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Great read. This just show how evil for-profit medicine really is. The fact that the pay is so high in the west is disturbing. I really pray we see a single-payer socialised system in our lifetime in the US. Growing up with socialised medicine has shown me the truth. No doctor, no matter how talented, needs to make what they do. All of this should be government run as a non-profit. Government should mandate and force all pharmaceutical companies into non-profit status as well for the good of mankind.

I'm sick to death of not being able to go to hospital here in the US, even with insurance, because what with the co-pays and deductibles, it costs a fortune. I just don't go, and I am in need of surgery that I cannot afford.

QUESTION:

Would an Indian facility in India treat me for a relatively small amount of money? Even after the flights, it would still be cheaper than the $22k I've been quoted here by multiple sources.

Maybe? Medical tourism is a well-established thing.
I've often thought about establishing a medial tourism non-profit. Think Watsi.org, but for first-world consumers of healthcare, taking them to near-first-world country locals where the cost of the same quality service is much lower.
> Would an Indian facility in India treat me for a relatively small amount of money?

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/health-10837726

While there are some good ideas the ruthless efficiency is a bit scary.

Why is it scary?

Is there something inherent about health care that prevents an industrial philosophy towards production?

Best practice around canula tells us to do one thing. But if you have all these patients and you have your own data you can drop the standard a little bit. You've saved a bit of money, and raised risk by a tiny bit. While no surgery is risk free it's kind of odd to increase risks to save a few dollars. I guess I don't mean scary, just, it's something to think about.
If they have good outcomes, which they seem to it makes sense. While there may be a place for a hospital that does it all, it makes perfect sense that you would have a hospital that does just heart surgery and a lot of it.

You probably have less contagious people around; you're going to have staff that is familiar with the various complications available all the time; and you can probably negotiate better prices based on volume for the various tools and disposables; it just makes good sense.

Just a note: Most often, it is not the doctors' salaries or time that is the major contributor to the cost of surgery. Instead, the ridiculous fees are created by the hospital administrators as a result of a long history of negotiations between insurance providers and hospital admins. Simple parts that cost $0.10 to manufacture will be billed at $20, rooms will be billed at $8000/night, etc.

To my knowledge, most doctors are trying to actively reduce healthcare costs on the end user. They don't see much of the profit, that just lines the coffers of the billion dollar for profit hospitals out there.

It's not their salaries?

Watch them come to work, note the care they drive. Follow them home, note the house they live in. I've yet to see a dr in the US come to work in a civic, or live in a modest house...

Right, the answer is somewhere in between.

When I worked on an ambulance, I'd be at the hospital several times a day - in the ER doctor lot, a sampling of the cars:

- multiple Tesla S's - 3 Porsche Cayenne - 2 Audi S5s - several Escalades

Whilst there are two sides to the story, let's not pretend that doctors live hopeless lives, saddled with a lifetime of crippling student loan debt, barely able to keep their heads above water to selflessly help people.

There is a medical group in Kansas/Indiana, I think, that was trialling the novel idea of "fixed price surgery"... looking at right on $100K for cardiac bypass.

Me? To look at my explanation of benefits, the billing for my kidney stone last year peaked at over $60K.

Did you see the age of those same doctors? Virtually guaranteed none of them were < 40.

A fair calculation of salary is some evaluation of (years of training required * intrinsic skill required * benefit to society). If you accept that, then doctors are surely near the top.

[accidental double-post]
The salaries are high but the fact that a surgery costs $34,000, most of it doesn't go to the Doctor. I'm sure they get a lot, but the hospital needs its cut, the insurance need it's cut, etc.
I mostly agree, but Doctors get paid a lot too. We let the American Medical Association artificially limit the number of doctors in order to keep their salaries up (which has the side effect of over-working the doctors).

The costs you mentioned are the primary ones, but doctors salaries are a major contributor as well.

The number of physicians is primarily limited by the number of available residency slots, over which the AMA has little control.
There are a lot of reasons American health care costs more. Most people want to blame it on just one group or reason (which not coincidentally matches their political priors).

The answer tends to be "a little bit of everything." And it's really hard to cram down the costs on someone who is already making a certain amount of money.

Great read. This just show how evil for-profit medicine really is.

There are no for-profit hospitals in India? From what I've seen from a quick google search, all the best ones are private, for-profit.

Americans are quick to brand things evil.

Of course there are for-profit hospitals in India. All the private ones are. Its just that the system has not deteriorated so much as the US, that price of basic care has shot up so much.

The procedure described in the article is reasonably simple. I am not a doctor; the reason I know is my dad had the same procedure, once in 2005 and once in 2013.

Once the procedure was done, his doctor had a post-surgery chat with my mom and me, and gave us the box the stent came in. The cost of the Stent was approx Rs 150000. The whole cost was about 200,000 (including preliminary testing, doctor's fees, stay, surgery, post-surgery, and a ride home). We did it at one of the top hospitals in India (http://www.madrasmedicalmission.org/), and talking to some folks there, I was told that the profit was made in the cost of the Stent. Even though the box quoted Rs 150000, the hospital acquired it at 1/10th that price directly from the manufacturer (Abbott).

The question is: would you be comfortable being treated in India if India had 19th century medical equipment and a 19th century medical practicum? Because that, effectively, is what you are condemning your great grandchildren to.
Great read. This just show how evil for-profit medicine really is.

I think you mean how evil semi-socialized, heavily regulated medicine really is. India's medical system is as close to free market health care as I've ever encountered.

You walk into a hospital, ask the price, pay it. If you don't like the price, you can go to a different hospital and ask them. If you have insurance, you send them the bill afterwards. That's basically it, and most hospitals are for-profit. In my experience, the government hospitals are significantly dirtier than the private ones. Employer sponsored health insurance isn't a big thing. Doctors who won't talk to you without insurance [1] are more or less nonexistent.

Most likely an Indian facility can treat you. The cost is unlikely to be more than 1 or 2 lac (e.g. $3k tops), depending on your condition. Throw in another $1k for the flight + $1k for a decent hotel. If you want to learn more, send me an email.

[1] In the US I'm willing to pay cash for care before treatment, but most doctors won't talk to me. I'm told it attracts undesired regulatory attention.

The U.S. insurance system is not semi-socialized on that part, it is a result of collusion between hospital administration and insurance companies to maximize profits instead of health of the nation. Corporatism keeps laws on the books that reduce competition and take the decisions out of the hands of patients and doctors and puts it into bureaucrats.

Medicaid and Obamacare are the socialization aspects, which try to work within the Corporatist solution... we should have and should just tear the whole system apart.

Too many good minds work in billing and adminstrative research and development, not in medical development.

Disclaimer: I make medical billing and administrative software. I have a job because of a broken system... I'd sacrifice my comfort for a better system.

> we should have and should just tear the whole system apart.

And replace it with what? I left Canada because of the abuse of their healthcare system, so please, share with me a model that isn't like Canada's that you'd want to move to?

The US insurance system is heavily tuned to make some people pay for others. Employer sponsored insurance, together with accompanying regulations about individual costs, is tuned to make sure the smoker and the healthy person pay the same price. See also community rating in the private market. On top of that, the US government pays more for it's own socialized medical programs than most other nations do.

And this isn't even getting into all the ways regulations micromanage doctors and other parts of the system. Not to mention micromanage financial services - India actually has innovation in that space.

