Pa. lawmakers must join other states in fighting the rise of exorbitant hospital ‘facility fees’
Thirteen states have taken action to ban the charges and protect consumers. In
There's so much unfairness in America today that it shouldn't be surprising to see people take to the streets in protest because they no longer believe needed changes will ever occur.
What's unfair?
How about going to your doctor for years and only being charged your health insurance copay, and then getting a bill in the mail after your last appointment saying you owe an "outpatient facility fee" of
If your doctors are charging fees you were not being asked to pay before, they may have quietly ended their independent practice and become employees of a hospital system that now considers that office an outpatient center — which, by law, can charge nonmedical fees for services at a hospital "ambulatory care" facility.
More and more people are being charged facility fees because more and more doctors are no longer independent. Hospital ownership of physician practices grew 124% nationally between 2012 and 2018, according to a
Not only are most physicians no longer their own boss, they also must follow treatment rules imposed by health insurance carriers, even if they don't agree with them. That dynamic has greatly impacted the doctor-patient relationship.
Along with excessive fees for office visits, patients must pay the ever-increasing premiums and deductibles charged by medical insurance companies. That double whammy is one of the reasons polls show many Americans remain uneasy about the economy despite its improvement.
President
But with
That is why 13 states have written their own rules to protect patients from being gouged by hospital corporations that seem more concerned with producing maximum profits than treating patients fairly.
State Rep.
One must ask: If a physician was able to both pay the light bill and provide competent medical care to patients before selling that practice to a hospital, why must the hospital that bought the practice now charge patients an added fee?
Government reimbursement regulations, insurance company directives, and, yes, corporate greed have changed today's medical profession. As a result, more steps are needed to protect health-care consumers.
— philadelphia inquirer
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