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Medicine The Internet

Hospitals Hide Pricing Data From Search Results (beckershospitalreview.com) 158

According to a Wall Street Journal investigation, hospitals are blocking confidential prices from web searches with special coding embedded on their websites. It's problematic because pricing information for hospital services must be disclosed under a new federal price transparency rule that went into effect on Jan. 1. Becker's Hospital Review reports: The code prevents pages from appearing in searches, such as a hospital's name and prices, computer experts told the Journal. While the prices are still there, it requires clicking through multiple layers of pages to find them. "It's technically there, but good luck finding it," Chirag Shah, an associate computer professor at the University of Washington, told the Journal. "It's one thing not to optimize your site for searchability, it's another thing to tag it so it can't be searched. It's a clear indication of intentionality."

Hospitals burying their pricing data include those owned by HCA Healthcare and Universal Health Services as well as the University of Pennsylvania Health System, NYU Langone Health, Beaumont Health and Novant Health, according to the Journal. Penn Medicine, NYU Langone Health and Novant Health told the publication they used the blocking code to direct patients first to information they "considered more useful than raw pricing data," for which they included web links. UHS uses the blocking code to ensure consumers acknowledge a disclosure statement before viewing prices and is making no effort to hide information, a hospital spokesperson told the Journal.

After the Journal reached out to hospitals about its discovery, the search-blocking code was removed from sites including those of HCA, Penn Medicine, Beaumont, Avera Health, Ballad Health and Northern Light Health. An HCA spokesperson told the publication the search blocker was "a legacy code that we removed," and Avera, Ballad, Beaumont and Northern Light said the code had been left on their websites by mistake.

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Hospitals Hide Pricing Data From Search Results

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  • by S_Stout ( 2725099 ) on Monday March 22, 2021 @08:58PM (#61187678)
    No more ignorance. You pull this shit, you go to jail.
    • by CoolDiscoRex ( 5227177 ) on Monday March 22, 2021 @09:54PM (#61187776) Homepage

      No more ignorance. You pull this shit, you go to jail.

      Nope.

      Nice fantasy though.

      You steal a pack of gum, you go to jail. (Well, probably not if it’s your first offense but the possibility is there)

      Criminal Law, that which has cage time as a penalty, only applies to laws that YOU break.

      If you’re a corporation, your transgressions are covered by Civil Law, rarely with cage time as a punishment.,

      So, steal a $1.00 item from Walmart? Criminal Law. Possible incarceration. Good luck getting a job or an apartment after that.

      Intentionally overbill 10 million people netting billions in ill-gotten gains? No incarceration threat. Home ownership assured. Job offers pour in. Just pay off the large yet token-to-your-company “fine”, and you can do it as often as you’d like.

      Welcome to the USA.

  • Robots.txt? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by sinij ( 911942 ) on Monday March 22, 2021 @09:05PM (#61187694)
    Is the special embedded code WSJ reporting a simple robots.txt with disallow tags?
    • Re:Robots.txt? (Score:4, Interesting)

      by dissy ( 172727 ) on Tuesday March 23, 2021 @12:02AM (#61187962)

      If you look up their robot txt on wayback, the first couple health networks listed have no changes as far back as 2019.

      HCA interestingly had no robots txt before 2019.
      The first four I checked do contain only disallow lines

      I was going to link them but slashdot thinks a URL is ascii art and rejects my post.
      I'm sure you can look them up easily enough.

      • Without knowing the URL you are trying to use, why not use an anchor tag [w3schools.com] instead of the URL itself?
      • by fred911 ( 83970 )

        ''I was going to link them but slashdot thinks a URL is ascii art and rejects my post.''

        It's not just the posting of URLs that it sees as SPAM, I've seen it too frequently lately. Someone has been doing some fuckery designed to eliminate the normal spam. What ever codebase changes they've made have made this an issue for me many times, requiring me to re and rededit posts. So whatever they were attempting to improve was done with shitty code.

    • Do the prices mean anything? This is the US healthcare system: Standard practice is to massively over-charge for everything, then offer equally massive discounts negotiated with insurance providers. So unless you are some sucker who didn't buy or couldn't get health insurance, the sticker price is meaningless.

      • by tlhIngan ( 30335 )

        So unless you are some sucker who didn't buy or couldn't get health insurance, the sticker price is meaningless.

        It means a lot ot those people, don't you think?

