Medical bills and debts are ineluctable in everyone’s life. But excess payment from our hands can be fended off always. To begin with, you need to check the bills because sometimes you might be overcharged for some drugs. Also doctors prefer medicines which will give them profit. So, you can go for alternative drugs having same impact and effect for which it is prescribed. This should be done after gaining sufficient knowledge and consulting doctor.
Haggle for better costs on medicines. This needs a lot of home work to be done because you need a proper knowledge on the prices of medicines. Lot of sources are available if you browse through internet. Even many insurance providers will have some data on the cost of the medical items.
Also ensure that all the pending payments do not come under the insurance provider. You have to review it carefully. Also you can avail help from the American Academy of Family physicians to understand the billing statements and to gain knowledge on various benefits that you can acquire from the insurance provider. The Bureau of Consumer Protection can assist you in solving disputes.
With all these precautionary measures executed, you can proceed further to prepare a flow chart of your payment plan. The first step is to negotiate with the creditors. They can help you with appreciable discounts for one time payments. Also you can go for payment on a monthly basis. In such case, negotiate for lower interest rates.
Get aid from the charitable or financial aid department associated with every hospital. They can assist you to a greater extent if you are really suffering from financial compaction. To avoid adverse actions to be taken against you, you need to keep in touch with the creditors. Do not avoid any bills from the hospitals or creditors. Better negotiate rather than avoiding. Many social and federal organisations can provide medical debt grants for the sufferers. Do not pay your bills through credit cards which may have steeper interest rates. Get help from Medical debt counsellors to arrive for a quicker solution.
If a collection agency contacts you, it will lead to poor credit score. Make a proper plan on your budget. Arrive at your monthly instalments and inform them legitimately. Travel behind your plan to get rid of tough time in your life.
Posts Tagged ‘Bills’
Coping With Large Medical Bills And Debt With A Payment Plan
Tuesday, May 4th, 201011 Questions About Medical Bills
Tuesday, April 27th, 2010When you are receiving medical treatment, especially if you were in the hospital, you will get a lot of billing documents in the mail. It will be less confusing if you know that there are three basic types of mail you will receive for each treatment. This article will discuss what these documents are, what information you need to record, and when to pay the balance due, if any.
1. How should I file the statements, invoices, and explanations of benefits forms?
It is important that you open up every single envelope, because you could end up throwing away a reimbursement check! You can sort the documents you will receive in three ways:
(i) By medical provider (for example, doctor’s name, hospital name, or lab name);
(ii) By date of the first medical procedure or service on the document (since many documents itemize services from several dates grouped together on the same form); or
(iii) By type of document (for example, all invoices from medical providers, all explanations of benefits forms from your first insurance company, all explanations of benefits forms from your second insurance company).
Any of these systems will work. What is important is to be consistent in the filing method you use and to keep it constantly up to date. If you keep track of your medical bills as they arrive, you will know when it is time to pay and how much to pay.
2. What documents will I receive if I have medical insurance?
If you have a private insurance plan (Blue Cross, Blue Shield, etc.), or if you have Medicare with a supplemental insurance plan, there are three types of documents you will probably receive. They are:
(i) The initial statement or invoice (this may or may not be sent out);
(ii) The Explanation of Benefits; and
(iii) The final bill.
3. What does it mean when the document says, “This is not a bill”?
The first document you may receive in the mail is an initial statement or invoice from your medical provider. Not all offices generate and send this form. But, if your doctor or hospital does, this invoice will usually say “This is not a bill,” and it itemizes all of the services you received.
Unless you are a “private pay” patient who is responsible for all of your medical bills, you will probably not have to pay that entire total you see at the bottom of the bill. This form is simply telling you how much is being billed to your insurance company.
4. What is an “EOB”?
After the claim is processed, you will receive a second type of document called an Explanation of Benefits (EOB). If your primary insurance company is Medicare, you will receive a form entitled “Medicare Summary Notice” that itemizes which services they have processed. Medicare or the insurance company will either authorize payment or deny it; this statement will tell you how much of the bill was approved for payment and who was paid.
