Debra Pritchard was a retired factory worker who was careful with her money, including medical expenses, said her daughter Alicia Wieberg. She said, “She was someone who would never go to the doctor no matter what.”
That ended last year when the rural Tennessee native suffered a severe stroke and several aneurysms. She was rushed twice from her local hospital to Vanderbilt University Medical Center in Nashville, 120 miles away, where she was treated by brain specialists. She passed away on October 31st at the age of 70.
One of Pritchard’s visits to the Nashville hospital was by helicopter ambulance. Ms. Wieberg had heard that such flights could be expensive, but she didn’t know how exorbitant the prices were, or how her mother skimped on Medicare coverage, which made it difficult for her family to survive. He said he did not realize the extent of the predicament he would be in.
Then the bill came.
The patient: Debra Pritchard had Medicare Part A insurance before her death.
Medical services: Ambulance flight to Vanderbilt University Medical Center.
Service provider: Med-Trans Corp. is part of Medical Transportation Services. Global medical response, an industry giant backed by private equity investors. The large company operates in all 50 states and has a total fleet of 498 helicopters and planes.
Total bill: $81,739.40, none of which was covered by insurance.
What you get: In recent years, high charges from air ambulance providers have prompted complaints and federal action.
For patients with private insurance, Surprise Prohibition LawThe law, which went into effect in 2022, prohibits air ambulance service companies from charging people more than they would pay if their services were considered “in-network” with their health insurance company. For patients with public insurance such as Medicare or Medicaid, the government sets payment rates that are much lower than what companies charge.
However, Mr. Pritchard had opted out of the portion of Medicare that covered ambulance services.
That means her estate was supposed to pay the entire ambulance bill of nearly $82,000 when the bill arrived less than two weeks after her death. Her main assets were 12 acres of land and her home in Decherd, Tennessee, where she lived for 48 years and raised her two children. The cost of one of her helicopter rides could eat up about a third of the value of her estate, said Wieberg, her executor.
The families’ predicament stems from the complex nature of Medicare coverage.
Pritchard was only enrolled in Medicare Part A, which is free to most Americans over 65. That part of the federal insurance program covers inpatient care, and it paid for most of her hospital bills, her daughter said.
But Pritchard denied other Medicare coverage, including Part B, which covers things like doctor visits, outpatient treatment and ambulance rides. She suspects her daughter skipped the insurance to avoid the premiums most recipients pay, currently about $175 a month.
Lauren Adler, a health economist at the Brookings Institution, said: study ambulance billestimates that if Ms. Pritchard had applied for Part B, the maximum amount Medicare would have allowed for Ms. Pritchard’s ticket would have been less than $10,000. The patient’s share of that would have been less than $2,000 for him. If many Medicare members had also purchased additional Medigap coverage to cover things like coinsurance, her estate might not have owed anything, she said.
Nicole Michel, a spokeswoman for Global Medical Response, which provides air ambulances, agreed with Adler’s estimate that Medicare would limit ticket prices to less than $10,000. But she said the federal program’s payment rates do not cover the cost of providing air ambulance services.
“Our patient advocacy team is actively working with Ms. Vieberg’s attorney to determine if there is any other medical insurance coverage that could be billed on the date of service,” Michelle told KFF Health. wrote the News in an email. “If not, we, like all of our patients, remain committed to working with Mr. Wiberg to find a fair solution.”
solution: In mid-February, Wiberg said the company had not offered to reduce his bill.
Wieberg said both she and the attorney handling her mother’s estate contacted the company and asked for a reduction in the bill. She also contacted Medicare officials, filled out a form on the No Surprises Act website and filed a complaint with Tennessee regulators that oversee ambulance services, she said. She said she was informed on February 12 that the company had filed a legal claim against the estate sum.
Wieberg said other health care providers, including ground ambulance services and Vanderbilt Hospital, ultimately waived thousands of dollars in unpaid fees for services to Pritchard, which are normally covered by Medicare Part B. .
But as it stands, Pritchard’s estate still owes the air ambulance company approximately $81,740.
Key points: People who are eligible for Medicare are encouraged to enroll in Part B unless they have private health insurance through their employer or spouse.
“If you are a Medicare enrollee and are having difficulty paying your Medicare Part B premiums, there are resources available to you to compare your Medicare coverage options and learn about options to help pay your Medicare costs,” according to the Commonwealth. said Meena Seshamani, director of the Centers for Medicare. said in an email to KFF Health News.
she pointed out that Every state offers free counseling Helping people access Medicare.
In Tennessee, that counseling is provided by the State Health Insurance Assistance Program. Lori Galbreath, the center’s director, told KFF Health News she wants more seniors to discuss their health insurance options with trained counselors like her.
“Every Medicare beneficiary’s experience is different,” she says. “We can look at their different situations and give them an unbiased view of what the next best course of action is.”
Counselors advise many people with modest incomes to buy insurance. medicare savings program, which can cover Part B premiums. In 2023, Tennessee residents could qualify for such assistance if they earn less than $1,660 a month for a single person and $2,239 for a married couple. Many people can also receive help with other out-of-pocket costs, such as copays for medical services.
Wieberg, who lives in Missouri, is preparing to put her family’s home on the market.
She sees a fight over her mother’s air ambulance bill and wonders why Medicare is split, with Part A offering free inpatient care, but Part B requiring coverage for other essential services. He said he was thinking about it.
“If you’re over 70, you’re probably going to need both,” she says. “So why do we decide what we can or cannot buy, or what we can or cannot use?”
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