        Granted, Obamacare/RomneyCare fixed a lot of the issues, but there's still a bunch of people who don't have it, and they're forced to pay full freight.

        And if you want real scum, air ambulances are not covered by anyone. And they charge a crap load of money for what they provide - often unnecessarily. And the air ambulance providers do it on purpose b

        • Granted, Obamacare/RomneyCare fixed a lot of the issues

          Really?

          I contract and pay my own medical insurance.

          Obamacare caused my rates to skyrocket....it was quite reasonable in the past, but after OC...it immediately skyrocketed my rates and they kept going up year after year, often with somewhat less coverage.

          • by sjames ( 1099 )

            The catch is, as soon as you got to a point where you really needed it, they would have dumped you as they did to so many. Sometimes even retroactively. Or in many cases it would turn out to be cheap because they disallow everything.

      • by sinij ( 911942 )

        Do the prices mean anything?

        Yes, you can refuse to pay more than what they list and have a reasonable chance to succeed in courts. So yes, they mean a lot.

      • This makes me want to go back to Mexico. I can't tell you how refreshing it was to walk into a hospital and have a menu of common treatments and services prominently displayed at the front desk. And funny thing, competition keeps prices reasonable. The US system is so broken that it's still cheaper for me to fly to Mexico and get treatment for any major issue than to use my US "insurance" to get treatment here.
      • Haha sometimes its even more crazy than that. I had a procedure done last year, and the amount I was supposed to pay with my insurance 'discount' was several times what I had assumed the procedure would take... I would have owed around $1000 for a 25 minute office visit, whereas most information I found previous to the visit indicated typical price was $150-300, depending on insurance.

        So I called the hospital to see what was up, and after a bunch of back-and-forth, they notified me that the 'non-insured' co

      • Yes, though the prices are a load of dung, they mean a whole lot when your insurance rejects the services over some technicality. Instead of you paying your portion of the insured rate, which may amount to 2% of their fantasy list price, in such cases the hospital will come after you for the full 100%, with an offer to accept 80% if you hurry up and pay Right Now. That's right, they aren't stopping at the insured rate which may be 40% of that fantasy list price, they go for it all. In such cases, medical

    • by sjames ( 1099 )

      More likely javascript that only pulls and displays the pricing info once it's sure you aren't a web crawler.

  • by Drishmung ( 458368 ) on Monday March 22, 2021 @09:17PM (#61187708)
    From the CMS site linked in the article [cms.gov] "each hospital operating in the United States will be required to provide clear, accessible pricing information online about the items and services they provide in two ways:
    1. As a comprehensive machine-readable file with all items and services.
    2. In a display of shoppable services in a consumer-friendly format.

    It doesn't sound like this web pages meet the clear, accessible and consumer-friendly criteria.

    CMS plans to audit a sample of hospitals for compliance starting in January, in addition to investigating complaints that are submitted to CMS and reviewing analyses of non-compliance, and hospitals may face civil monetary penalties for noncompliance

    Mayhap, some complaints to CMS might assist them in their task.

    • we just post the charge master price that few pay

      • Most people have insurance, and for them, it is mainly the insurance co. that dickers prices. In that case the main question for the patient is whether the provider and service in question are covered. As it turns out, this is also pretty difficult to determine sometimes. Individual doctors at the same hospital or clinic may or may not take your coverage, and they may call on each other during the procedure to rack up more charges.
  • Pricing ? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by hoofie ( 201045 ) <(mickey) (at) (mouse.com)> on Monday March 22, 2021 @09:35PM (#61187740)

    The problem is having to use the words "hospital" and "pricing" in the same sentence.

    • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

      by raymorris ( 2726007 )

      MRI machines cost money. Surgical suites cost money.
      They don't magically appear out of thin air.
      Surgeons cost money (partly because their insurance costs a ton of money).

      Hiding the prices is one way you end up paying far too much.

      And no, sending the money to Washington politicians and back doesn't make it free. Having the politicians take a cut and send it back makes things cost more, not less.

      My doctor said I needed an MRI and handed me the phone number of an MRI place. I called them and asked the price.

      • Re:Pricing ? (Score:5, Insightful)

        by Richard_at_work ( 517087 ) on Monday March 22, 2021 @10:17PM (#61187824)

        And the last time I needed an MRI I had to do no legwork, and instead my doctor sent me for one, they booked me in the following day, I turned up and was seen within 30 minutes, my doctor received the report the next day digitally, and it cost me nothing.

