Here we go again.
Remember those UTIs I mentioned a couple weeks ago? Well, the latest one is over and done with, and I finally had my appointment with my new primary care practitioner last week. She said I should have something called an IVP, which I understand is an X-Ray of the kidneys and bladder, to make sure there's nothing funky looking going on (since I've had 4 UTIs in a 12 month period, which is apparently not normal.) She wrote me a referral for radiology and someone made the appointment for me last week. The person who made the appointment gave me the date and time (tomorrow morning at 7:45am, ugh) and location that I needed to show up at, and told me not to eat or drink anything after midnight. Okay, no problem.
This morning, I got a call from someone at the hospital that they need my insurance information to make sure I'm covered for the procedure, or else give me a quote if my insurance doesn't cover it. This was odd to me because I was just there last week for my office visit and they had all of my insurance info on file already. Anyway, the person who called left a message and I got it about an hour and a half later, and called the number back that she gave me. I got a voice mail recording and left my name and number and all that good stuff and asked her to call me back.
She never did. Two hours later I decided to try calling her back and she answered her phone, which is all well and good, but why didn't she return my call? I gave her all of my insurance info, and she said she would call them to see if they would cover the procedure. That was 45 minutes ago, and, again, I haven't heard back. Does it really take 45 minutes to talk to an insurance company about this?
I also asked her some questions about the procedure, which she couldn't answer because she's "billing not medical." That's fine, I understand. She gave me the phone# for the radiology department so I called them and asked about the procedure. The woman asked if I had filled out the prep paperwork that needs to be done. No, because no one ever gave me or even mentioned prep paperwork to me. She got really snotty with me and said, "Well, you'll have to stop in tonight and get it because it needs to be filled out before you get here in the morning." I mean, jeez, how was I supposed to know?
I'm getting pretty impatient with these people. Am I overreacting? They didn't have my insurance info on file when I'd already given it to another department of the same facility, didn't return my phone call (twice now, since I'm still waiting for the call back regarding my insurance), and didn't tell me about the prepwork, then got pissy with me when I said I didn't have it. If I hadn't called to ask, I wouldn't have known about it at all, and what would have happened tomorrow, then, when I didn't have it? I'm really considering canceling and looking for another facility; we live literally across the street from a medical center with dozens of hospitals and clinics. I picked this one at random because it was close (well, they're all close) and my insurance covered the dr I saw for the office visit last week (but my as it turns out, my insurance covers pretty much every dr anyway.)
Remember those UTIs I mentioned a couple weeks ago? Well, the latest one is over and done with, and I finally had my appointment with my new primary care practitioner last week. She said I should have something called an IVP, which I understand is an X-Ray of the kidneys and bladder, to make sure there's nothing funky looking going on (since I've had 4 UTIs in a 12 month period, which is apparently not normal.) She wrote me a referral for radiology and someone made the appointment for me last week. The person who made the appointment gave me the date and time (tomorrow morning at 7:45am, ugh) and location that I needed to show up at, and told me not to eat or drink anything after midnight. Okay, no problem.
This morning, I got a call from someone at the hospital that they need my insurance information to make sure I'm covered for the procedure, or else give me a quote if my insurance doesn't cover it. This was odd to me because I was just there last week for my office visit and they had all of my insurance info on file already. Anyway, the person who called left a message and I got it about an hour and a half later, and called the number back that she gave me. I got a voice mail recording and left my name and number and all that good stuff and asked her to call me back.
She never did. Two hours later I decided to try calling her back and she answered her phone, which is all well and good, but why didn't she return my call? I gave her all of my insurance info, and she said she would call them to see if they would cover the procedure. That was 45 minutes ago, and, again, I haven't heard back. Does it really take 45 minutes to talk to an insurance company about this?
I also asked her some questions about the procedure, which she couldn't answer because she's "billing not medical." That's fine, I understand. She gave me the phone# for the radiology department so I called them and asked about the procedure. The woman asked if I had filled out the prep paperwork that needs to be done. No, because no one ever gave me or even mentioned prep paperwork to me. She got really snotty with me and said, "Well, you'll have to stop in tonight and get it because it needs to be filled out before you get here in the morning." I mean, jeez, how was I supposed to know?
I'm getting pretty impatient with these people. Am I overreacting? They didn't have my insurance info on file when I'd already given it to another department of the same facility, didn't return my phone call (twice now, since I'm still waiting for the call back regarding my insurance), and didn't tell me about the prepwork, then got pissy with me when I said I didn't have it. If I hadn't called to ask, I wouldn't have known about it at all, and what would have happened tomorrow, then, when I didn't have it? I'm really considering canceling and looking for another facility; we live literally across the street from a medical center with dozens of hospitals and clinics. I picked this one at random because it was close (well, they're all close) and my insurance covered the dr I saw for the office visit last week (but my as it turns out, my insurance covers pretty much every dr anyway.)
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