PreacherDJW
Jan 13, 2006, 06:39 AM
Last spring, I had a toothache and went to a dentist for evaluation. The finding was that a wisdom tooth was impacting a back molar and the wisdom tooth needed to be pulled while the molar needed to have a root canal and capped. The dentist forwarded me on to an oral surgeon who was outside of my insurance company’s network group of approved doctors, meaning that my out of pocket expenses would be a little more than if he were in network.
The oral surgeon took an x-ray and found through a CT scan that I had a tumor growing in the sinus cavity behind my cheekbone that needed to be extracted. After getting a second opinion, I opted to have the surgery performed. In addition to the excision of the tumor, the oral surgeon would be removing three wisdom teeth and doing a Septoplasty procedure on my nasal passage which had bone structures growing at wrong angles.
Before the surgery could be performed, the doctor required that I would have to pay for the doctor’s portion of the bill. The receptionist calculated the cost of the doctor’s bill, subtracted the amount that I had already paid on previous visits, and subtracted what she determined that my insurance provider would cover. My out-of-pocket expenses were $4608.00. Knowing that this was what I would need to pay and calculating the hospital’s expense and other miscellaneous expenses that might pop up, I borrowed $10,000. When I paid the oral surgeon’s fee, I asked if this would be all that I would owe and was told yes. I asked once again to make sure, and was told I would not owe anything else.
The surgery was performed and the doctor billed my insurance. My insurance paid substantially less than what I expected for two primary reasons. Rather than billing for one surgery, the oral surgeon billed for three separate procedures. My insurance provider claims that since I did not go under anesthesia three times, they recognize this as only one surgical procedure. The other reason that my insurance provider is not paying off is because they claim, according to a medical billing chart that is used by insurance companies across the U.S. the oral surgeon is charging between 45-60% more than what is the customary and usual charges for the procedures and the area of the country that we live in. Therefore, I am being billed for those outstanding charges to the tune of an extra $2800. Am I obligated to pay the $2800, even though I was told that after I paid the $4608.00, I would not owe any more? Do I have a legal ground to stand on in refusing to pay these excess charges? What are my legal options?
Thank you for your responses.
The oral surgeon took an x-ray and found through a CT scan that I had a tumor growing in the sinus cavity behind my cheekbone that needed to be extracted. After getting a second opinion, I opted to have the surgery performed. In addition to the excision of the tumor, the oral surgeon would be removing three wisdom teeth and doing a Septoplasty procedure on my nasal passage which had bone structures growing at wrong angles.
Before the surgery could be performed, the doctor required that I would have to pay for the doctor’s portion of the bill. The receptionist calculated the cost of the doctor’s bill, subtracted the amount that I had already paid on previous visits, and subtracted what she determined that my insurance provider would cover. My out-of-pocket expenses were $4608.00. Knowing that this was what I would need to pay and calculating the hospital’s expense and other miscellaneous expenses that might pop up, I borrowed $10,000. When I paid the oral surgeon’s fee, I asked if this would be all that I would owe and was told yes. I asked once again to make sure, and was told I would not owe anything else.
The surgery was performed and the doctor billed my insurance. My insurance paid substantially less than what I expected for two primary reasons. Rather than billing for one surgery, the oral surgeon billed for three separate procedures. My insurance provider claims that since I did not go under anesthesia three times, they recognize this as only one surgical procedure. The other reason that my insurance provider is not paying off is because they claim, according to a medical billing chart that is used by insurance companies across the U.S. the oral surgeon is charging between 45-60% more than what is the customary and usual charges for the procedures and the area of the country that we live in. Therefore, I am being billed for those outstanding charges to the tune of an extra $2800. Am I obligated to pay the $2800, even though I was told that after I paid the $4608.00, I would not owe any more? Do I have a legal ground to stand on in refusing to pay these excess charges? What are my legal options?
Thank you for your responses.