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A big health insurer is planning to punish patients for 'unnecessary' ER visits
[LA Times] Anthem is the nation’s second-largest health insurer, with thousands of medical professionals on its payroll. Yet its Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Georgia subsidiary has just informed its members that if they show up at the emergency room with a problem that later is deemed to have not been an emergency, their claim won’t be paid.

It’s a new wrinkle in the age-old problem of how to keep patients from showing up at the ER for just anything. But medical experts say the Georgia insurer is playing with fire. By requiring patients to self-diagnose at the risk of being stuck with a big bill, it may discourage even those with genuine emergencies from seeking necessary care. And it’s asking them to take on a task that often confounds even experienced doctors and nurses.

"Patients don’t come with a sticker on their forehead saying what the diagnosis is," said Renee Hsia of the Institute for Health Policy Studies at UC San Francisco, who has studied the difficulty of making snap diagnoses at the ER. "We as physicians can’t always distinguish necessary from unnecessary visits."
Posted by: Besoeker 2017-06-03
http://www.rantburg.com/poparticle.php?ID=489536