Any theories which claim that for-profit systems are horrible need to be tested against the Indian system. It's mostly for-profit, free market, etc - all the incorrect claims people make about the US are pretty much true there.

There's this story about health care that goes like this:

1. There are two kinds of health care systems in the world.

2. The first kind is private-run, profit-driven and super-expensive, the second kind is government-run and much cheaper.

3. America has the first kind. Every other country has the second kind.

You can see that story being repeated all over this page.

You forgot to mention that that story is a fiction, albeit a popular one.
Employer sponsored insurance, together with accompanying regulations about individual costs, is tuned to make sure the smoker and the healthy person pay the same price.

That is kind of what insurance is for though - to level out the cost for everyone.

It's a common misconception that smokers cost society. The truth is, smokers die earlier and cost tax payers less in insurance benefits and health care than non-smokers. [1] We should be encouraging people to smoke if we want to save money. (I'm joking!)

[1] http://www.plosmedicine.org/article/info:doi/10.1371/journal...

That is kind of what insurance is for though - to level out the cost for everyone.

No, the point of insurance is to reduce the variance of an individual's future cost. Due to the law of large numbers, averaging across independent identically distributed people is equivalent to averaging over the future, but that's a side effect.

Averaging over independent non-identically distributed people is NOT part of insurance at all - that's what I'm describing as "the socialist part".

An example illustrating the difference - say you have 10 dice, and if a die rolls a 6 it costs $1,000. You also have 10 coins, and if the coin comes up heads, it costs $1,000. Insurance is when you charge the dice $166 and the coins $500. Socialism is when you charge everyone $333 - that's redistribution from the dice to the coins.

The link about smoking costs is interesting, however that applies at the level of government paying for lifetime costs. Annual costs are higher. So insurance for this year should cost the smoker more than the healthy person.

I agree with everything but the "not semi-socialized" statement. It is half socialized, half corporatism with the worst of both worlds. You even refer to the socialized aspects which it wouldn't have were it not semi-socialized.
I agree with almost everything you have written. But I'll add that it can be quite a bit more complicated than "ask the price, pay it". You're right about the financial aspect. But the technical aspect can be quite muddled.

Many doctors tend to show off expertise that they do not really have. I have a dead family member to show for as an instance of doctors who are too too stupid to understand what the reports were screaming at them. My family member did get top-quality care after an emergency incident put them under the purview of a different department: the department that the initial report had already made blatantly clear. And this was at one of the best hospitals in Bangalore. I have chronic health issues, myself. I had to "shop around" until I found a doctor who was (1) aware of the current recommended treatment procedures and (2) not making grandiose claims about the success of my treatment options.

And yes, medicine here is quite wonderfully capitalistic. Most drugs are very cheap, and the penurious get "BPL cards". That's enough for most people. However, things aren't all that rosy for people with weird chronic diseases, or diseases that need the latest in therapy... like cancers, etc.

Interesting, but I want, in my lifetime, to see a more or less tax-based system that means I see my GP and pay nothing save what I'm taxed in my pay packet every fortnight. There needs to be caps on costs. Costs determined by government, not for-profit entities. In essence, health care is a basic human right. I don't mind a slight ~10% uptick in my taxes to pay for it. That 10% is still orders of magnitude less than I pay annually for health insurance, which is sinfully expensive. I'm praying Hillary Clinton, when she gets elected, will finish what she started.
> That 10% is still orders of magnitude less than I pay annually for health insurance, which is sinfully expensive.

I don't think you understand what "order of magnitude" means. You pay more than your gross salary for health insurance? If 10% is "orders of magnitude less", then you must pay at least 100%.

Also, I don't know where you are buying insurance from, but I can get insurance for about 4% of my gross salary.

Good on you, and I mean that nicely. My insurance monthly is 1/3 of my salary after taxes. Blue Cross through my employer. I tried to fall back on something from the ACA Web site, but because my employer offers insurance, I don't qualify for the better rates. Stupid rules.
> My insurance monthly is 1/3 of my salary after taxes. Blue Cross through my employer.

Uh, that 4% is if I was self-employed. I pay $35/month through my employer.

> I tried to fall back on something from the ACA Web site, but because my employer offers insurance, I don't qualify for the better rates. Stupid rules.

The price I can get insurance for through the ACA website is the same as the unsubsidized cost of what I get through my employer. I suspect that is because we are a small company that is not getting a break from Blue Cross. I honestly don't know if I am benefitting from being in Texas, but I can buy a gold plan for $350/month.

Same thing in Vietnam. A family member ended up sick so she went to the brand new, for-profit hospital. Spent 1/2 a day in the ER and the cost was $150USD.

If people can afford it, they would never step into a gov't run hospital in Vietnam.

> I think you mean how evil semi-socialized, heavily regulated medicine really is. India's medical system is as close to free market health care as I've ever encountered.

> You walk into a hospital, ask the price, pay it. If you don't like the price, you can go to a different hospital and ask them. If you have insurance, you send them the bill afterwards.

Yeah, it looks great from the perspective of rich people like yourself. It's not so great from the perspective of many of India's poor people, especially in rural areas, who cannot afford the market rate.

I'm aware that most people in India can't afford even a small portion of the things Americans take for granted. Forget medicine - what about a flush toilet or clean drinking water (let alone expensive things like cars or even two wheelers).

Poverty is an orthogonal problem.

> who cannot afford the market rate.

Any sources for that? As far as I have seen, admittedly, a fraction of the massive population, cost of healthcare is not the issue. Some of my doctors charged me rather high amounts and explained that they use it to offset the cost of treating poor people for free. Drugs are extremely cheap, and many docs give it away to the poor. India has problems with access, sanitation, hygiene, and education. As far as I have seen, "cannot afford the market rate" is not a common issue.

You would think Indians are lucky in this regard. It's actually the opposite, despite being a software developer who earned reasonably well (compared to the norm) I dread the thought of going to a good hospital. I just don't have the sort of money they ask for. I cannot even imagine what it is like for a poorer shopkeeper or factory worker. For comparison, I earned $1000/month after 6-7 years of experience. $1700 after a decade of experience and ability to program in 3-4 languages. Most jobs will earn you around $500-$600/month.

That is why in India people save money because the parents tell them from childhood that hospitalizations / accidents can cost a lot of money so better save up in case you get sick.

If you make a lac/month, surgeries of the sort I've received will be one month of income. In the US, prices will be both higher relative to income and unknown, i.e. the doctor just won't tell you.

As for saving, people in the US don't save. And they refuse to spend money on medicine - I know a woman who easily spends $10-20k/year on entertainment, but balked at spending $8k to repair her knee.

Yes! I don't know about India, but if you went to Argentina you could probably get treated for pretty much anything for that amount.

I have my own story about how shitty the US health care/insurance system is, but I've told it before.

> Great read. This just show how evil for-profit medicine really is.

To be fair, I can share an appalling story of how Canadian healthcare abused my son for more than a year, and how it wasn't until we started making plans to move to the US that we saw much better care (in the US).

