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The way I understand it, patients fall into 4 main categories in terms of how well they pay.
1. Upper Middle Class/Wealthy patients with cash reserves and good insurance. These patients are the most favored, as they are willing to pay cash for better perceived services and they have insurance policies that reimburse well.
2. Middle class patients with decent insurance, but little cash. Bread and butter : these patients have trouble coughing up the deductible, but they generally can scrape together the funds. Their insurance pays well enough that the surgery is profitable.
3. Patients with the crappy private insurance / medicaid / medicare. I think medicare may actually pay ok for some stuff, but in general these patients are probably a money losing proposition. The crappy insurance almost never pays claims, and government insurance pays poorly and requires a ton of worthless paperwork.
4. Poor patients who aren't quite poor enough to qualify for medicaid/SCHIP and who have no insurance at all. Essentially, treating these patients is the equivalent of opening up your wallet and giving the patients money.
Obviously, if one wants to stay in business, one would need to strongly prefer patients in categories 1 and 2. But how do most private practice surgeons deal with the hordes of un and underinsured? Do they simply refuse to see any of them, or do they assign some kind of quota? How do you look someone in the face and say you won't do a procedure if they won't pony up the thousands of dollars it costs?
I'm especially curious about how surgeons handle this, because malpractice insurance is typically extremely high for surgeons, and there are a great deal of fixed costs. A PCP doctor might in principle be able to give some care away free, and even the poor can usually scrape together $60 or so for an office visit. But an operation costs thousands of dollars in supplies and malpractice insurance and nurse/tech labor and drugs and god knows what else. I don't see how a surgeon could do much work "pro-bono" as one "free" case must wipe out the profit margin of 3 or 4 paying cases.
1. Upper Middle Class/Wealthy patients with cash reserves and good insurance. These patients are the most favored, as they are willing to pay cash for better perceived services and they have insurance policies that reimburse well.
2. Middle class patients with decent insurance, but little cash. Bread and butter : these patients have trouble coughing up the deductible, but they generally can scrape together the funds. Their insurance pays well enough that the surgery is profitable.
3. Patients with the crappy private insurance / medicaid / medicare. I think medicare may actually pay ok for some stuff, but in general these patients are probably a money losing proposition. The crappy insurance almost never pays claims, and government insurance pays poorly and requires a ton of worthless paperwork.
4. Poor patients who aren't quite poor enough to qualify for medicaid/SCHIP and who have no insurance at all. Essentially, treating these patients is the equivalent of opening up your wallet and giving the patients money.
Obviously, if one wants to stay in business, one would need to strongly prefer patients in categories 1 and 2. But how do most private practice surgeons deal with the hordes of un and underinsured? Do they simply refuse to see any of them, or do they assign some kind of quota? How do you look someone in the face and say you won't do a procedure if they won't pony up the thousands of dollars it costs?
I'm especially curious about how surgeons handle this, because malpractice insurance is typically extremely high for surgeons, and there are a great deal of fixed costs. A PCP doctor might in principle be able to give some care away free, and even the poor can usually scrape together $60 or so for an office visit. But an operation costs thousands of dollars in supplies and malpractice insurance and nurse/tech labor and drugs and god knows what else. I don't see how a surgeon could do much work "pro-bono" as one "free" case must wipe out the profit margin of 3 or 4 paying cases.
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