Posted in General on Sep 21, 2011
Troubled by unpaid medical bills? Are doctor visits becoming a stressful financial situation? You are not alone. In the past 5 years, the average family has seen a 50% increase in medical costs. There are ways to decrease your medical costs with a bit of pre-planning and by having a frank discussion of medical costs and cheaper alternatives with your doctor. You do have some financial power as a patient. Don?t wait until an emergency situation arises.
3 Ways to Save Money on Medical Costs
By Constance Gustke ? Bankrate.com
Article Highlights
--Start by figuring out your current expenses on health care services.
--Use medical price comparison sites to research prices in your area.
--For routine illnesses, consider lower-cost health care facilities.
Understand your costs. "To find ways to save, you need to understand how much you spend," says Tomer Shoval, CEO of Simplee. "This is the first step." Tracking your medical spending using software such as Quicken allows you to monitor medical billing errors and make sure you're not overpaying for a service. Simplee also has a free health care expense-tracking service that links to your health insurance account.
Make use of price-comparison sites. More medical price comparison sites are popping up to slice and dice medical expenses. Typical procedures such as hip replacements or colonoscopies are the easiest to compare, says Cooper. Searches in cities yield more choices than rural areas, where you're "grateful to have a surgeon," she says.
HealthcareBlueBook.com, started in 2009, is especially useful, says Cindy Holtzman, founder of the insurance and medical bill advocacy firm Medical Refund $ervice Inc. The Healthcare Blue Book, a free service, lists fair prices for surgeries, office visits, medical tests, dentistry and other services in your area.
Holtzman also suggests trying PriceDoc.com and myMedicalCosts.com. PriceDoc.com covers diagnostic and wellness service pricing and even allows you to bid online for a procedure. MyMedicalCosts.com provides average medical prices and doctor ratings. Daily deal sites such as Groupon, LivingSocial and Daily Dibs are even getting into the act. While not every deal offered is for a medical-related treatment, you can find the occasional discount on some health care services, such as Lasik, the laser vision-correction surgery, or teeth whitening. Buying discounted medical procedures, especially given the tight time limits for decision-making, isn't always a practical medical strategy. But Cooper says that these sites do serve a useful purpose: They allow consumers to compare cost and quality.
Think outside the (medical) box. Going to the emergency room is a costly way to treat routine health issues. Use the Internet to scout out cheaper medical options. For example, urgent care facilities can treat sprains, burns and many illnesses at a lower cost. Walk-in retail clinics, such as the ones at select Rite Aid and Walgreens locations, can offer lower medical costs for treating common illnesses such as flu or strep.
For full-blown surgeries, consider licensed ambulatory surgery centers or Non-Profit Hospitals. Costs at these centers are typically 40 percent less than they are at hospitals, says Nicholas Newsad, author of "The Medical Bill Survival Guide." These centers can lower costs because they focus strictly on surgeries rather than on high-cost services used in emergency rooms, he says. If you do need a hospital, nonprofits are cheaper than for-profits. Outpatient surgery done at a for-profit hospital is significantly cheaper than it is at a nonprofit, Holtzman says. Hospital websites typically state their status. University hospitals also have lower prices, she says.
http://www.bankrate.com/finance/insurance/3-ways-save-money-medical-costs.aspx
Last Updated by Audra Kennedy on 2011-09-21 07:31:09
Posted in General on Sep 18, 2011
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Last Updated by Admin on 2011-09-18 18:18:13