Please do.
I told my story many times. I'll give the short version. My son got an initial diagnosis of autism as 18 months while living in Quebec. Despite laws stating otherwise, after a year of waiting (and being flat out lied to and dealing with gross negligence), we'd had enough and moved to the US, where we were able to start getting care faster than it took to get our stuff moved down here, all at no cost. In Canada, the wait time was over 3 years for public care, and going the private route was still a 1 1/2 year wait at a cost of $30k+ a year. In the end, I'm left with the knowledge that I trusted in the Canadian Healthcare system for over a year, and the price was putting off my son's early intervention. My younger son (also autistic) received care at 18 months, and is doing much better.

To this day, I still can't share this without getting really angry at all they did, or didn't do.

You have no idea what you are talking about. India's hospitals are run as profitable businesses. There is literally no government support. In fact, practically speaking, there is almost no government regulation period. Reputation and successful past patient experiences are the signal that consumers use to select a medical institution for care.

The American system is the one that is highly regulated and semi-socialized.

The Indian system is free to innovate as any start up can innovate. That is why American doctors are stunned when they go to a private Indian hospital and see the amount of digitization and high tech involved in Indian care.

You should watch this so you become enlightened as to how entrepreneurs in India are reducing the cost of health care, but still getting world class outcomes:

https://www.ted.com/talks/thulasiraj_ravilla_how_low_cost_ey...

"This just show how evil for-profit medicine really is. The fact that the pay is so high in the west is disturbing. "

Pay for which workers? More than Physicians are involved.

I would say that the average billing clerk in the US and the average nurse in the US and even the person who runs the mechanical systems and drive the emergency vehicles as well as any supplies (if they are sourced locally) are much much much cheaper in India than in the US.

Separately in the US I know of Indian doctors who could practice in India but fail to do so. And they have even pointed out how much "help" they could have (they actually called them "servants") if they lived over in India. Labor is much cheaper in India. This may not account for all of the price differential but running a Hospital in the US is almost certainly way more expensive than in India.

>No doctor, no matter how talented, needs to make what they do

You are blaming the wrong person.

You have no right to the free labor of others. Why should a doctor work under indentured servitude to whatever this nonprofit decides to pay him or her after over a decade of study. That's outright theft.
forca, email me? I'd like to help you out and I can probably do so. So don't hesitate. Let's talk.

I'm based in India and you haven't described your condition, but I can tell you that yes world-class healthcare is available in India and compared to US at relatively affordable prices. I would like to help you out to arrive at an objective decision.

There's no contact # or email in your profile so I can't reach you.

Her experience is the same as mine.

I've had most of my medical care over the last few years done in India. This includes LASIK (34k per eye), a selective nerve root blocker injection (8k) and a micro lumbar discectomy (85k). I expect to have a second discectomy done in the next month (being really tall sucks), provided my condition doesn't worsen and I'm able to fly.

Overall, my experience with India's medical system has been fantastic. I've found clean hospitals (not all of them!), total price was all completely transparent (+/- 10% of quoted price), and the doctors have generally been as good as in the US.

Overall, for anyone needing significant medical work done, I strongly recommend medical tourism.

Also, while you are there, have a custom suit made (particularly if you are really tall, and ordinary clothes don't fit). But be warned - I spent more on my suit than on the root blocker injection.

[edit: numbers in INR. Quick reference: 1 lac INR = 1600 USD. In spite of a few years worth of inflation, I don't expect to spend more than 2k USD on back surgery.]

[edit 2: 1 lac = 100,000.]

Are these in USD or INR?
(comment deleted)
I'm guessing INR.

43k INR = US$558

8k INR = US$131

85k INR = $1397

(per xe.net)

I love how they work out to be about what it would cost in both countries using their own currency.
I think you got your numbers backwards... 1600 IRN ~ 1 USD, right? Your way, your lasik costs about $54M..

So you can get full Lasik for ~$50USD?

1 lac(or lakh) = 100,000 So 34k INR = 34,000 INR ~ 550 USD
Looks like there's a good opportunity for medical tourism in India. Maybe it's a startup idea?
There are companies which do this. One hospital I visited has a dedicated office for medical tourists (mostly Arabs). I have no idea how useful the office is, I just went in like an Indian.

For lawsuit-related reasons, I'd avoid doing such a startup myself. The US is lawsuit happy - a purely India-based operation would have a competitive advantage over me.

> For lawsuit-related reasons, I'd avoid doing such a startup myself.

Of course, I think this is an idea that Indian based startups can pursue.

If anyone in Pune is interested, I'll be there in October and will be happy to offer free advice (worth every rupee) on handling the US side.
I'd love to pick your brains about this. Have sent you an email. Thanks.
Awhile back I was struck by the sprawling medical campus at my University (in the US). First I passed by the original hospital, a large six story structure. Then I passed the new Children's hospital, an even larger building. Finally I walked by the latest building under construction - a twelve story behemoth spread over several city blocks.

It seems that every few years a new building is added, and each one is bigger than the last. Something about the pattern felt vaguely familiar. What I asked myself also exhibits unrestrained exponential growth like the pattern of construction that I saw - then I realized the answer. A tumor!

People are voting you down, but you make a great point.

It's especially apropos when you realize that many US states have massive gluts in hospital beds and more and more procedures that once required hospitalization are now outpatient, and private insurance makes it punitive in most cases to stay in a hospital for any length of time.

The money for these building binges is mostly from Medicare, which still allows hospitalization in more cases. The fact hospitals have sufficient funds to constantly build massive facilities is a signal that they are making too much money on Medicare. Particularly disturbing when you consider that Medicare is effectively a price floor for medical services.

I voted you up. What you say is disturbing and true. American medicine treats the symptoms and intentionally strings people along rather than cure the underlying cause. There is no profit in curing cancer -- only in the treatments. I'm convinced of this after having a few people I dearly loved die in the American medical system. We need more of a system whereby our taxes are used solely for the good of the people -- to improve our lives. It's sad, really. As much money as the US has, we could have the highest standard of living on the planet, but we're nowhere near that because of greed on the parts of tax-dodging corporations, greedy capitalists, and a whole host of other reasons.
If this is in California, they are probably replacing the old hospital for earthquake safety reasons.
But India is 24 hrs away by flight. If there was a list of countries with the flight duration and cost of medical care, what countries would lie on the Pareto front? What if you sorted by a "$-hr" metric?
You hear good things about Thailand and some South American countries.
We should still consider the fact that the author has a husband who's a doctor, and has family from India and is herself from India. Not sure if the costs would be the same if someone who hadn't been to India in a while or had no family were to go to seek treatment. Someone could easily take advantage of you and you'd hardly have any recourse.
I have no relatives in medicine (my sister trained as an EMT, but doesn't work as such), I'm not from India and have no family there. They've been pretty straightforward with me. The price they give me comes out of the same price list as the price they give to everyone else.

Also, if they rob you it's still a great deal. Do you really care a lot whether you spend $1k or $2k on surgery?

I haggle with autowallahs on principle, not because I care about paying 30rs extra.

(comment deleted)
India also has a parallel subsidized healthcare system of Government-operated hospitals, in which you can receive treatment at much lower costs, or often, for free. (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Public_hospital#India)

However, the waiting lines for everything from a basic consultation to an actual procedure are much longer, and the standard of care seems to be lesser, so a lot of people from the middle and upper classes avoid them.

[Edit: parent comment seems to have been deleted, it mentioned the average figure for Indian per capita income, and asked whether most Indians could afford a procedure like this.]