5. If my claim is denied, what do I do now?
If you see that the claim is denied, call the biller at the office to see what caused the denial. It could be something as simple as a wrong code. Ask that the claim be re-submitted. Most offices will do this automatically, but it does not hurt to call to follow up.
6. I think I need a chart to keep track of all of these claims. What kind of information do I need to record?
After the claim is paid, you will note:
(i) How much was “approved”;
(ii) How much was paid;
(iii) The date it was processed;
(iv) If the payment was to you or to the provider; and
(v) If the provider “accepted assignment” of the claim.
7. Do I cash the reimbursement check or send it to the doctor?
If there is a check issued to you, deposit the check, then pay the medical provider the same amount you were reimbursed. Make a photocopy of the check for your records.
8. What if I have a second insurance policy?
If you have a second insurance, the medical provider’s biller will submit a claim to that second insurance company after the first insurance’s Explanation of Benefits form is issued. The second insurance company will also send you an Explanation of Benefits (EOB) for each item considered by the first insurance company.
When you receive an EOB from your second insurance, you need to record on your chart:
(i) How much was approved for payment;
(ii) The date it was processed;
(iii) How much was paid;
(iv) Whether the payment was to you or directly to the medical provide; and
(v) Whether you have a balance due for your out-of-pocket payment to the medical provider
If you have two insurance policies, then you will determine how much you will have in “out of pocket” expenses for that service, now that both insurances have processed the claim.
9. What is the “final bill”?
The third type of document you is the final bill, which you will receive after all insurances have processed your claim. It will show the amount of the original bill, each payment from insurance, any “write offs” or discounted balances and, finally, your balance due.
10. What if my “balance owing” does not match what is on the final bill?
If you receive a statement from the doctor’s office showing a balance owing, and it does not match your records, call the biller to ask for an explanation. If you do not understand the terminology or jargon, keep asking until you have a satisfactory explanation. You may want to have a meeting with the biller so that you can present your paperwork and show how you arrived at the amount due.
11. Why do I need to track every health insurance claim?
By tracking each claim as it works its way through the system, you will know when an invoice arrives whether it is simply informing you that your first insurance has made payment, and you can file it away, or whether that claim has been processed by both of your insurances and it is time to get out your checkbook, if a balance is due.
Remember, if you use a recordkeeping system to keep track of your medical billing, you will be more likely to get all the benefits due to you from your insurance coverage. You need to know that you are not paying out-of-pocket for services that are covered by insurance.
5 of 21 – Nine out of 10 hospital bills are incorrect, according to estimates
Saturday, April 24th, 2010
Interview with Suganthi Shivkumar, Managing Director, Asia South, Informatica SEA Pte Ltd, Singapore (www.informatica.com January 27, 2010, 7.30 am (Nageswara Rao Park), bit.ly
Reduce The Burden Of Past Due Medical Bills
Thursday, April 22nd, 2010In the unprecedented uneven economy that we have in the world today, nobody is alone who is facing the concern of past due medical bills – there are quite a few others like you. As the accumulation of bills and the amount owed on them keeps growing bigger and bigger, the chances of being able to pay them keep getting lesser and lesser. So let’s briefly go over some key suggestions relating to clearing the medical bills.
The first and foremost thing that you should do is to have a deep, thorough look at your budget. If the comment of the word budget raises question mark to your mind, then quite simply, that is the reason why you have pending bills to wreck your finances because of which they have stacked up to enter past due phase.
Making a budget a very easy process of calculating your income for a month and the expenses and savings to find out how is your money being spend.
Get an itemized copy of your previous past due medical bills that you owe and read them speedily in details. The objective of going over these bills is to ensure that you are right charged for the services that were provided to you by the medical provider and nothing more.
After you are aware of the amount that you owe, the next step of negotiation with the medical provider to secure as much waiver as possible on your total due amount. Try to pass on the the thought that you are tenaciously looking to pay your total dues and if they can cooperate with you on the amount, you are willing to make instant payments.
Lastly, once the negotiations are done, you should set up a payment plan for clearing monthly installments on your past due medical bills and guarantee that you clear them on time.
