MushyMushy
Marseeya Here!
- Joined
- Jul 2, 2006
- Messages
- 13,072
Ours doesn't have anything, they will send you to get all of that stuff done.
Same here. We even have to go to the hospital to get simple blood work done.
Ours doesn't have anything, they will send you to get all of that stuff done.
But insurance companies aren't complaining, at least not yet. The government, in the 'person' of the State of New York, is.
Do you really think this medical professional is such a bad business person that he would overextend himself, or not have a backup plan in place?
And how do you account for, or treat, people who don't HAVE insurance?
Oh, and the physicians to whom daisax refers charge a LOT more than $79 per year membership fee.
If that's true, then insurance companies should come forward and admit it - not hide behind the coattails of government regulations.manning said:The insurance companies are complaining. They are doing it thru the state.
The doctor is offering his services at what he thinks he can live with. He has freed himself of bureaucratic paperwork. He has freed himself from having an insurance company telling him how to treat a patient based on what they think is cost effective. The relationship is one on one, doctor and patient.
I live in the chicago area. About a year or so back I heard about a doctor who tried this. He was upfront with his patient. He told them he doesn't have malpractice insurance and would charge reasonable rates. It was up to the patient if he wanted to use him for a doctor. They knew up front what to expect.
He would refer his patients to specialists when needed. All of a sudden the specialists started to turn him down.
What he found out was they were being told by their insurance companies that if they accepted his patients their insurance would be cancelled.
If this doctor is giving good competent care at a reasonable price, what's the problem? If he can't do it at that cost he will have to find another way to charge.
Why should the government dictate what he can/can't do. And that looks like the way we are going.
Talk about a third party, the insurance company, dictating what a doctor can/can't do.
And a higher fee if he/she disn't visit last month? This only makes sense for the doctor, at this rate, if there is a minimum of 1 visit per month if he set his rates based on the associated costs...How about to avoid being called insurance this doctor charges the patient $79 for the first office visit each month then $10 for any other visit that month,
then he gets the $79 monthly fee and it doesn't look like "insurance"
I definitely can see a problem with this.
I think it would be better for him to allow his patients to set up comfortable payment plans, if his main concern is for his patients.
How about to avoid being called insurance this doctor charges the patient $79 for the first office visit each month then $10 for any other visit that month,
then he gets the $79 monthly fee and it doesn't look like "insurance"
I definitely can see a problem with this.
I think it would be better for him to allow his patients to set up comfortable payment plans, if his main concern is for his patients.

My internist has been doing this for years. But the cost is $2000 a year. She strictly limits the number of patients she will accept and has a long waiting list.
She has not accepted any insurance in over a decade (including medicare). She does not do this for any financial reasons. She just likes to control how she practices medicine. No dictates from insurance companies or Medicare.
I miss being able to have a 30 minute appointment or even an hour or two for my yearly physical.
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