The government hospital can be poorly run and unsanitary and most people who can afford it go to private ones. I guess still better than nothing.
That may be so, but the skill level is the same, and the equipment is the same, if not similar.

So if the fundamental quality of care is the same, what explains the insane markup? Salaries? I doubt it.

The $47,000 was the average cost for the angiography so just finding out what was wrong with the heart -- that was what cost her $254 in India. Not a pleasant sounding procedure, involving sticking a giant needle through your forearm, guiding it up to the heart and injecting some contrast fluid so you can see what's going on the heart (still better than open heart surgery though).

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Angiography

I take back what I said after more thought and reading other comments.

If you cant even reliably get a quote on a procedure then there are much bigger issues at hand beside the patients charges.

I recently wrote on my blog about the cost of having a benign mole removed. I got so angry when I heard the cost of that simple procedure that I went online and calculated the cost to do it in Colombia, where I have some family. Long story short, I estimated that it would be 34% cheaper to fly to Colombia, have the same procedure done, and have a full week's vacation (at hostel rates, which is how I travel). Everything, including airfare and a full week of food and lodging, for 34% less than just the procedure in America!

The best part is that I guesstimated the cost of the procedure in Colombia. But even if I tripled my guesstimate, it would still be cheaper to fly!

For time-insensitive or elective procedures, you can and should go abroad. The real cruelty is people who don't have a choice--emergency situations, cancers, etc. They're trapped in our hideous system and often have to choose between their life savings and a lifetime of debt, and dying.

Our American approach to healthcare disgusts me. Every time I think about it I get filled with rage.

If you can shop around in the US for something like that it can matter too. To correct my son's tongue tie the first ENT would have been over $1500 out of pocket, including anesthesia. The second one did it in his office as part of another appointment we had related to his hearing, total out of pocket $50.

IMO, The biggest problem is really lack of transparency for this stuff. If a hospital takes government money (and pretty much every one of them does), it should be required to publish its rates like a utility does.

The more they deal with insured patients, the less ready they will be to give you quotes. I was trying to find a news story of someone calling around to get price quotes on procedures and many places just immediately hung up at the question.
Coming from India, I have really come to hate the medical system here in the US. There are countless times I have been screwed over by the lack of transparency in cost and the layer of bureaucracy and BS imposed by having to deal with an insurance company rather than __the doctor/hospital who treated me__!!

It has been a few months since I have seen a doctor, but I still receive some new goddamn bill every other day. They are usually cryptic and leave me wondering what the hell they are for, and why they were not just presented to me on the day of the test. Don't even bother asking anyone what a procedure costs. Hospital staff will redirect you to someone who deals exclusively with insurance (completely unnecessary if we just had simple bills like any other transaction FFS), and the insurance people don't have enough specifics to ever really give you an answer, not to mention the time it will take waiting on hold etc. When you are getting multiple procedures, its just not worth the time. So you are practically forced to go in completely blind about potential costs.

To top it all off, my insurance coverage has expired as I recently graduated. So my options are to either pay $600 for 30 days of medicine that I need, or get the exact same medicine shipped to me from India, for $10-$20. They produce it by the millions in blister packs. This should not be so difficult! If we just had realistic prices in the first place instead of inflating them and bringing them down with insurance, this crap would not happen.

And don't even get me started on "pre-existing conditions". What that means for me is constantly lying to doctors and being unable to give them a complete medical history - otherwise I'll have f* "pre-existing condition" stamped on my head and never get sane rates again.

I fail to see why health care is not treated more like a series of simple business transactions in an economic system instead of this colossal mess.

/rant

> And don't even get me started on "pre-existing conditions".

First, I would delete the sentence after this if I were you, since it could come back to haunt you legally[0].

Second, unless things are different for foreigners in the US (which AFAIK is not the case), this is not how pre-existing conditions actually work (anymore), post-ACA.

[0] (I am not a lawyer, I am not your lawyer, and this is not legal advice.)

> So you are practically forced to go in completely blind about potential costs.

This (price transparency) is actually the real problem more than the sticker prices themselves.

If patients had the ability to know expected prices beforehand, market forces would work to bring prices down. As it stands, we have a very awkward situation in which insurers compete to keep premiums down to attract customers, and therefore negotiate lower prices with providers, but patients are completely blind to this entire process and are unable to "vote with their wallets", because the prices that patients pay and the prices that insurers pay are not always directly linked in practice.

"If patients had the ability to know expected prices beforehand, market forces would work to bring prices down."

If patients knew to ask. Really. If you are covered by insurance (including medicare/tri-care/etc) you won't get an answer. But if you are paying out of pocket (and most hospitals require credit if you are doing something serious - like open heart)you can negotiate the price.

Let me say again, the hospital will negotiate. The doctors and labs (not done in the hospital) are another matter.

Also, if you see an aspirin on your bill costing $75 you need to call. You'd be surprised how effective this is. Most Americans never question the price of anything. Even cars these days people take at face value.

Of course, if you in the ER with chest pain, I'll admit, the last thing on your mind is the bill. And the hospitals know that.

So what's the lesson here? In America have insurance. Even if you are 20 years old. A simple care wreck can destroy you financially. You think student loans are bad? Try a drug overdose. Or a heart attack. Or a fractured back ( a car wreck). If you young, insurance is cheap. Dirt cheap.

I haven't had much success getting prices when I had a high deductible insurance. Most doctors won't tell you anything or they will quote you one price today and 5 times as much tomorrow. You certainly won't get a binding quote you can plan with.
Price transparency is the one thing I would have liked to see from ObamaCare. They should have mandated to open up all pricing and all quality numbers. It's possible that some people would misinterpret these numbers but right now you are in that crazy situation where you have to make decisions based on no data at all.

With open pricing and data a market based health system might work. Maybe.

In Canada, a significant amount of medical procedures (possibly all of them?) have pre-set prices. A visit to a doctor's office costs X. A hospital visit costs X. There's no 'how much might you charge for this procedure tomorrow?'

Of course, Canadians don't pay out of pocket for the vast majority of insurance things, but it even extends to other non-covered services like RMTs, dentistry, etc. Private insurance may not cover some specific things (like white fillings on molar teeth), but you never have to wonder what the prices are or how much you'll end up paying if you say yes.

As far as I understand the insurance companies also negotiate pr-set prices with hospitals and doctors. But if you pay yourself they just make up prices and you don't know how much the insurance companies are paying so it's hard to negotiate. and even if they give an estimate it's not binding.
> If patients had the ability to know expected prices beforehand, market forces would work to bring prices down.

This would only really work if it were legal for hospitals to compete on price and for better/cheaper hospitals to expand and capture extra business thereby driving worse/pricier ones out of business. Which it's not. In any other industry if local providers provide crappy service at ludicrous prices you can open a competing service across the street and steal all their customers. And companies do just that - you get competing gas stations and competing burger joints right across the corner or across the street or just down the street. But hospitals generally need to PROVE their entry to the market WON'T harm the existing players, or they aren't allowed to open or expand facilities. Which means no price competition, no price wars...and no transparent pricing.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Certificate_of_need

> It has been a few months since I have seen a doctor, but I still receive some new goddamn bill every other day.

I went to a single visit to a hospital once and after the treatment, I got 4 different bills. I was amused why I was getting bills from places I had no idea about. Then I realized each entity had a different billing department - the hospital's bill, the doctor's bill, the tester's bill, etc. all related to the single visit to the same hospital.

