It wasn't a minor condition. It was a staph infection. Don't let the term bugbite mislead you. His son wasn't in the hospital for a bugbite. He was in the hospital for a life threatening infection from an antibiotic resistant infection. That is far from minor.
Disclaimer: I'm not arguing for PPACA in any way but if you are going to base you argument on billing for a "minor" condition then make sure it's actually a minor condition.
So... MRSA Staph Infection... what is the cost to correctly diagnose? And what is the cost of the antibiotics?
I'm not a doctor, but most non-boutique antibiotics are dirt cheap.
I didn't intend to trivialize the illness. I more meant that this could happen to _anyone_. And if this is the cost for things that can happen to anyone, we have a real problem on our hands. Much like it's a problem that a basic, no-complications, baby delivery costs $15-20k.
Insurance is math, and the math gets scary quickly unless costs are controlled.
It's more than just diagnoses and antibiotics. It's monitoring the child for 2+ days. And broad spectrum antibiotics than can kill resistant staph infections I imagine aren't cheap either. Not to mention you can't just administer them. You have to monitor their effect continuously to make sure they actually are having an effect.
As to happening to anyone yes in the same way that anyone could get hit by a car. It's a rare occurrence. most people will not be getting staph from a bug bite. It's totally possible that 23k is an egregious amount to bill for his treatment but I think you are going about making that argument from the wrong position.
Are you capable of diagnosing an MRSA Staph infection? What all exactly is involved in diagnosing it? Looking at it? or do you need complicated lab tests? Does it require a consult with someone who specializes in infectious diseases or can just anyone do it? How do you dispose of medical waste from treatment? Are there any complicated regulations that increase the cost there?
All of these questions should be what fuels the debate around medical billing. The fact that you as a patient have very little visibility into all of that is in my mind the issue.
Arguing about how anyone could be hit with life threatening illness or injury is a potent and emotional distraction.
> but most non-boutique antibiotics are dirt cheap
The whole problem with MRSA is that you need boutique antibiotics to treat it! You don't have to be a doctor to know that, by the way; Wikipedia will tell you that part.
Agreed with you on the baby delivery part. Though it only costs that much in a hospital. In states where alternate arrangements involving a midwife are legal (not Illinois!) the cost can be much more reasonable for a no-complications birth.
From the article, at least a two day hospital stay, IV, antibiotics, the time of the nurses checking in on him, the doctor(s) rounding on him, and the orderlies and cleaning staff keeping the place clean. Staying in the hospital is not cheap.
Disclaimer: I'm not arguing for PPACA in any way but if you are going to base you argument on billing for a "minor" condition then make sure it's actually a minor condition.