Medical Bills and Debt
Wednesday, April 21st, 2010Most times a physically and mentally depressing stage of sickness is followed by a financially challenging one where you are left to clear outrageous medical bills and debt. Let’s see how you can properly deal with yourself to see through this stage.
The very first thing that you ought to do after you are discharged from the medical provider is to contact their finance department for a detailed bill to be sent to you. You must go through the entire bill properly to ensure that every single charge in the bill is correct and valid.
If there is anything that you think is not correct on the bill, you ought to straightaway raise a dispute in the medical provider. If the hospital is not understanding you should instantaneously go to your state’s health office to get your medical bills and debt checked.
Next what you ought to do is naturally try to pay your bill as early as possible. Nonetheless, if you think that you will not be able to clear your bill timely or in total, you must let your medical provider know without hesitation about it.
You can further look for some kind of charity abatement that you might be eligible for. Most of these discounts are based on your annual income so you will need to furnish all your documents.
Other than this, you can also try to reach a payment plan with the service hospital so that you can pay your bill in monthly installments. Most healthcare providers are open to cooperate with patients in order to keep them from filing for insolvency because that leaves the healthcare provider with no claim at all.
And at last, most crucial suggestion to clear your medical bills and debt is to keep making regular payments to the creditors.
Be Aware of These Steps to Prevent Medical Bills and Debt
Tuesday, April 20th, 2010A lot of times a physically and mentally tormenting stage of ailment is followed by a financially challenging situation where the patients are left to pay heavy medical bills and debt. Let’s see how you can properly deal with yourself to see through this stage.
The very first thing that you must do after you are discharged from the medical provider is to call their finance department for an itemized bill to be sent to you. You ought to go through the entire bill properly to check that all the charges listed in the bill are accurate and valid.
If you find any correction on the bill, you ought to speedily call and inform the hospital. If the medical provider is not understanding you should without hesitation go to your state’s health office to get your medical bills and debt checked.
Next what you should do is obviously try to clear your bill as early as possible. However, if you realize that you will not be able to clear your bill in time or completely, you need to let your service hospital know instantaneously about it.
The next thing you can do is to look for some kind of charity abatement that you might be eligible for. Most of these discounts are based on your annual income so you will need to furnish all your documents.
Other than this, you can also try to set up a payment plan with the medical provider so that you can pay your bill in monthly installments. Most hospitals are willful to cooperate with patients in order to keep them from filing for insolvency because that leaves the doctor’s office with no claim at all.
And then, most necessary suggestion to clear your medical debt and bills is to keep paying regularly to the creditors.
Shower Prank Before Hospital Bills
Sunday, April 18th, 2010
My dumb nephews pour super cold water while I am taking a nice warm shower, that leads me to drop the soap, step on it, slip backwards and hit my head on the tub.
Health & Renter’s Insurance : How to Pay Hospital Bills With No Insurance
Tuesday, April 13th, 2010
In order to pay for medical expenses without any insurance, a person will have to pay out of their own pockets. Find out why health insurance is so important withhelp from an insurance representative in this free video on health insurance. Expert: John Pinelli Bio: John Pinelli is a financial service broker for Northwestern Mutual Insurance. Filmmaker: Bing Hu
Operator of two hospitals didn’t pay bills, officials say.: An article from: Arkansas Business
Friday, April 9th, 2010Product Description
This digital document is an article from Arkansas Business, published by Journal Publishing, Inc. on May 4, 2009. The length of the article is 369 words. The page length shown above is based on a typical 300-word page. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.
Citation Details
Title: Operator of two hospitals didn’t pay bills, officials say.(NE Journal: A Look at News From Northeast Arkansas)
Author: Mark Friedman
Publication: Arkansas Business (Magazine/Journal)
Date: May 4, 2009
Publisher: Journal Publishing, Inc.
Volume: 26 Issue: 18 Page: 12(1)
Distributed by Gale, a part of Cengage Learning
Operator of two hospitals didn’t pay bills, officials say.: An article from: Arkansas Business