        I pay my taxes, for me healthcare is as "free" as the police, local government, the fire service, the military, roads, sewage handling, the postal service etc etc etc. I pay taxes and I receive benefits from society as a result - and so does the rest of society.

        Notice how politicians are absolutely perfectly fine with charging you through the nose for all manner of bureaucracy by putting in place layers and layers of government - local, county, state, national etc etc. And people seem to be happy about that, or at least don't seem to care. But dare to consider that they could also pay for healthcare for everyone and suddenly you have people up in arms about how badly they would do it...

      • This is something entirely unique to the United States. Price shopping for routine medical care. We can’t have that terrible socialized medicine here! The rest of the world figured this out ages ago.

        • Honestly you can't have an Obese country and free Healthcare. It would be astronomical costs and 3 times the taxes of Canada and Europe. It would be much much cheaper to get Americans on real food again. No more boxed foods and processed cheeses and carbs that are killing everyone
      • by CoolDiscoRex ( 5227177 ) on Monday March 22, 2021 @10:38PM (#61187854) Homepage

        MRI machines cost money. Surgical suites cost money.
        They don't magically appear out of thin air.
        Surgeons cost money (partly because their insurance costs a ton of money).

        This!

        See, Americans take for granted that we have MRI machines and surgeons that aren’t starving.

        You know what they use in Sweden? Empty Pez dispensers.

        Imagine going to a hospital in Sweden, only to have the emaciated, malnourished doctor come out and start banging the effected area with an empty Pez dispenser.

        Because that’s exactly what they do over there. Why? Because MRI machines cost money, and the plucked chicken carcasses they send to the MRI companies just don’t cut it.

        Some people simply don’t get it, though.

        • Re:Pricing ? (Score:5, Informative)

          by Ian_MA ( 5468378 ) on Tuesday March 23, 2021 @03:32AM (#61188244)

          The populations of Ontario and Pennsylvania are about the same. Pennsylvania has about 4 times the number of facilities that can do open heart surgery, but Ontario and PA have the same health outcomes for serious heart conditions. So the people in PA, and the US, are paying for healthcare they don't need.

          That's what you get when doctors and hospitals are paid by the procedure and not by the outcome. That's also what you get when there's a free market on pharmaceuticals, procedures, and medical devices. Insurers and providers jack prices up and we're forced to pay for it all out of our paychecks, and through deductibles and co-pays.

          • There is absolutely nothing free market about the US health system.

            • by fred911 ( 83970 )

              ''There is absolutely nothing free market about the US health system.''

              Then how does an EpiPen cost 700 bucks when epinephrine has been around forever and can be bought OTC in an inhaler for 25 bucks? There's no other reason to see cost increase from the 100 price in 2007 [which is a major profit margin] than market capture and greed. Why did they raise the prices, not because manufacturing costs increased, they increased them because the have a captive market and they fucking could. Ask Skrelli about that.

          • Or Pennsylvania is simply home to the Philly cheesesteak and need 4x the heart care.

      • Re:Pricing ? (Score:5, Insightful)

        by thegarbz ( 1787294 ) on Tuesday March 23, 2021 @06:49AM (#61188532)

        No one is suggesting these things don't paid for. But what is "pricing". How does the MRI in one hospital cost in any way more or less than an MRI in another? I mean unless you run your hospital as a for profit enterprise rather than a medical service. But no one in a first world country would be mad enough to do that right?

        Jokes aside. I have lived in various countries, from those where I never received a bill for an MRI, xray or whatever, to those where I received a bill that was covered by insurance, but the price was 100% fixed regardless of which hospital I was referred to.

        I had a muscle that failed to heal last year and was referred to all sorts of places. There was no Google search. There was no $1500 or $450. There was just the system which lists medical services that offer MRI and you get automatically referred to the closest one. The insurance company gets a bill with a line item for standardised cost - MRI, and that's that. There is no cheaper, or more expensive. There is just the MRI.

        Would you buy a car or even a phone without checking the price?

        Funny you should say that. When I travel by Uber I pay the same price whether the driver shows up in a Camry or an Astra. I assume you didn't buy your MRI machine, but rather paid for a service right?

        Actually since you mention buy, the price of medicine for any drug that requires a prescription here is also fixed.

