Wednesday, January 05, 2011

Your Insurance may not cover the Neonatal ICU

Expecting a new addition to the family? Check your insurance coverage. From the WaPo:

Nathan and Sonji Wilkes thought they had covered all the insurance bases before the birth of their son, Thomas, seven years ago. Their obstetrician and the hospital near their Englewood, Colo., home were all in network. They checked with the health insurer that provided their coverage to estimate their out-of-pocket costs. The expected total: $400.

Thomas's birth was uneventful. But when hospital personnel circumcised him, he wouldn't stop bleeding. He was given a diagnosis of hemophilia, treated and placed in the hospital's NICU, where he received treatment to stop the bleeding and remained under observation for a day.

A few weeks later, the Wilkeses got a $50,000 bill for Thomas's NICU stay. They learned that the unit, located on the same floor as the regular nursery and delivery rooms, was staffed by a company under contract to the hospital, and the company didn't accept the family's insurance plan. "We just thought it was part of the hospital," says Nathan Wilkes. "We had no idea that it was even an option that the NICU could be in a different network."


It wouldn't have occurred to me, either.

The sad truth is that any time we get into any medical situation that involves health insurance, too, we have to ask every question we can think of - and be very, very sure about what's covered by our insurance. This is just one more set of questions that expectant parents should be sure to ask.


cross-posted at MainSt/workingamerica.org

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