Think you’re fully insured? You could be in for a big
surprise if you have a heart attack or a car crash and the ambulance takes you
to the nearest hospital — one that is not on your insurer’s list of preferred
providers.
Drew Calver found that out when he was billed $109,000
for emergency treatment of a heart attack, even though the emergency room he
was taken to assured him it would accept his employer-provided insurance. The
problem is, the insurer only paid as much as it would have allowed for an
in-network hospital. The out-of-network hospital that treated him wanted three
times as much, so it billed Calver for the balance. The bill came to more than
twice his annual salary as a high school teacher.
Surprise medical bills are known in medical circles as
“balance billing.” Emergency room treatment is one of the most common sources
of surprise bills, but not the only one. You may also be on the hook for a
balance bill if you receive a complex treatment like a joint replacement or
transplant, even if the operation is done at an in-network hospital. Often, it
turns out later that some out-of-network practitioner, such as a radiologist or
anesthesiologist, has assisted without your even knowing about it, let alone
having a chance to give or withhold consent.