        • I had a muscle that failed to heal last year and was referred to all sorts of places. There was no Google search. There was no $1500 or $450. There was just the system which lists medical services that offer MRI and you get automatically referred to the closest one. The insurance company gets a bill with a line item for standardised cost - MRI, and that's that. There is no cheaper, or more expensive. There is just the MRI.

          You bought the insurance next to the laundromat, didn’t you?

          I told you to get t

        • > Funny you should say that. When I travel by Uber I pay the same price whether the driver shows up in a Camry or an Astra.

          Funny you should say that. Uber has four levels of cars with different pricing. UberX, UberXL, Uber Black, Black SUV

          The Camry is X level (basic) everywhere.
          The Opel Astra isn't allowed most places, it's X level in Germany. A nicer car from the same manufacturer, the Opel Zafira, costs more.

          So no, you don't pay the same price for a really nice car as you do for a lesser one. In fact,

          • by thegarbz ( 1787294 ) on Tuesday March 23, 2021 @12:20PM (#61189720)

            So no, you don't pay the same price for a really nice car as you do for a lesser one. In fact, you don't even pay the same price for the same car at different TIMES with Uber! So a perfect example of exactly the opposite of the point you were hoping to make!

            When you're done autistically missing my point, did you quiz your doctor on the exact model of MRI he was going to use? Did it come with a leather bench?

            Here, Garbz just laid out a couple great example of "different levels of service, all of which are sufficient, have different prices".

            Actually I did no such thing. Your problem is that you are systematically attempting to circumvent my point. When you call an Uber you don't get to chose the specific car. You don't get to chose the driver. You don't get to watch them on the track or judge their skill, and whoever shows up will charge you the same rate. Different level of service is just stupid when you apply it to the medical industry. Your MRI is an MRI, if it fails to diagnose the problem you move onto other diagnostics not "oooh I need MRI premium".

            Part of the cost difference is the second place offered lower pricing during times of lower demand, just exactly like Uber!

            The only reason you have lower demand in different places is because you have a poorly managed hospital system in your city. When I call an Uber the demand pricing isn't localised to me within a few km, it's localised to an entire city. The fact you think MRIs should be more localised in pricing than that just shows you spectacularly missed the point I was making.

            Honestly I don't know why you people get so defensive of your broken medical system.

        • How does the MRI in one hospital cost in any way more or less than an MRI in another?

          Well, depends on how old the MRI machine is and what type it is...the open magnet ones are often a bit more expensive to purchase than the regular ones.

          All MRI machines are not the same.

          • Are you saying each hospital budgets for individual equipment equally rather than this being centrally managed by the medical association of your state? Man that's more fucked up than I thought.

            • Are you saying each hospital budgets for individual equipment equally rather than this being centrally managed by the medical association of your state?

              Well, yes...the equipment is NOT owned by the state or the federal govt...yours is?!?!

              It isn't always a hospital that owns them, I worked with a radiologist that owned his own MRI and CT machines in a clinic and hospitals and other Dr's outsource to him to perform the studies and do the readings.

      • by jbengt ( 874751 )
        You can't always shop around. My wife had to have a PET scan and a CAT scan before surgery - no possibility of going anywhere but the hospital she was at because the scans had to be done right before the surgery. They charged around $16,000 each. The insurance bargained it down to around $8,000 each and paid 80% of that.
        • That's true. On the other hand, you had already chosen that hospital. It was too late to *change your mind*, but you did get an opportunity earlier to choose.

          With the new law, all of the hospitals in your area would have posted their prices on their web sites. Quite likely one hospital would have generally lower charges than the other, rather than one charging much more for one thing while the other charges much more for the PET. So you would have already been at the reasonably-priced hospital.

      • MRI machines cost money. Surgical suites cost money. They don't magically appear out of thin air. Surgeons cost money (partly because their insurance costs a ton of money).

        And yet here in the UK we have all of those things and nobody ever asks or worries what the bill is because there isn't one. When I needed a MRI here in the UK it cost me £0. In fact if I'd been on a low income the hospital would have covered my travel expenses to go for it.

        • > When I needed a MRI here in the UK it cost me £0.

          According to ONS, it costed you about 12,000 GBP.
          8,068 per family on average, with the middle class paying most of that. So you probably paid 8,068 for your family, and about 4,000 for a family with a lower income.