I had to call each of the 4 departments and deal with insurance. It was a nightmare!

It's not always like that. There are insurers like Kaiser that are vertically integrated that make the whole experience much smoother. At my last checkup, my doctor gave he an immunization, ordered blood tests and prescribed medication. The blood tests and pharmacy were both in the same building, so I just had to make two stops on my way out of the building that took an extra ~15 minutes. The immunization and checkup were covered by my insurance and I paid my copay for the blood work and prescription up-front just before having my blood taken and getting my medication. It was all very affordable, quick and easy and I never saw a total bill. I only got a receipt for my copay.

I've never needed any major health care from them, but I have a parent that has had both hips and a shoulder replaced with Kaiser who had a similarly simple experience.

I'm generally not in favor of single-payer, but take this as an argument against my position.

My mom had some big treatments last year. My dad is a probably-undiagnosed-autistic guy who loves spreadsheets. He set up a spreadsheet for every single visit, correlating exactly how much was paid, exactly how much insurance (including Medicare) paid, and when each provider was marking the bills as paid.

He's retired, so this was his full-time hobby.

He still got continuously yanked around by every single provider, some claiming paid in full (which my dad filed dutifully in a binder) and then later asking for more money.

It's a freaking mess.

So why doesn't this make you generally in favor of single-payer?
Given the choice between two systems[1], I can prefer one and still see the tradeoffs each has.

[1] Of course there are more than 2 choices.

It is unrealistic on how a sponge in surgery costs $45 or a set of 3 small towels (x2) costs $380.

Also, the optimizations in health care over the last couple decades actually have gotten it to cost more overall, mostly due to processing overheads and bureaucracy.

When it comes to getting multiple bills, part of that has to do with their standards with insurance agencies. Usually you have CPT (R) codes, HCPCS, ICD codes and so on (at least in the US, international places do not use CPT often.)

There is professional billing, which generally involves physicians or specialists time and expertise. While hospital billing involves staffing, reduction of capacity (like taking up a room or a bed), and all supplies, materials, and labs performed while admitted.

Another thing that is standard in the industry is that it actually costs more to consult someone than to refer a patient to them. Part of this has come due to insurance agencies being more supportive of consulting which means that the specialist can benefit more patients with less responsibility transfer and time.

Keep in mind that hospital "costs" are largely fictional. When the bill says $45 for a sponge, the insurance company has negotiated a much lower rate for the whole procedure, and if you go to the hospital and say "I'm a cash patient", they'll typically also give you a substantial discount (though probably not as low as the insurance company gets, and only if you're able to pay the whole amount right away).

As far as I can tell, the inflated prices (that almost no one pays) are mostly just so the hospital can report how much they're "losing" treating uninsured patients who can't pay.

> As far as I can tell, the inflated prices (that almost no one pays) are mostly just so the hospital can report how much they're "losing" treating uninsured patients who can't pay.

Actually, it's because they lose money (on average) on patients on public insurance (Medicare[0] and Medicaid patients), so they need to charge private insurers more to cover the gap[1].

Insurers negotiate "discounted" rates with certain "preferred" hospitals in exchange for sending them more volume, but in this case "discounted" means "still overpriced, but closer to the actual marginal cost". The other private insurers still pay the exorbitant rates.

This is why hospitals are completely willing to lower your bill if you are uninsured and paying cash if you ask - they don't care about the money they're getting from you; they care about the money they're getting from the private insurers. The amount of money they make off of patients who are uninsured and paying out of pocket is negligible in this calculus.

Many hospitals are not at all secretive about this; executives talk about this pricing model fairly openly.

[0] For simplicity, I'm ignoring Medicare Advantage plans here.

[1] The ratio of this is HIGHLY dependent on the patient demographics of the particular hospital, but the general trend holds throughout.

Often private insurers will say "We will pay 1XX% of what Medicare pays" and the like, though not across the board. Generally from procedure to procedure.
Here in the UK Accenture billed £10bn to the NHS for a computer system that didn't work and had to be scrapped.

The entire healthcare industry, in every country, is full of people who love to play fast and loose with other peoples money.

You're confusing the healthcare industry with government in general. As soon as you get a government contract it's a license to print money.
Healthcare software does need to be high quality to ensure patients get the best care possible.

But that doesn't mean that people play fast and loose within the healthcare industry.

Sure, the VA [1] spent so many resources (an unrealistic amount..) on a single component, namely scheduling, that people can easily think this on top of the already existing costs.

Wasn't there a post at one point about how working at microsoft was like being on antidepressants? It's probably a magnitude more than that at the government.

[1]: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Veterans_Health_Administration_...

I don't disagree with your rant, but Obamacare eliminated all the pre-existing conditions clauses.
> And don't even get me started on "pre-existing conditions". What that means for me is constantly lying to doctors

I don't know if it's a good idea. I have a related anecdote: My mother forgot (or omitted) to mention a pre-existing condition when she contracted a mortgage insurance. She died a few years later from causes totally unrelated to the pre-existing condition. Somehow, the insurance company found out and legally canceled the insurance.

Sorry for your loss.

I don't really know how all that works but just curious - is it documented / can they prove that the pre-existing condition wasn't mentioned at that time? Sounds pretty convenient for the insurance company to purposely "forget" something like this and then abuse that information when the time comes since, unfortunately, the person who could argue it is no longer alive.

In that case, it was pretty clear. She had to answer a questionary so yes it was documented. And the contract stipulated very clearly that in case of mistake or omission the contract would be void. I can't really blame the insurance company even though it seemed unfair at the time.
I feel like there is a lot of beating the dead horse with this issue.

Is there (holding the jingoistic flag wavers aside) any real disagreement on the conclusion that the US healthcare system is terrible for the average user - such that we need continual reminder?

Didn't the whole ACA debate prove that yes, we get it it's broken and there is major popular support for changes, even if the actual changes made were not themselves popular by a plurality?

Everyone agrees that it needs to change.

There is little agreement on how to change it. Most proposed changes are "let's gore the other side's ox."

> There is little agreement on how to change it.

That's because, generally speaking, the more collectivist proposals rely on evidence from the many, many countries that pay less for healthcare per-capita and get better outcomes, while the side that feels a more lassaiz-faire approach are relying on an essentialy religious position.

The former group also ignores countries like India and Singapore, and pretend that there is just one kind of health-care system everyone else uses, sometimes calling vaguely calling it "single-payer." People like Ezra Klein desperately try to correct these people, to no avail.

And after all, why should they care to learn the facts? All they need is enough buzzwords to call the other side stupid on message boards, and they are perfectly happy.

I believe that one of the reasons why discussions around the US healthcare debate do not bring any plausible alternatives is because the /real/ solutions would comprise something like socialization of medicine (like Norway, Canada, or other developed countries) which is something that the American culture is against in its deepest roots.

This is comparable to the discussion we have here in Mexico about Oil, which is also a very touchy issue because culturally, in Mexico we have always been taught that Mexico´s oil is Mexicans property, and that any attempt to privatize some of its processes would mean to "sell the Fatherland/country" to evil transnational companies. Thus, given this premise, it is almost impossible to have a "grown up" discussion about how to fix the problems related to energy.

