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God's Politics

A Tale of Two Hospitals: How Sugar Water Helps Make Christmas Sad

by Ernesto Tinajero 11-23-2009

This year we were planning to see my folks for Christmas. It won’t happen. The bills for our son’s medical issues are killing us. In the whole affair, we have experienced the devil and angel of health care. There have been posts here calling out the insurance companies, but it is time to hold the hospitals and clinics to the same fire. Our local hospital in Spokane has been a nightmare of over-charging, while the one in Seattle, Childrens Hospita,l has been a joy. One seems to be out for profit and the other cares for both my son and our family. As we reform health care, an important question is how can we get our hospitals to look more like the Mayo Clinic and Seattle’s Childrens Hospital and less like the pork-filled billing machines many of them are.

Understand our story: we have insurance, but our plan is now 80/20 with a maximum out of pocket, or so we were told. The reality, in practice, is very different and speaks to why our system is plagued by systemic problems. First, our 80/20 split is figured out before the insurance company is given their discount. Second, only a fraction of what we pay out counts toward our maximum. These are the problems of the insurance company. But they are not the only problems within the system.

It is time to call out the providers. The local hospital charged for two MRIs and two C-T scans, when only one of each was ordered, needed, and performed. They billed for two of each because they could claim a change of the angle for each scan and then code it as two different MRIs and two different C-T scans. Doubling the price for the love of money. Now, I say it was one of each in reality, because we had to purchase (after spending thousands of dollars) the MRI and C-T scan to take for the doctors in Seattle. I got only one disk for each, with only one reading, and the Doctors at the Childrens Hospital referred to one of each. One in reality and two for the wallet. In most businesses, such overcharging is considered fraud. In the medical world, this is business as usual. Health-care reform has to answer this problem.

Now, don’t think I am just mad to be mad. Having experienced great health care in Childrens Hospital, I know we can do health care better. The kindness and professionalism of Childrens has been a welcome change. They had us meet with a counselor to help with the financial piece. It also has been a fraction of the cost of the local hospital even factoring the travel and hotel expenses. The better care was cheaper.

The poignant example of how the local hospital over-charged us is a story of the most expensive sugar water. When we brought in our son for his MRI, they had to set an IV. The nurse made my son a pincushion as we, his parents, held him down. He looked at us with terror and confusion. Why were his parents holding him, while someone was torturing him? Eight tries later, the IV was finally set and my four-month-old panting from the experience. The nurse opened one thimble-sized container of sugar water to calm him. She dipped it in his pacifer twice and then threw the rest away. We were billed for two containers at almost $9.00 a pop. If we bought the sugar water by the gallon at that rate it would be $1,180. The pricey sugar water is part of the reason my family will not see my son on Christmas. The question I have is does this seem like justice to you?

portrait-ernesto-tinajero1Ernesto Tinajero is a freelance writer in Spokane, Washington, who earned his master’s degree in theology from Fuller Seminary. Visit his blog at beingandfaith.blogspot.com.

Categories: Health
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  • ckgmail
    Ernesto, I hope your US Representative and your senators see this. It is real live stories like this one that can make a difference. I also hope you will send it as an opinion piece to whatever newspapers will publish it. Try the Amarillo Globe News in Amarillo, Texas--a very conservative newspaper in a very conservative (I would say right wing) area. You probably will need to make the two hospitals anonymous for the newspapers' fear of being sued. You can send it electronically to the Amarillo paper.
    letters@amarillo.com

    Charles Kiker, Tulia, Texas
  • SisterMarie
    Ernesto, after a weekend filled with the TV blaring spokespersons from the health insurance agencies decrying reform legislation, reading your post makes me want to scream. These well-dressed men and women care only about their bottom line - not about your son.
  • TN_Horseman
    Ernesto, I have experienced similar problems with some hospitals, especially the ridiculous overcharges. The unfortunate thing is that I see nothing in the bills in congress to address such practices, just pass the costs on to those who will pay the bills.

