  Can you make sense out of this?


If any reader can make any sense out of these real life medical absurdities, then the medical profession needs you STAT.  You are much smarter than we are.

Comments

  1. I am a bedside nurse and my hospital is self-insured, however they use a third party company to approve or deny coverage. I was denied a second visit to pain management for steroid injections into my lower back because they said I'd already had two visits. Our insurance does not allow employees to dispute these denials even though I pay my premiums (which aren't insignificant) through payroll deduction. My back pain is primarily due to activities related to my role as a bedside nurse. If I didn't work for the company but used their insurance, I would at least be able to dispute a denial. It seemed ridiculous that they would rather me not be able to do my job, which provides income to the hospital, than pay for a few milligrams of prednisone and lidocaine. You are correct that they know if they make the process difficult enough, people will just give up. It has me so frustrated that I'm considering seeking alternative employment.

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

Stop Medical Malpractice: The White Coat Wall of Silence

Photo Credit Leisure Guy, one of my most faithful commenters, opines that I am omitting an important aspect of the tort reform argument. He has implored me repeatedly to read a particular book that I suspect buttresses his views, but this worthy pursuit is simply not near the top of my priority pyramid. Since he’s retired, he enjoys the luxury of burrowing deeply into the base of his priority pyramid. With 4 tuitions to go, retirement is a distant mirage for me. I’m can be a ‘leisure guy’, but only in my dreams. I have written throughout this blog and elsewhere that there are too many frivolous lawsuits against physicians. I have admitted that caps on non-economic damages are not ideal, because they deny some worthy plaintiffs of complete compensation, but I support them because I believe they serve the greater good. I have ranted that there is no effective filter to screen out physicians who should never be invited to the litigation party in the first place. I believe that the...

When Should Doctors Retire?

I am asked with some regularity whether I am aiming to retire in the near term.  Years ago, I never received such inquiries.  Why now?   Might it be because my coiffure and goatee – although finely-manicured – has long entered the gray area?  Could it be because many other even younger physicians have given up their stethoscopes for lives of leisure? (Hopefully, my inquiring patients are not suspecting me of professional performance lapses!) Interestingly, a nurse in my office recently approached me and asked me sotto voce that she heard I was retiring.    “Interesting,” I remarked.   Since I was unaware of this retirement news, I asked her when would be my last day at work.   I have no idea where this erroneous rumor originated from.   I requested that my nurse-friend contact her flawed intel source and set him or her straight.   Retirement might seem tempting to me as I have so many other interests.   Indeed, reading and ...

Prostate Cancer Screening: Stop The PSA Train!

About 10 years ago, my dad was to see his general internist. I have always refrained from giving medical advice to my family, for all of the reasons why doctors should not treat or advise their relatives. But, on this occasion, I did give Dad some unsolicited advice, particularly as I knew that his physician fired the diagnostic testing trigger readily. “Dad, please make sure that he doesn’t check the PSA (prostate specific antigen) test.” Dad indicated that he would convey my concern to his doctor, who ran the test on him anyway. Apparently, he includes the PSA test as a matter of routine on all men over a certain age. Twenty-five years ago as a curious, but skeptical medical student, I learned about prostate cancer. I learned that every man will develop it if he lives long enough. I learned that most cases of prostate cancer remain silent and never interfere with the individual’s life. I learned that the treatment for these cancers involves either major surgery or radiation, both of ...