Had a similar case with someone in Nicaragua. The procedure (including diagnosis, medication etc) was $3,000 there whereas it would have been at least $30,000 in the US. I think it goes well beyond cost of living comparisons, because most things there cost perhaps 2-4 times less than here. Even if we factor in that per-capita medical costs in the US are roughly double the rest of the developed world ($6,000 vs $3,000) there is still another multiplier of perhaps 2-3x for procedures.

I’m becoming more convinced every day that the US has become a two-tier society. I (and many of my friends) have had some very lean years, earning perhaps $7-15,000 and surviving. During those times, saving even $3,000 was next to impossible, because we were already $5, $10, $20,000 in debt or more. Multiply that by 10 and it’s effectively out of reach for, I don’t know, 90% of the country. The standard deductible (which is looking like it’s going to be about $6,000 under Obamacare) will often mean the loss of a home, vehicle, or college savings, especially for chronic conditions.

Meanwhile the people who determine these rates (doctors, hospitals, medical supply companies, insurance agencies) enjoy comfortable incomes of $50, $100, $250,000 or more. I don’t think they are capable of setting rates ethically. Throw in the fact that aging people are desperate and will basically pay anything to live longer, and it’s an unavoidable conflict of interest.

I think the simplest solution to all of this (and probably the most controversial) is to decouple medical research from practice. Ban all medicine-related patents. Create low interest government matching funds for the loans provided by supply companies to dentists and other independent practitioners. Remove the regulations that prop up monopolists and rent seekers. Start reducing the administrative layer that adds so much cost but so little quality of care. Then protect doctors from frivolous lawsuits with a bond system like plumbers and electricians use for catastrophic accidents so they can perform the procedures they feel are needed instead of the ones deemed “safest” or most profitable. Go after the true medical costs, the Erin Brockovich type of coverups that cost the economy billions. And especially go after the sources of illness - radiation from burning coal, carcinogens released by fracking, a hamstrung FDA that doesn’t have the resources to test interactions between thousands of household chemicals, carcinogenic herbicides and pesticides used on genetically modified food, and so on.

I’ve heard the standard arguments about how all of this might disincentivize medical research but I don’t buy them. The system we have now rewards treatments more than cures, as evidenced by big pharma ads on TV for irritable-whatever. If we really want to start over, we need to go back to pre-Nixon, before HMOs and profit-driven care. We need to spend substantially more on medical research than we do now (rather than practice), through universities and big-data approaches where biologists and chemists can run simulations and avoid human trials. Dump the current grant system and make funding far more accessible so researching don’t spend all of their time fundraising.

If we do all of this, we may just have a shot at cracking the underlying mechanisms that cause illness, basically map every virus and bacteria, the mechanisms through which genes control proteins, how we age and repair damage, etc etc. We should be growing replacement organs by now. We should have cured chronic conditions like diabetes and arthritis years ago and gotten cures for allergies, asthma and autism for free since similar pathways are at work. Right now we are doing little to no prevention, charging just enough to keep people from going to the doctor at early stages of illness, and then charging an arm and a leg for the medical equivalent of disaster cleanup. It’s really quite remarkable, and sad.

Generally agree, but a couple quibbles:

> protect doctors from frivolous lawsuits with a bond system

Malpractice suits only make something like 1% of healthcare costs, and malpractice insurance is already everywhere.

> big-data approaches where biologists and chemists can run simulations and avoid human trials

We don't know enough about the human body to be able to accurately do this. Might help for initial tests (and already does, I'd imagine), but you still always need clinical trials.

I don't know the degree of it, but malpractice suits and insurance are only going to be a portion of the costs that frivolous lawsuits incur. Costs would also arise from running tests to strengthen a legal defense rather than for medical reasons, and those numbers are going to be harder to pull out.
"We don't know enough about the human body to be able to accurately do this. Might help for initial tests (and already does, I'd imagine), but you still always need clinical trials."

Trials are expensive per successful drug less because individual trials cost a lot, and more because you're dividing a non-insignificant cost by a low rate of success. If simulations let you avoid 10% of unnecessary trials, that's a substantial savings.

(Which means that the pharmaceutical companies are probably already working very hard at this...)

Malpractice suits only make something like 1% of healthcare costs, and malpractice insurance is already everywhere.

This isn't measuring the right thing. Pretend that some lawyers managed to win a case locally that the "standard of care" for a shoulder injury was an MRI, even through there is no medical reason, because a bunch of doctors in one hospital did it for whatever reason.

Now all the doctors in town rapidly move to MRI'ing every shoulder injury so they don't get sued. This doesn't show up in the malpractice premium numbers.

"Standard of care" is strictly a one-way ratchet. If enough doctors in your town/county/field do something, you have to do it, too. You can have comparative results research as long as your arm showing it has no benefit (and even creates slight radiation risks) and it won't do you any good. "Standard of care" is the legal term of art, and it always increases, never decreases.

Two more pieces of evidence that lawsuits matter [1]

1. Vaccine manufacturers were going to stop making vaccines because the lawsuit risk was getting too high. (Vaccines do have risks, although minor.) The vaccine courts were set up and everyone seems pretty happy with it.

2. Hillary Clinton's health care plan from 1993 had a whole bunch of tort reform. This is not because the Clintons hated trial lawyers! But they didn't want the courts to be the ultimate arbiters of how much medical care someone should get. You would not be allowed to sue for malpractice without first going through an arbitration process.

[1] I'm not blaming everything on lawsuits. But you couldn't run an NHS-like system privately in the US.

This reminds me of the case of a friend (who is from India) who went on vacation to India. There, something went wrong and he suffered a herniated disk in his back. He immediately went to the hospital. They took an MRI, and advised surgery. He underwent the surgery, and then had a 1 month stay at home with a nurse in attendance. Total cost came to about 200,000 rupees (about $4000).

He came back to the US and then told the insurance company what had happened. (He didn't know he had to inform the company when it happened). They balked at paying his expenses, and came up with all sorts of excuses. Then he told them the cost: $4000. The person he was talking to told him was shocked, saying just an MRI here would have cost them more. They asked him to get an post-surgery evaluation done by his primary physician, and paid the bill no questions asked.

I was traveling through India with my sister, and she got terrible food poisoning. I put her in a private hospital, where she was given incredible service and recovered within a four days. The hospital bill was only 8000 rupees, or ~$150. My sister told me of one nurse who gave her exceptional care, so I tried to give that nurse a 5000 rupee ($100) tip. Without a moment of hesitation, she flat-out refused. Her response brought tears to my eyes -

"Sir, this is my duty. There are poor people right outside, your money would really help them."

As I talked to my relatives about what I experienced, I learned that Indian medical staff see their job as their dharma (duty), a belief that stems from their medical training and originally from the Bhagavad Gita, a religious text that is central to Hinduism. If I had to state a particular reason for the quality of Indian medical treatment, that's what it would be - that they consider their jobs a sacred duty. When someone truly believes that their job is a sacred duty, they will do it with a passion that cannot be artificially reproduced by a huge salary or per-patient compensation.

The sentiment that teaching and medical practice are noble professions is widespread in India. Both these professions command a lot of respect in society.
Maybe I should retire there and teach. If the pay is at least enough to be comfortable, I can make up the rest in respect.
It is also because being a doctor is considered high status in India. Higher than lawyers, businessmen, engineers. Also they also command a high income. So what you did of offering a tip is more of an insult.
S/he tried to tip the nurse.
>>Higher than lawyers, businessmen, engineers.

