averysmom said:What are these costs? These wholesale costs? I am Canadian, and my dd fell and hit her head in Disney 5 years ago, and our emergency room visit for 3 staples was $1700.00. This was for the hospital and the doctor. I just about fell off my chair! Thank goodness I had travel insurance. To compare, an ER visit here, with a similar injury would have cost a non-citizen around $400.00. How can health care be that more money in the US? I looked for figures on delivery, but the most recent I could find was from 2002-03. A non-complicated ******l birth could cost a non-citizen ( no free health care) $2700.00. Doctor and hospital. Even assuming that the price has gone up by 50% in 10 years, it would still only be $4000.00. How much would that birth cost me in the us? I bet more than that, even at "wholesale" costs. Why? Why is it so expensive?
That $1700 bill was not a wholesale cost. There's profit margin in that. When I am referring to the wholesale cost of providing a service, I'm referring to what it costs the hospital to provide the service: supplies, staff, etc. That's the cost that the hospital pays to provide the service. What they bill to an insurer, patient or even Medicaid is more than that. Medicaid pays about a third of the billed amount, which is about half of the hospital's actual expenses in providing the service. Now, many insurers are reducing their reimbursement to match Medicaid/Medicare. It's unsustainable for facilities to continue to provide care & only be reimbursed for half of what they spent to provide the services. One hospital in my area closed last fall. A large system in another state is laying off hundreds. Another system is cutting housekeeping services & asking the RNs to pick up additional housekeeping duties. I'm not snooty. I'll take out trash. Wipe down beds. But if I'm spending my time doing housekeeping, who's doing the nursing? Who's at the bedside with your post-op hip replacement grandmother? Or after your daughter just had her baby? I only have a certain amount of time in a day. Multiple research studies have shown that patient outcomes are better and safer if their nurse is not overloaded with too many patients or too many extraneous duties. If a nurse has an appropriate load, she can focus on high quality care & patients benefit from it.