          You don't actually believe that "they yanked it out of my paycheck before I could even deposit the check" means "it's free", do you? I mean, you're brighter than that, right?

      • Would you buy a car or even a phone without checking the price?

        Would you call 911 without checking the price of a fire truck? You are attacking a straw man. The point isn't that healthcare should be free. The point is that a market is not an efficient way to allocate health care resources. I'd love for you to prove me wrong with an overwhelming number peer reviewed papers that link profitability to positive outcomes. If all you have is some news articles and blog posts, don't bother.

      • by mvdwege ( 243851 )

        So how do you explain the US spending almost twice the amount per capita on health care costs compared to other countries?

        According to your logic, al that opportunity for shopping around should mean you pay less on aggregate. So either Americans are too stupid to shop around, or your thesis that a free market in hospital services is more efficient is bunk.

        Empirically, central pricing for hospital services, either through government backed insurance or compulsory private insurance, is more efficient and cost

    • by G00F ( 241765 )

      The problem is having to use the words "hospital" and "pricing" in the same sentence.

      They will give you the real price afterwords(after being sometimes they send to collectiosn first. What they lack is any kind of honesty. There is zero honesty in the billing practices of the medical/hospital field. While the front workers taking my CC may seam honest, the billing and everything they are front ending is not.

      • While the front workers taking my CC may seam honest

        Why? Do they actually tell you:

        “I understand that you’re paying out of pocket but we still need your social social security number. See, we’re going to upcode the hell out of everything we do for you, and when you see your bill, you will have major sticker shock. Without our ability to extort you via ‘your credit report’, there’s no way in hell you’d pay what we’re going to demand. Oh, not to mention, my

        • I broke my foot and went to an urgent care clinic for x-rays. They suggested I see an orthopedist once I got back home. I did that. He took a look at my X-Ray on my phone and said, "yeah it's broken, but you don't need surgery."

          I got the bill for TWO broken foot treatments. Why? Because two bones were broken. I protested. Insurance called the doctor's office and they said, "no mistake, we did it on purpose." So, it was $700 for 5 minutes.

    • Re:Pricing ? (Score:5, Insightful)

      by CoolDiscoRex ( 5227177 ) on Monday March 22, 2021 @10:11PM (#61187812) Homepage

      The problem is having to use the words "hospital" and "pricing" in the same sentence.

      Crazy talk. The free market works. Especially with hidden or unknowable until- you’redischarged pricing. The free market works best like that.

      Why?

      Because with the exception of social security, Medicare, fire protection, police, public schools, the military, the EPA, the FDA, NASA, the National Weather Service, and a bunch of other stuff to numerous to mention, we do not tolerate providing for the general welfare in this country, even though that’s exactly what the constitution says government is supposed to do.

      The freedom to lose your home and go bankrupt due to illness is a freedom you pinko commies don’t have.

      Jealous?

      Fuck yeah you’re jealous!

      These colors don’t run, bitch! ‘Merca, yeah! Wooo! Oh yeah, and our basketball team is better than yours too!

      Hah, suck it, loser!
       

    • Indeed, it's a shame our US friends don't understand the benefits of a social health care system. While such systems are rarely perfect, your life usually doesn't depend on whether you can afford it or not. I much prefer knowing my out-of-pocket expenses are nearly always zero.
      • Indeed, it's a shame our US friends don't understand the benefits of a social health care system. While such systems are rarely perfect, your life usually doesn't depend on whether you can afford it or not. I much prefer knowing my out-of-pocket expenses are nearly always zero.

        Tons of us do realize it, but Democracy is idiot rule so we can’t have it.

        Critical/abstract thinking begins around 110 IQ. The average American is 98. 2/3rds are under this and learn by repetition and what they’

        • Yes, many of us understand that other, more socialist nations have plain better health care, for half the cost.

          The reasons why the US does not have it are many, First, employers use healthcare as another hold over employees. Lose your job, and you and your whole family also lose healthcare. So you're not going to complain about bad working conditions, are you? Or join a union?!?

          Second is bigotry, especially racism. Lot of white bigots don't want brown people to receive medical care, and will forgo

  • by RoccamOccam ( 953524 ) on Monday March 22, 2021 @10:02PM (#61187798)

    While the prices are still there, it requires clicking through multiple layers of pages to find them.

    “But the prices were on display”

    “On display? I eventually had to go down to the cellar to find them.”

    “That’s the display department.”