This was true at one point in time. May be around 2 decades back. But engineering has gotten very lucrative due to the IT boom, overall growth in economy and general demand for engineers in a high growth environment.

Also engineering has a lower barrier to entry and pays better than what many physicians make these days. To make anything decent as a doctor you have to do your MD, which is expensive both in terms of investment of time and money. And even after that, the job at the hospital won't pay you anything close to what your average engineer at a MNC would get paid.

And then don't forget the fact that many engineers can make money through side projects, freelancing and take adhoc risks like doing start ups which isn't even an option to most doctors.

I am from India, and this is definitely something that happens very often. Doctors are very high in the respect scale.

Pinch of salt, don't be fooled into thinking there are no doctors out to make money, etc. A 5000 Rupee tip is humongous. It's probably what she makes every month. If you had offered Rs 500 instead, she'd have likely taken it happily.

5000 Rupee (or 63EUR) per month for nurse? If this is close to true, I really feel for them. They work just as hard as the doctors, some even more so.
How do you think prices can be so low, besides not paying for R+D?
American prices are not high because they pay for R+D. For the medicines, maybe. I'm epileptic, and the equipment that was used for my treatment in India was consistently better than the one my neurologist used for examination when I moved here.

Essential drugs are cheap because of not paying for R+D, plus government subsidies.

> Essential drugs are cheap because of not paying for R+D

Not sure I'd agree there. In the west, even mundane drugs that don't need all that R&D, like common painkillers, antibiotics, vitamins, etc. are expensive. I think the issue in the west stems from regulations that make it difficult for new players to penetrate the market, even for generics. Running a cartel becomes easier that way.

Compare [1] and [2].

[1] http://www.walgreens.com/store/c/tylenol/ID=957-brand

[2] http://www.medindia.net/drug-price/acetaminophen/crocin-500m...

A medication that I take daily costs about $35 per month after insurance covers part of it. I get a years supply from India for ~ $11. The identical pill.
There seem to be quite a few of us chronics on this thread! My own meds cost about US-1200$ and IN-100$, per month. But I find it understandable in my own case... the drug is new, and the patent is nowhere near expiring.

In case you were telling me the price because you thought I disagreed that it's cheaper in India, I don't. My point was R&D cost is not the reason why common drugs are cheaper.

Hey, I meant essential drugs in India! Sorry for the confusion.

Also, the term I should have used was "Life saving drugs". An example would be Sorbitrate (http://www.everydayhealth.com/drugs/sorbitrate). Crocin is not something that falls in that category in India.

I'm afraid I don't get your point. Isosorbide dinitride costs about US-35$-75$ [1] and IN-0.4$ [2], about 100 tablets in both cases. The patent was published in 1979, so it should have long expired by now, and would be a generic drug[3]. Whatever the German company spent on R&D would have been recovered before the patent expired.

[1] http://www.goodrx.com/isosorbide-dinitrate

[2] http://medlineindia.com/cardiovascular/isosorbide_dinitrate....

[3] http://www.google.com/patents/US4156736

My point is somewhat similar to yours. R+D is only one reason pushing drug prices up. But some life saving drugs are cheaper in India because the government subsidizes their cost, which doesn't happen in the US.
Prices aren't low. They are actually pretty much high for an ordinary Indian. They appear low to you because if you pay in dollars you get 60 rupees for ever dollar.

So its the currency conversion factor is what makes it look low.

I might be slightly off. But not by more than 1.5 - 2 times. It's not a really bad salary, I agree it's not awesome either.
Yes. Doctors are next to God in India. A doctor in village will have invitation to every marriage and major ceremony. Cops wont give ticket the doctor they know and politicians will fear laying their figure on the doctor in the village.

Being polytheists Indians have a God of medicine too. He is called "Dhanvantari" a man with a pot of potion of immortality. I have seen his life size statue in many private Hospitals.

Nice to hear that you had a good experience here in India. But don't get too excited yet.

Medical industry is only lucrative to foreigners coming to India because of the foreign exchange factor. Otherwise its the same this there too. Not the kind of Insurance company mess I hear happening in the US through folks on this forum, but there similar things here too.

To start with most doctors will write down a series of tests even if they are dead sure of what the problem is. These even include stuff like viral fever, common cold. People fall for it because dengue and typhoid has been always been for a while here. We have a famous test called 'basin test'- basically it means collecting the patients blood and draining it in the basin, because every one is so sure that the patient has no issues there is hardly any point wasting time and resources testing.

Doctors purposefully prolonging treatments to keep the consultation fees coming is pretty common. Most physicians close to your home, where you would generally go have a deal with a the nearest pharmacy for commissions in exchange for writing down drugs which are only available in the pharmacy. Same works for writing down tests. Although these days 'polyclinics' are getting pretty common, the doctor will generally have a small test lab at the clinic and will to makes some money through that too. I even know doctors who run diabetic camps, thyroid camps and obesity camps and what not just to get patients to clinics because drug companies want some free marketing and trap more patients to believe they have some disease which they don't.

Medical education is expensive in India. Sure you will get respect but even for an ordinary Indian, overall tuition and capitation fees means the only way for them to recover their investment is through either cheating or dowry.

The bigger problems like are a little different, but even there mishandling of cases and purpose full wrong treatment to pump up the hospital bills is pretty common.

Its the same everywhere. Its about greed, people in US and India are no different. Greed works the same way in US the way it works in India.

When he was born, my son had cardiac surgery. Had another one 4 months later and a catheter later on. The two surgeries were done by one of the top 10 surgeons in the world. All in all, he was 6 weeks in the hospital. He's now in very good health. Since we live in Canada, it costs us nothing except the parking at the hospital (about $120 total with a pass) and the lost work time.
Free as it ought to be -- payed for out of yours and everyone's taxes. Parking should have been free, to be honest. Nothing I hate more than seeing basic services turned into money-making opportunities for the shady.
Since Canada doesn't spend trillions in wars and bailing out banks, they can afford to provide healthcare to it's citizens.
Wow. Simple, yet profoundly true.
Actually, Canada pays less on a per citizen basis than the US does on it's health care. America can still have it's wars, bank bailouts and health care, if they weren't politically gridlocked with the issue.
Do you know how much it would have cost in the US? More than $1.5MM is the estimate I got. If you were to pay here as a non Canadian. About $200-300K. The missing $1MM, where is it going and where is it coming from? Everything is relative when you say everyone pay because of taxes. I would from you salary and insurance. At the end of the day, who's paying more? I don't know. But I'll tell you something: in the States, our choice would have been an late and illegal abortion or a bankruptcy. Today, we have a marvellous son that our society decided we should protect at all cost.
Sounds similar to the German medical services available for children. My son needed surgery on his ptosis that is becoming a problem for his vision. After making seeing the doctor at the UniKlinik in Cologne, he was booked in for operation in two weeks time. The operation took place and was in hospital for about 1 week. My wife stayed with him for that whole week in the hospital.

Total cost for this procedure was zero. I did not have to deal the insurance at all, the UniKlinik handled all the paperwork.

We were considering having the same operation in Australia prior to relocating to Germany. It would have cost at least $2500 and months of waiting.

