When Out-Of-Network Doctors Offer Services At In-Network Hospitals, Patients Pay The Price
More and more Americans are getting slapped with sky-high surprise medical bills.
PBS NewsHour:
Unexpected Medical Bills Can Cost American Consumers Thousands
It’s a growing frustration for many Americans: surprisingly high medical bills that they are struggling to pay. In some cases, patients are surprised to learn that they received care from an out-of-network doctor in an in-network hospital, long after an emergency room visit has passed. (6/26)
PBS NewsHour:
Americans Who Confronted ‘Surprise’ Medical Bills Share Their Stories
Last year, Consumer Reports found 30 percent of Americans with private health insurance have received surprise bills, where their insurance plan paid less than they expected. Of those, 23 percent received a bill from a doctor they didn’t expect to get a bill from. And 14 percent said they were charged higher out-of-network rates by doctors they thought were in-network. (Ponsot and Moritz-Rabson, 6/26)
Meanwhile, Hispanic immigrants in Baltimore are struggling with health care costs —
Kaiser Health News:
For Many In Baltimore’s Growing Latino Community, Health Care Is A Challenge
[Cecilia Ramirez's] predicament is shared by thousands of Hispanic immigrants in East Baltimore, and millions nationally, who cannot afford regular medical services and are uninsured because they lack the benefits attached to legal U.S. residency and citizenship. Ramirez’s parents came illegally to the U.S. from Mexico when she was 10. Her immigration status now — “lawfully present” — allows her to work and study here without fear of deportation, but she has no path to citizenship. She is ineligible for health coverage under the Affordable Care Act or any public insurance program. (Anft, 6/27)