I am totally clueless about how medical insurance works, but I am extremely grateful that I have it and that it covered virtually 100% of my AN costs. My bills, including surgery, came to approximately $100,000 and I only had to pay $400 deductible for my MRI.
My plan has a PPO network, and thankfully both my surgeons and the hospital where my surgery was performed belong to it so my insurance company picked up the entire tab.
So, here's the question - my insurance company took the hospital and surgeons' fees and discounted them by a huge amount so that the payouts were minimal compared to the billed amount. One example, the neurosurgeon charged roughly $18,000 for his 7 1/2 hours of time, but the insurance company discounted it and he ended up getting paid approximately $3,000.
While I'm glad the insurance company paid everything, because there is no way I could afford to, I am also left with the feeling that my medical providers (specifically the doctors) got "gyped". Brain surgery is a huge deal, they spent lots of hours in surgery, my outcome was wonderful, etc., and I feel guilty that they were not reimbursed much, much more.
Does anyone know, when doctors belong to a medical network, are they getting some advantage I'm just not seeing? or are they just getting paid less than the norm?