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Hi Everyone,


I am responsible for caring for my elderly relative, who is sick and in need of constant attention. As of late, the medical bills and procedures have significantly increased. Unfortunately, I am getting incredibly fatigued and frustrated. On top of all of this, I believe the medical bills of the individual are incorrect and more than what they should be.


I really don't have the time or energy to solve this. I was wondering if anyone knew of a respected company that could accurately find these mistakes and save me much need money.


Thanks

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Here's what I do. I don't pay ANY medical bill until I see the EOB from the insurance company. When I get the EOB, I company what I was billed with what the insurance company says I SHOULD have been billed. If there's a discrepancy, I call the provider, inform them, and ask them to make an adjustment. If they want to see the EOB, I send them a copy, but they usually don't.

It may not seem this answers your question, but I think it addresses the spirit of your question which is: I need to get this done and I'm too tired for a hassle.

The best way to avoid fighting with providers is to call the insurance company and let them know, "on x date I was billed x amount by x provider." They will be able to tell you if you were billed what you should have been, of if you were billed too much. Providers have to bill the contract rate. I hope this helps.
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You are the one who knows what was given and what was done. A third party would have no way of knowing whether the bill is correct.
When you see an error, call immediately for a correction or clarification.
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johnnyburns527
YES YES I also wish there was someone or some company that would dispute medical bills

I was hospitalized recently, and they ordered all of my daily meds from an old list. Two were ones I never received at the hospital. I have since learned they can charge at will for non-prescription meds.
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I did some research over the weekend and actually found some companies that answer the exact question I previously asked. If anyone is interested, visit DisputeBills CoPatient sites I personally recommend DB because they have a success rate that exceeds 70%.

Bottom line is that I have finally found a specific company that can do this time consuming work for myself and help me finally save me money!
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At DisputeBills they work on a 30% contingency payment plan, so if they saved you 100% of the $30,000 you would owe Disputebills $9,000
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Oh how I wish there was someone or some company that would provide that service!

Try to get organized. Talk to the billing department. Make your notes from the phone calls right there on the statement (but not on the portion you may be sending in with a payment). I also always wrote down who I spoke with and tried to speak to that person if I had to call again.
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Get a calendar or planner book and write down every medical event on the date it occurred. Get a three hole punch and a quality three hole notebook, and file every statement chronilogically on the date it occurred. Many times the medical provider submits the insurance claim multiple times with minor updates and/or clarifications to satisfy the insurance company. You can understand this better with everything filled by date medical service received. If you have supplemental insurance, they cannot submit their insurance claim until the primary insurance claim is settled. A third party "billing helper" agent would bill you more than they would help you. If you think any billing is fraudulent, it is your responsibility to report this to the insurance people. We all realize the complexity of medical billing, but it is reality that each of us must deal with. Realize that much of the medical billing is not paid by insurance or the insured, rather it is "written off" by the medical provider. Don't pay anything until considerable time has passed and you understand the billing issue completely. Eventually, you must discuss issues with the billing clerks to gain understanding. Having the documentation in order will be a minimum requirement.
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This may be too late to help you--but any time we have a "procedure" of any kind, I start a new file. In it I place:
A: all information given to me (or hubby) by the drs' offices/original dx/and xrays or scans
B: all bills as they come in
C: all payment statements as they come in--and then I cross reference those with the original bill---I ALWAYS find errors, always
D: a "calling list" the place I called, the time., date, to whom I spoke, what we spoke about, what they are going to do, what I am going to do and I GET THEIR NAMES!
E: a finalized bill when all the dust has settled.

Plus I will hold on to this for a few years.

Hubby had a liver transplant 10 years go, chemo afterwards for 84 weeks, a stroke, a terrible motorcycle accident, and all the dr visits, hospital visits, etc along with those. Without my enormous notebook of information, we'd be out much more money. I found countless incidents of double billing--improper billing. outrageous billing--since we were private pay out of plan for most of this, we still paid almost $200,000 over time. You betcha I squeezed every penny til it hurt.

I started doing this with a child's simple tonsillectomy. I do it for all things now, even our boring yearly exams. With 5 kids, I couldn't keep track of who'd had what done--and with the transplant--no way could I have carried that info in my brain.

I do not know of anyone who would WILLINGLY take on this task. You'd probably pay more than you owed to unsnarl someone else's medical bills.
Start afresh and don't do more than a couple of hours per day. It's daunting, but doable.
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I agree with Christine73. If the person is on Medicare, you will get a statement from them. Then you will get a statement from the supplimental. This statement will show what medicare paid and what the supplimental picked up. The balance is paid by the patient unless on Medicaid. I wait for the bill and make sure everything agrees. Medicare does not make mistakes and they will tell u that. What u need to make sure is that the supplimental is billed by the provider. This is the only problem I have had. Copays, and until met, deductables by the patient. When it comes to procedures, you may hve to shop around. Every hospital charges different.
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When you get a bill from a provider it will show what they billed. It will show what Medicare paid and then what the supplimental paid. You will also she Medicare adjustments that should agree to what the supplimental statement says the patient may owe. Be aware that not all providers take Medicare or some supplimentals. In this case, the patient is responsible for payment. I would question the need for certain "procedures". Just because it is recommended doesn't mean you have to have it done.
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