Wow, Jan, I'm stunned. I might have expected that an overnight stay with general anesthesia might rack up a charge like that. But holy cow.
Sara - as I said earlier, that was the price before my insurance company discounted it. After they discounted it, it cost less than $10,000 - for the surgery and the device - and I never paid one cent.
I don't think there is such a thing as a BAHA trial since the BAHA is a tried and true product - unlike the SoundBite - it's been around for a long time (many, many years in Europe before it came to the states) so there is nothing to "try". You can demo the BAHA, but that's something different.
Sue -
the BAHA is considered medically necessary for those who are SSD - BUT that does not mean that your insurance company is required to cover it.
My insurance company's biggest question was "are you SSD?" I quickly referred them to my AN surgical report which clearly stated that I was SSD as a result of my surgery. That coupled with the information my doctor sent them on what the BAHA would do for me and why I needed it was enough information for them.
Did you ever find out if your insurance company covers Cochlear Implants? If so and they are refusing to cover a BAHA you have a better discrimination case based on that argument than you'd have arguing chronic ear infections.
Also, did you ever contact Cochlear and ask for help in getting Blue Cross to cover a BAHA?
Jan