I think that it's bullshit, but I could wrap my mind around the insurance co objecting to you spending an "unnecessary" night in the hospital and refusing to pay for the night's stay. But to deny the whole bill because they don't like one part is bullshit.
Spike's Bitches 45: That sure as hell wasn't in the brochure.
[NAFDA] Spike-centric discussion. Lusty, lewd (only occasionally crude), risqué (and frisqué), bawdy (Oh, lawdy!), flirty ('cuz we're purty), raunchy talk inside. Caveat lector.
BTW, this craziness is everywhere, not just hospitals and insurance companies. The reason Bro and SIL decided to have my nephew at home is that the birthing center told them that they had to leave three hours after the birth if there were no complications. A birthing center!
Yeah, they sent my 80-year-old mom home on the same freaking day she had her hysterectomy.
There's nothing wrong with our insurance system. Nope. Nothing at all.
BTW, this craziness is everywhere, not just hospitals and insurance companies. The reason Bro and SIL decided to have my nephew at home is that the birthing center told them that they had to leave three hours after the birth if there were no complications. A birthing center!
And yet, costs continue to skyrocket.
Incidentally, even though the hospital is willing to write it off, it might be worth appealing. "Makes a fuss when screwed with" is not a bad list to be on.
It is true that some insurance companies make it an unspoken policy to deny a claim the first time it comes up since a statistically significant portion of their customers won't challenge it. When it is challenged they will often pay on the claim.
I plan to ... would have today except our phones aren't reliable - couldn't get a clear connection to the insurance company (unless they have their system set specifically to make it impossible to talk to them ... which I wouldn't put past them). Aside from future repercussions, I think it's wrong for the hospital to not get paid for the parts they don't object to (like the surgeon and the anaesthesiologist and the medications (lovely, lovely morphine) and the IV antiobiotics they had me on). bah humbug!
I think that it's bullshit, but I could wrap my mind around the insurance co objecting to you spending an "unnecessary" night in the hospital and refusing to pay for the night's stay. But to deny the whole bill because they don't like one part is bullshit.
Yeah, I can understand their reasoning as well, but they should be refusing to pay for the night in the hospital, not the procedure itself.
Aside from future repercussions, I think it's wrong for the hospital to not get paid for the parts they don't object to (like the surgeon and the anaesthesiologist and the medications (lovely, lovely morphine) and the IV antiobiotics they had me on)
For serious.
Looks like the Toyota may be totaled. I just faxed the insurance co. the receipt from the engine we put in last month, see if that makes a difference.