shh
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Dec 10, 2013
- Messages
- 2,008
There are laws against "bait and switch" and misleading pricing - but seems none of that applies in the medical world where the patient is swimming in a pool of sharks - the sharks being physician billing practices, health insurers and US healthcare dysfunction in general.I know, right? I haven't been to a primary care in ages, but at my regular eye exam, dental exam, gyn exam they always ask during the appointment if I have any questions or concerns. What can you bring up then without being out of the scope of your annual exam?
(I'm sure doctors hate it too - they'd much rather hear patient concerns and address any issues proactively, but they're stuck in the same stupid system.)
This whole "wellness exam" concept creates hassles and surprise charges for millions of patients. It's ridiculous: every insurance company should clearly articulate EXACTLY what you can and cannot ask during a wellness exam. Or if you cannot ask ANYTHING and must refuse to answer specific questions- they should clearly specify that as well.