Apply for medical assistance and talk to the hospital!
Antigone Send a noteboard - 11/02/2010 12:28:44 AM
My aunt severely broke her leg in November. She spent 3 days in the hospital, had x-rays and at least one MRI and had her leg surgically repaired. I think the total cost was around $12,000.
I work in a public assistance office in Pennsylvania determining client eligibility for Medicaid, and I have no idea if your Medicaid system is administered the same way. That said, I would suggest she apply for Medicaid. She is most likely considered temporarily disabled due to her injury. And she probably has reduced or zero income at this point in time. Even if she would have been over the income limit for Medicaid at the time of her accident, she may be eligible for a spend-down category (for example, if her bills came to $15,000 and she was over income by $5,000, she'd be responsible for that $5,000 and Medicaid would cover the other $10,000 if she is eligible for the spend-down).
Even if she is not eligible for medical assistance, many hospitals have programs to assist self-pay customers (under the Hill-Burton Act). Again, I'm speaking from my experience as a Medicaid worker in Pennsylvania, but it's worth asking about. The hospitals around here that do have these programs often require a denial from medical assistance as a requirement of eligibility.
Again, not sure how similar it is where you are, but I strongly urge you try...could save you a bundle!
I work in a public assistance office in Pennsylvania determining client eligibility for Medicaid, and I have no idea if your Medicaid system is administered the same way. That said, I would suggest she apply for Medicaid. She is most likely considered temporarily disabled due to her injury. And she probably has reduced or zero income at this point in time. Even if she would have been over the income limit for Medicaid at the time of her accident, she may be eligible for a spend-down category (for example, if her bills came to $15,000 and she was over income by $5,000, she'd be responsible for that $5,000 and Medicaid would cover the other $10,000 if she is eligible for the spend-down).
Even if she is not eligible for medical assistance, many hospitals have programs to assist self-pay customers (under the Hill-Burton Act). Again, I'm speaking from my experience as a Medicaid worker in Pennsylvania, but it's worth asking about. The hospitals around here that do have these programs often require a denial from medical assistance as a requirement of eligibility.
Again, not sure how similar it is where you are, but I strongly urge you try...could save you a bundle!
Antigone
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*MySmiley*
Remember I was always true...Remember that I always tried
Remember I loved only you...Remember me and smile...
For it's better to forget
Than to remember me
And cry
A question about medical costs
- 09/02/2010 02:49:49 PM
691 Views
I would suggest
- 09/02/2010 02:57:51 PM
505 Views
Re: I would suggest
- 09/02/2010 04:54:47 PM
392 Views
well, it'd be hard to say "oh it's usually this" for the whole industry
- 09/02/2010 05:04:47 PM
468 Views
But it shouldn't be.
- 09/02/2010 05:30:52 PM
490 Views
I don't think less opacity would change the price of the supplies much
- 09/02/2010 07:21:32 PM
325 Views
Yup
- 09/02/2010 05:13:02 PM
358 Views
Re: Yup
- 09/02/2010 07:19:47 PM
343 Views
I was being sarcastic
- 09/02/2010 07:24:28 PM
465 Views
the cost structure they use is so insane it would be almost impossible to guess
- 09/02/2010 03:04:09 PM
376 Views
Well hindsight is 20/20, but was the ambulance ride truly necessary?
- 09/02/2010 03:34:39 PM
493 Views
- 09/02/2010 03:34:39 PM
493 Views
Apply for medical assistance and talk to the hospital!
- 11/02/2010 12:28:44 AM
463 Views