    “With a flashlight.”

    “Ah, well, the lights had probably gone.”

    “So had the stairs.”

    “But look, you found the prices, didn’t you?”

    “Yes,” said Arthur, “yes I did. They were on display in the bottom of a locked filing cabinet stuck in a disused lavatory with a sign on the door saying ‘Beware of the Leopard.”

    -- with apologies to Douglas Adams

  • by Lando242 ( 1322757 ) on Monday March 22, 2021 @11:27PM (#61187926)
    Our local hospital hides the info pretty damn well. From the site main page, you have to go to the patient portal, then the billing department, and then a "pricing-transparency" page. That page is simply a landing page that lists SIX DIFFERENT unformatted spreadsheet files (.CSV). Each one is huge (hundreds of rows, dozens of columns) and impossible to browse from a cell phone or smaller tablet. You then have to cross-reference the CPT code (Current Procedural Terminology) of the service you received with one or more of these spreadsheets to find out what their current rates are for your situation. Where do you find the CPT code? On an itemized bill, which you have to request as they only send you a total bill at first. The best part is, depending on your insurance or lack thereof, you could end up paying one of several widely different prices. The CPT codes themselves are also impenetrable. Many of them don't actually explain what services they cover and are just placeholders for generic services. Go ahead and google CPT 99281 through 99285 and make sense of what that could be. Each one of those could have a widely different price.

    Interestingly, my hospitals 'self-pay rates' (no insurance) are significantly lower than their insured rates. In my case, this meant that I actually paid more for an emergency room visit out of pocket than I would have without any insurance at all. Their self-pay rate was $780 for one CPT code but $2,550 when covered by my insurer. The hospital made an agreement with my insurer to bill for much higher rates for some CPT codes when they were involved. Since most people have a deductible and an even larger out-of-pocket maximum the insurer doesn't have to pay that full price in most cases. My insurer only reimbursed them for about $300 on that CPT code. I ended up owing the hospital over $2,200 because I had to pay the rest. I would have paid $780 without any insurance at all. Can you request the self-pay rates for situations where your deductible is high or something like that? Sure, but only BEFORE you receive treatment. After you have been treated they won't work with you on prices, only repayment plans. The best part? My hospital claims they are a non-profit.
    • My hospital system actually has the prices fairly accessible. Once you locate the page (search price list on their site), there are links to one JSON file per hospital.

      Interestingly, you can see what the negotiated price for the various insurers is in addition to self pay. Current prices as of the end of December.

  • Shady but legal (Score:5, Informative)

    by inode_buddha ( 576844 ) on Tuesday March 23, 2021 @12:16AM (#61187988) Journal

    My local USA hospitals won't even talk to you without insurance. The refused to quote me on my own. As of 18 mos ago, I had to have cochlear implants put in. Out of work the whole time. There is now a cool quarter million $$$ buried in my skull.

    Did you know that the medical industry is exempt from RICO? If anyone else did what they did, they would be risking jail time like the Mob.

    Regarding medical expenses in the US: The US pays almost 2x as much per capita than anyone else and it is *NOT* because of the uninsured. Go to the SEC and find out the truth -- it all goes to "administrative overhead" AKA executive salaries. Blue Cross alone has an overhead over 40% That is just the insurance. Now figure the drug companies, with double and triple-digit price hikes in the last 2 years. And of course the hospital execs.

    The cost of overhead in Medicare? Single digits.

    The reason why universal healthcare works in places like Europeis because they don't allow that kind of skimming.

    I hope and *pray* the US goes to Medicare for all, even if they double my medicare taxes it would still save me over 10 grand per year in insurance premiums.

    I mean, why the hell don't people just do the math?? I thought this was news for nerds?? The reason why healthcare in the US is so expensive is because it is *for profit* instead of *at cost*.

  • Well, how do you think the hospitals get the money to pay those doctors??
    • I assume the same way they get money to pay doctors in every other country where the idea of "pricing" when discussing medical treatment will be met with a confused "huh?"

      I mean I've never heard of this concept of hospital pricing, that didn't stop me getting an MRI, Xray, and 3 visits to an orthopedic surgeon specializing in sports injuries last year.

      Though I can't say I'm completely happy with the result. Doctor + physio + Xray + MRI + Orthopedic surgery cost me $250. That is outrageously high. It would h

    • The hospitals don't pay those doctors. The doctors send their own bill.

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