https://www.nytimes.com/2017/07/24/upshot/the-company-behind-many-surprise-emergency-room-bills.html
A couple of thoughts:
1. Historically the NYT has seemed incredibly anti-physician in their rhetoric/spin. It makes me wonder a little about this article right off the bat.
2. How much of the out of network billing practice by these large management companies (ER/anesthesia/etc) is intentional and how much is because they rely on locum tenems from out of the area who may or may not be contracted with regional insurance payers?
I had a recent post on my blog looking at a hypothetical scenario of a specialist physician (partner in physician owned practice) selling his/her practice to a large national management company. I wonder if this aggressive billing practice is how these companies plan to make back their initial investment (in addition to paying below market wages to physicians, overworking said physicians, etc).
A couple of thoughts:
1. Historically the NYT has seemed incredibly anti-physician in their rhetoric/spin. It makes me wonder a little about this article right off the bat.
2. How much of the out of network billing practice by these large management companies (ER/anesthesia/etc) is intentional and how much is because they rely on locum tenems from out of the area who may or may not be contracted with regional insurance payers?
I had a recent post on my blog looking at a hypothetical scenario of a specialist physician (partner in physician owned practice) selling his/her practice to a large national management company. I wonder if this aggressive billing practice is how these companies plan to make back their initial investment (in addition to paying below market wages to physicians, overworking said physicians, etc).
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