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Medical Billing Mistakes to Avoid

Medical Billing Mistakes to Avoid

Medical Billing Mistakes to Avoid 150 150 Medical Cost Advocate

We are all busy these days; whether it be the normal requirements of work or trying to get ahead so you can go enjoy that well earned vacation. You are never too busy to take your healthcare billing for granted and just pay. The below article describes three things you can do. Medical Cost Advocate can do all these steps for you and add the rigorous capability of our Healthcare Advocacy Services to manage you billing and insurance ongoing … so you can take that vacation and rest assured your medical bills are being handled by an expert.
3 medical debt mistakes to avoid
Sean Pyles, NerdWallet
Many consumers take their medical bills at face value — and pay the price.
You can limit the hurt by shopping around beforehand, double-checking bills and negotiating your out-of-pocket expenses. Avoid these three mistakes:

  1. Not shopping around

Start by knowing the cost of services. For planned or routine medical expenses, you can ask the billing department to estimate costs. Then shop around if you have a choice of providers.
Resources like New Choice Health and Healthcare Bluebook can show you a price range for services in your area.

  1. Taking your bill at face value

“There’s a large number of people who touch your medical bill when you go to the medical office, from service providers, nurses and office administrators,” says Cheryl Walsh, a medical bill advocate in New York. “Between that, there’s a lot of room for errors for medical bills.”
Medical bills usually have a single total at the bottom. What that doesn’t show are the items, big and small, you’ve been charged for. Request an itemized bill to check for duplications or charges for care you didn’t receive. Compare this with your explanation of benefits to verify your insurer paid what it should.
If you’re overwhelmed, you might need a professional. Medical bill advocates specialize in reducing the amount that people pay. Many give free consultations and charge only if medical bills are reduced, sometimes based on a percentage of savings.

  1. Not negotiating payment options

Negotiating has two parts. First, agree on what you’re going to pay. Then establish how you’ll pay it.
Knowing what others paid can give you leverage, so check the online resources mentioned above. Don’t be afraid to talk to your provider; just prepare by figuring out what you can realistically pay.
“Your job is to say, ‘Look, if you want to be paid, this is what I can afford,’” says Jerry Ashton, co-founder of RIP Medical Debt, a nonprofit that purchases, then forgives, medical debt. “Never make an agreement you know you can’t uphold.”
If you’re facing out-of-pocket costs you can’t handle, you may be able to:

  • Establish a payment plan: Just as prices vary among doctors, so do payment terms. Often, all you have to do is ask to break the cost into manageable chunks.
  • Ask for a financial hardship plan: Some providers offer these to low-income patients. Eligibility varies, and you may have to apply for Medicaid before being eligible.
  • Negotiate: You may be able to settle for less than you owe, especially if your bill is in collections.
  • Consider debt relief: If your debt is more than half your annual income and you see no way to pay it off within five years, you may want to consider bankruptcy.