Thank you for sharing. Not only cost is important but people seem to forget about waiting times, the silent killer.
I moved to US last year, and figured the healthcare system in US is the biggest train wreck. It is not only super expensive, but also super complicated. You have to jump through many hoops likes insurance, appointment waiting list, mail order pharmacies (who always mess up your order), pre-existing conditions etc.

We were denied treatment by our insurance because of pre-existing conditions. Thankfully, Obamacare fixed it and we began to receive healthcare in 2014.

The prices of healthcare are artificially inflated so high so that it is not affordable for most Americans, so they can be forced into the bizarre health insurance system. This system only makes healthcare even more expensive due to administrative costs and make it complicated for everyone. There should be no place for a middleman in healthcare.

I recently went to see a doctor for a non-serious problem, and here is how it worked out.

Steps to get medical care in US:

1) Call a specialist's office for appointment, and you will usually get a wait list of 3 to 6 months.

2) After months of wait, you get to see the doctor who will diagnose you.

3) Doctor sends in your prescription to your mail order pharmacy.

4) Pharmacy messes up your order; it could be incorrect dosage, pre-authorization, incorrect billing etc.

5) Your medication is delivered to you after few days, sometimes it can even take weeks.

6) You get bills, which could be 10x higher than what you were expecting. Your insurance company provides no explanation of the mysterious charges.

Costs: $50 co-pay, $450 for prescription.

Insurance claims: $700 specialist, $2750 prescription.

Here's how it works in India:

1) Call into doctor's office, you will usually get appointment for same day or next day. You can even walk in without appointment.

2) The doctor diagnoses you, and write a prescription.

3) You take that prescription to any pharmacy, and buy the medications.

Costs: $10 to $20 fee for specialist, and $20 for prescription.

No Insurance required

Edit: I've compared prices of various medications in US and India. Most of the medications in US cost 10x to 20x more than India.

> 1) Call a specialist's office for appointment, and you will usually get a wait list of 3 to 6 months.

In the past year I have seen both a dermatologist and an orthopedist for the first time. I never had to wait more than a week.

> 3) Doctor sends in your prescription to your mail order pharmacy.

Mine have always gone to the local pharmacy of my choice. Same for my wife.

> 5) You get bills, which could be 10x higher than what you were expecting. Your insurance company provides no explanation of the mysterious charges.

I rarely get bills after the fact, but they always itemize and explain the charges. I also get statements showing what my insurance company paid.

> In the past year I have seen both a dermatologist and an orthopedist for the first time. I never had to wait more than a week.

Appointment times vary by type of specialist, location and luck. I've never got any specialist's appointment before a month here in New York.

> Mine have always gone to the local pharmacy of my choice. Same for my wife.

I tried sending the prescription to local CVS pharmacy. CVS said that my insurance only approved medication for 1 month, while my prescription was for 3 months. Moreover, they were charging me 4x copay than the mail-order pharmacy that works with my insurance company. I guess this is another tactic of my insurance company to maximize their profit by forcing us to buy medication from their partner pharmacy.

> I rarely get bills after the fact, but they always itemize and explain the charges. I also get statements showing what my insurance company paid.

My Insurance company's partner pharmacy keeps charging me random amounts for same mediation. I've been getting few medications for $37 each since past 6 months, but now they suddenly starting charging me $185 each for the same medications without any explanation. I could buy the same medications in India for less than $10 each.

In bay area it took me 2 weeks to get appointment of a podiatrist and 1 month to get a general physician.
Similar in Canada:

1) Call doctor or drop by an evening clinic to see the on call doctor (who could be your doctor)

2) Doctor diagnoses you, write prescription

3) The pharmacy is usually in the same building

All that is free except the prescription that's what gets you here if you don't have private insurance but universal pharmacare is supposedly something the government is considering.

And specialists are hard to contact since you have to be referred to them by your family doctor if you have a family doctor. My last doctor who passed away had 7,000 patients he cared for he'd have to see three or four people every hour every day.

i am an indian living in the US for more than 10 years. Costs are cheaper in India and the big hospitals usually have good quality care. The problem is what happens when you have complications or side effects. In the US, you can sue the hospital/doctor and expect to get paid. You can't do that in India (cases drag on for decades).
Americans are most money hungry people I have encountered in my life. Seriously. Every single opportunity, heck ,even life and death is seen through money. I lived in Europe, South Asia and US. Europe is sort of similar but much better. I had came to US in 2004 on H1-B. People will literally say H1-Bs are reason they are out of job. Well, that's not true in many cases. Even if it was, what about hundred and thousands of lives saved by Indian Medical facilities ? Every time I go to home ( India) I see thousands of people coming to India ; many for medical tourism.

Also, FUCK this author for publishing costs. Next time think about poor people back home before going fucking social over it.

Because lots of people from fucking US and Europe are coming to India for medical tourism cost to treat people at home are skyrocketing. You motherfucking bastards count it in dollars and think , well fuck its just 3K , look how cool and cheap treatment it. Point is , it is 150000 for Indians at home. A well round software engineer earns between 600000 to 800000 after 3 or 4 years. Because now many hospitals know that foreigners are fucking bastards tipping and lavishing them with money they refuse to offer same level of treatment at home. So disease created by US of money hunger ( hmmm hmmm capitalistic fuckers ) is spreading in India fast , very fast. Fuck everyone taking advantage of our not-so-low-cost medical care with your fucking dollars.

When two parties mutually agree on some deal they both feel satisfied and have incentives to make each other happy. When the government decides what is the "interest" of one party and steps in to "protect that interest", very likely it will end up pissing off one party which eventually loses interest in any kind of innovation.

US has achieved the rare distinction of screwing up both the parties in case of healthcare.

Indian government in reality has even more laws and nonsense but it is too incompetent to implement any of those laws. This mostly leaves the things in a Laissez-faire situation. Like it happens in any Laissez-faire situation the third parties see too many problems but the people who are actually affected are more than happy because they are a better judge of their situation.

In my village in India, we have only 1 doctor. This doctor is a homeopathic doctor who even today charges Rs 10 ( $0.16) per visit. He spends less than 5 minutes per patient and his treatment is allopathic. He moved from a distant city to this village purely because homeopathic doctor giving allopathic medicine is illegal.

Over last 30 odd years not only he has got rich but he is the most powerful person in the village. He is very good at his job, has saved countless lives, delivered babies, removed aching teeth and written countless death certificates. Yes, there have been cases of wrong diagnosis and side-effects too but overall he has lead to net positive benefit to the society in my village and hence is revered.

Many proper doctors tried to setup their shop in my village and have failed purely because this doctor turned out to be better than them.

In India, Indian Medical Council controls the total number of doctors in the country but for a bribe of around $2M you can easily get a license to start a medical school. Medical Schools make insane amount of money and thousands of poor people enter the hospital everyday where you can get away making mistakes because the choice before these poor people is "either get this treatment or die in your home".

Another Note: Unlike best engineers in India, best doctors in India can not migrate to US. Because of the sheer population, Indian doctors see 4x more daily patients than their American counterparts perform far too many surgeries very likely to have seen more corner cases than American doctors.

Indian doctors in average private hospitals are far more competent than average American doctors.

It is good that American government is protecting jobs of American Doctors at the expense of public health by barring entry to Indian doctors. We Indians get cheaper and better healthcare. :P

Disclaimer: I worked for a large Cancer hospital in India.