    I will concede that part of the over billing is to make up for the underpayments from medicare, medicaid, and the uninsured. And that may go away with universal coverage. What needs to be done is the bad hospitals need to be exposed by dissatisfied consumers like you and then people will hopefully go to other care centers.
  • pooch
    Please explain which provisions in either the current House or Senate Healthcare Reform Bills would remedy the problems and injustice you have experienced.
  • scat
    For one thing, if everyone has insurance,then hospitals don't have to resort to "creative billing" to cover the costs of uninsured patients.
    Also, in countries wehre the government sets a ceiling on what they will pay for a procedure, the midical providers have miraculously found a way to do the procedure within those requirements. In Japan they now can do an MRI for $99 and still make a profit because the government refursed to pay $1500 previously charged.
  • Just a practical reminder that while hospitals may want to dictate what the actual bill is, we are not obligated to accept their version. The two MRIs in particular are something you could negotiate with the hospital. Large HMO's and other institutional buyers of hospital services negotiate much lower prices for everything in comparison to what the hospital charges individuals. My HMO regularly pays only 25 to 35 percent of what the hospital bills individuals. Maybe that is what we should all offer to pay...
  • NC77
    Have you asked the people in your fellowship for help? Almost every local church I have been to over my Christian life has done this (i.e., asking others to give to help meet the needs of those who need it within the fellowship) and the giving was always amazing. It may not be enough to cover all your medical expenses, but may very well help you visit your parents this Christmas. Just a suggestion in peace and love.
  • kiddoc
    I'm a pediatrician and I work at a large academic children's hospital. This tragic story is far from uncommon. Families of children with special needs face numerous challenges in caring for their children - it doesn't help when this is complicated by a terrible insurance policy.

    Will your income qualify you for Medicaid or CHIP? Many kids who are eligible for coverage simply do not know about it (80% of uninsured kids are eligible for one of the two programs).

    Also, some states also have programs for children who have special needs. Have you spoken to Seattle Children's about possible insurance options? Many children's hospitals have insurance experts ... who work on issues such as this.

    We can talk forever about the details of this ... but ... people should not be dependent upon charity to care for their children. They should not have to go without Christmas either. Children, their education, health, etc., should be our priority as a society.
  • I am a radiologist and sad to say that all too often I see colleges looking for ways to "maximize" their reimbursement. Sad that the ultimate price is paid by you and your child for this greed. I agree with one of the comments that you should go to the hospital ask to speak with the radiologist who read the scan and ask for a reduction in the charge. Real health reform must bring together the patient and the health care provider in more ways, so that no one is isolated in the process of care.
  • Real health reform must bring together the patient and the health care provider in more ways

    Yes. One of the biggest problems is that most people are unaware or only faintly aware of the real "costs" to procedures and drugs. Giving more power to the person who needs care is the answer to this reform. But unfortunately the government has regulated so much that this is difficult to do unless you're wealthy.
  • Real health reform must bring together the patient and the health care provider in more ways

    Yes. One of the biggest problems is that most people are unaware or only faintly aware of the real "costs" to procedures and drugs. Giving more power to the person who needs care is the answer to this reform. But unfortunately the government has regulated so much that this is difficult to do unless you're wealthy.
  • Sad story, really. It's too bad that the paradigm in our country of paying for services is that somebody else pays all or a portion of it, and then has incentive to rip those of us off who need the actual care. Health insurance is a nasty paradigm, and as stated above by another commenter, the reforms currently in Congress just build on this paradigm.

    Wouldn't it have been nice to have more options for hospitals? Wouldn't it be nice if those hospitals had to compete for giving better care to your family? Wouldn't it be nice if the costs of things went lower and lower because more companies would have to compete to sell you their life-saving or life-sustaining or life-enhancing products? For that matter, it would be nice to have more health insurance options that were not tied to employment but to what people needed, wanted, and could afford.

    Part of the problem is that hospitals have every incentive to charge as much as they want because others are willing to pay for it. Eliminate a third-party payer for most things, and they'll have to compete by lowering their prices and costs. So would drug companies. But thanks to massive regulation of the industry, Big Pharma and Big Insurance enjoy protections from the government to rip us all off and permit hospitals to charge as much as they want.

    It's one thing to say "for love of money," and that is indeed a problem. But there's also the issue of what permits such love of money to exist. A partial answer is the government (both state and federal).
  • hweav
    Ernesto,

    I want to wish you and your son and your family well. Thank you for your story.
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