How much does an mri cost with unitedhealthcare insurance

UnitedHealthcare has made a version of its mobile cost estimator available to the public, the insurer announced this week, giving free access to average local market prices for patients for 520 medical procedures.

The service, available through the Health4Me app, could allow community members to get a baseline idea of how much their treatment will cost before going in to a hospital or clinic.

"Giving consumers access to important medical cost information is improving transparency and making it easier for people to navigate the health care system," said Yasmine Winkler, UnitedHealthcare's chief product, marketing and innovation officer, in a statement. "With reliable and actionable information about the prices of services, consumers now have an important resource at their fingertips that can help them make decisions to improve their health and save money."

People who aren't insured by United would need to load the app under its "Guest" option.

Health4Me also allows consumers to locate nearby health care providers, including urgent care and emergency rooms, and offers lists of what kinds of treatments they could expect for each medical condition. It covers 290 diagnosis types.

For example, a review of the app shows:

• Average costs in Palm Springs (for the 92262 ZIP code) include $57 for an asthma check-up in an established patient of moderate complexity and $88 in a new patient with the same diagnosis. The same check-up for someone with moderate to high complexity is $85 for an established patient and $126 for a new patient.

• Annual physicals in the Palm Springs area cost roughly $356 on average for children ages 5-11 who are established patients. This can cost on average $590 to $650 for established female patients (depending on age) and $277 to $303 for men, also depending on age.

• Treatment for, say, a heart attack can include $1,269 in the ER on average, plus $9,493 for diagnostic cardiac catheterization and more than $7,000 for an angioplasty to open narrow or blocked heart arteries.

• For the common cold and flu, Palm Springs patients are generally asked to pay $57 and $69 for care.

• And a knee MRI costs roughly $602.

The app is available for both iPhones and Androids.

Desert Sun Healthcare Reporter Victoria Pelham can be reached at (760) 778-4649, and on Twitter @vpelham.

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I had an MRI of my head done this year (no problems found, thankfully!). The way it works is you satisfy your deductible, then pay 20% of the remaining expenses. One thing to note: if they haven't finalized your claim and you're just looking at the claimed and paid amount on the website (no PDF), don't worry about it yet.

I made that mistake and was panicking myself. The UHC website said the MRI facility was claiming ~$9k (!) for the MRI and the insurance was only paying ~$1k. It turns out that the facility took a $8k "writedown"...a.k.a. reducing their ludicrous charge that an insurance company will never pay. I had to cover ~$400 of it.

I am a grad student, so the insurance is slightly different, but the general experience should be similar. Unless the undergrad insurance has a really high deductible, the numbers you posted don't make sense.

March 3, 2014

How much does an mri cost with unitedhealthcare insurance

Dear Insurance Co., Patient X called and he wants to know why you’re paying $425 and $2,530 for the same MRI. Keep reading for a mini-mystery story about negotiated contract prices and gag orders…

Culture change is here: People have awakened to the wide disparities in pricing in the health-care marketplace. Even if they’re insured, they’re upset.

Let’s call him Patient X.  He wanted to talk about the coinsurance charges for his new health insurance plan. He wanted me to know a few things.

For an MRI in his neighborhood, his insurance company’s site tells him, the insurance company is paying anywhere from $425 to $2,530.

How does he know that?

Well, he’s responsible for 10 percent of the contracted fee. And the insurance company tells him what that 10 percent would be, should he choose Provider A, Provider B, Provider C and so on.

Helpful? Yes. Maddening? Also yes.

A bit of background explanation

Health-care providers have a number of prices for procedures. Their charged price (often known as the chargemaster price) is something like a manufacturer’s suggested retail price in electronics or the rack rate at a hotel, prices that are seldom paid because there are so many discounts available.

Full-pay patients, those who pay the charged price, are rare. What the provider actually receives is either a fixed price from the government (Medicare, Medicaid, or Tri-Care, for military personnel) or a negotiated or contract price, so called because it’s negotiated by the provider (doc or hospital, let’s say) by contract with the payer – an insurance company, like Blue Cross, Cigna, Aetna or United Healthcare.

The negotiated rates are secret, protected by gag clauses in most contracts. The insurers don’t want Provider A, who’s getting $425 for a procedure, to know that Provider B is getting $2,530. So there are penalties to providers for disclosing what they get.

That information has long been available on people’s bills, and explanations of benefits, but for a great deal of time no one cared because it might all have been covered by a $20 copay. Also, because you weren’t able to compare what your provider received with what another provider received, you might not have known of the disparities.

But! With the new 10 percent disclosure, Patient X now knows that for an MRI, his co-insurance will be 10 percent of the contracted rate. Multiply the co-insurance by 10, and you have the contracted rate.

This insurer pays from $425 to $2,530 for an MRI

Here are some of the prices, derived from multiplying his anticipated 10 percent coinsurance, as listed on the site, by 10:

Provider A: $425

Provider B: $753

Provider C: $1,495

Provider D: $1,760

Provider E: $1,708

Provider F: $2,530

What does Medicare pay? This is in the New York area, so it’s between $497 and $516. This is important because the Medicare rate is the closest thing to a fixed or benchmark price in the marketplace — it’s set by the government under a fairly convoluted equation described in this blog post.

This insurance company is undercutting Medicare at Provider A.

Does this mean that Provider F gives an MRI that is 6 times better than the MRI at Provider A? Well, not necessarily.  It probably means that Provider F has more power in the marketplace – perhaps a bigger reputation, more patients, “must-have” status or something else. (Here’s a blog post about a paper on cost and outcomes by Chapin White.)

Does this mean that  Provider A is getting taken to the cleaners? Well, maybe.

Does this mean that if you – as an insured person on this plan from this company, choose a less expensive provider, your premiums are subsidizing higher-priced providers? Yes.

But in our pricing survey of MRI providers in the New York City area, we learned that prices for cash or self-pay customers can range from $400 to $2,500.

So why do Providers C, D, E and F get more money than a cash customer would pay? And in some cases a lot more? Interesting question.

Note: We are not naming the insurer or the providers. Patient X gave us this information on the condition that we would not  name the insurance company, and we agreed. If we named the providers, that would identify the insurance company. So we’re not naming them either.

Moving toward transparency

It should be noted here that we think transparency is good. All prices (or costs or charges) should be revealed, and all quality metrics too.

There’s no compelling argument we’ve heard for keeping all this information secret.

We are big supporters of complete transparency. Partial transparency? We’re less enthusiastic about that.

Other procedures too

By the way, Patient X told us, other procedures also vary: For one, judging from the 10 percent coinsurance, the total cost at Provider A is $120, and at Provider B it’s $370.

For another procedure, the range is from $129 to $349.

If you extrapolate this set of numbers to the entire marketplace, and to much more complicated procedures – appendectomies, knee replacements, cancer care? – you can start to see how explosive the release of a 10 percent coinsurance charge might be for a thinking person.

Patient X is not exactly a cynic, but he’s pretty clear about pointing out that the insurance company is not directing him or anyone else toward lower-cost care.

Provider A and B, we’d like to talk.

Got something to share with us? E-mail: info (at) clearhealthcosts (dot) com, or phone 914-552-9876.

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Related posts:

Part 1: How to find out what stuff costs in health care.

Part 2: How to argue a bill.

Part 3: Appealing a denial, or how to turn a “no” into a “yes.”

Negotiating a bill.

How to save money on prescriptions.


How much does an mri cost with unitedhealthcare insurance