NEW YORK TIMES
She
Was Told Surgery Would Cost About $1,300. Then the Bill Came: $229,000.
The Colorado Supreme Court ruled that Lisa French had never agreed to pay the full price when she signed service agreements with a hospital.
“I was glad not just for me, but for other people,” Lisa French said about her court victory. “I think most people don’t get, like I didn’t get, how insurance and hospitals work.”Credit...Helen H. Richardson/The Denver Post, via Associated Press
May 21, 2022
When Lisa Melody French needed back
surgery after a car accident, she went to a hospital near her home outside
Denver, which reviewed her insurance information and told her she would be
personally responsible for paying about $1,337.
But after the surgery, the hospital
claimed that it had “misread” her insurance card and that she was, in fact, an
out-of-network patient, court papers said. As a result, Centura Health, which
operated the hospital, billed her $229,112.13. When she didn’t pay, Centura
sued her.
“I was scared about it,” said Ms.
French, 60, a clerk at a trucking company, who eventually filed for bankruptcy.
“I didn’t understand because I kind of relied on the hospital and my insurance
company to work out what I needed to pay.”
This
week, after a yearslong legal battle, the Colorado Supreme Court ruled that Ms.
French did not have to pay nearly $230,000 for the spinal fusion surgery she
underwent at St. Anthony North Hospital in Westminster, Colo., in 2014.
It said she would have to pay only
$766.74, apparently reflecting the remainder of her balance, as previously
determined by a jury.
“I was very happy,” Ms. French said on
Friday. “I was glad not just for me, but for other people. I think most people
don’t get, like I didn’t get, how insurance and hospitals work.”
Centura Health did not immediately respond
to requests for comment.
The unanimous ruling capped what Ms.
French described as a stressful ordeal that began when her doctor referred her
to St. Anthony North, telling her she needed back surgery or she could be
paralyzed in a fall.
“Personally, it was really hard because
I had never had surgery before,” she said. “I was already scared about that.”
Before
her surgery, Ms. French signed two service agreements promising to pay “all
charges of the hospital.”
Centura asserted that, because Ms.
French was an out-of-network patient, those service agreements required her to
pay the full rates, listed in a giant health system database known as a
chargemaster — a catalog of the cost of every procedure and medical supply
Centura provided.
In Centura’s view, the service agreements
“were unambiguous and French’s agreement to pay ‘all charges’ ‘could only mean’
the predetermined rates set by Centura’s chargemaster,” the court said.
But the court found that Ms. French
wasn’t responsible for paying those rates because she didn’t know the
chargemaster even existed and hadn’t agreed to its terms.
The court said that the chargemaster
wasn’t mentioned “even obliquely” in any of the service agreements or Patient
Bill of Rights forms that Ms. French signed.
“Indeed, Centura representatives
testified that the chargemaster was not provided to patients, and in this very
litigation, Centura refused to produce its chargemaster to French, contending
that it was proprietary and a trade secret,” Justice Richard L. Gabriel wrote.
Justice Gabriel pointed out that courts
and commentators have noted that hospital chargemasters have become
“increasingly arbitrary and, over time, have lost any direct connection to
hospitals’ actual cost, reflecting, instead, inflated rates set to produce a
targeted amount of profit for the hospitals after factoring in discounts
negotiated with private and governmental insurers.”
Chargemasters,
which are used by hospitals across the country, have long been a source of
confusion for patients trying to decipher what they may pay for a given
procedure, despite efforts to require more transparency.
“They have no basis in reality,” said
Gerard F. Anderson, a professor of health policy and management and a professor
of international health at Johns Hopkins University Bloomberg School of Public
Health.
“The hospital cannot explain to anyone
why they charge the prices they charge,” he said. “They are not based on costs.
They are not based on accounting principles. They are fictitious instruments
created by somebody in the hospitals.”
In 2019, the Trump administration
ordered hospitals to begin listing prices for all their services, theoretically
offering consumers greater clarity and choice and forcing health care providers
into price competition.
But the data, posted online in
spreadsheets for thousands of procedures, have often been incomprehensible and unusable by patients — a
thicket of numbers and technical medical terms, displayed in formats that vary
from hospital to hospital.
“Essentially, the patient has no
ability to do comparison shopping for the majority of hospital services,”
Professor Anderson said. “There are just too many moving parts. There are too
many different services you would need.”
Ms. French called the chargemaster “a
mystery” and said she had no idea she was agreeing to its rates when she signed
the hospital’s service agreements.
“I'm
just glad it’s over,” she said. “And I hope it benefits people who have gone
though the same thing I have and might go through in the future.”
No comments:
Post a Comment