waldoj,
@waldoj@mastodon.social avatar

Just rolled the absolute hell out of my ankle while on my final trip loading up the car for a 12-hour dive with family so my plans have changed to lying in the ground and yelling which is going great

JohnJBurnsIII,
@JohnJBurnsIII@kzoo.to avatar

@waldoj

😱 💙

waldoj,
@waldoj@mastodon.social avatar

🔲 pack for trip
☑️ lie on floor and yell

waldoj,
@waldoj@mastodon.social avatar

OK, injury or no, we’ve got an eclipse to see. Got some crutches, got a cane, got an ace bandage, got some ice, downed some ibuprofen, found an urgent care place in Nashville. Let’s do this thing.

kissane,
@kissane@mas.to avatar

@waldoj good luck 😬

waldoj,
@waldoj@mastodon.social avatar

Huh my ankle didn’t used to be the size of a softball

waldoj,
@waldoj@mastodon.social avatar

I have inadvertently become a walking billboard for Darn Tough socks.

waldoj,
@waldoj@mastodon.social avatar

A Venn diagram of the urgent care centers that exist in St. Louis and the in-network urgent care centers that my insurer claims exist in St. Louis is just two circles.

acdha,
@acdha@code4lib.social avatar

@waldoj this sounds like a nightmare. I hope your day gets better.

waldoj,
@waldoj@mastodon.social avatar

The doctor pronounced herself “shocked” that I broke no bones, based on the severity of swelling and bruising, but the two rounds of X-rays confirmed it. Just a severe sprain. I got this fancy boot that I’m sure I’ll get a $300 bill for in six months, but it helps enormously with walking.

Onto St. Louis tourism!

waldoj,
@waldoj@mastodon.social avatar

Turns out the stupid walking cast I got at an urgent care place did not cost the $300 that I forecast but, in fact, $743. This boot retails for $65.

American healthcare is just one scam after another.

Screenshot of the boot from a website. It shows a thumbnail photo, with the following text: Ovation Medical® Gen2® Walker Boot In Stock $65.00

waldoj,
@waldoj@mastodon.social avatar

A few more points about this scam:

The boot was terrible, and I had to buy a new one to replace it. (It had metal stays in the side that cinched directly onto my sprained ankle.)

I was a captive audience. I could not walk. There's no free market of boots at an urgent care facility.

I actually looked into buying a boot online. There were zero online retailers of walking boots that could ship in less than a week, zero that I could find in St. Louis, and zero that I could find around my home.

waldoj,
@waldoj@mastodon.social avatar

I've noticed that a particularly high rate of scam billing comes in the form of the cheap, simple orthopedic devices provided at urgent care and related facilities: slings, braces, walking casts, etc. Sometimes the medical practitioner themselves is in on it, sometimes they're actually providing you with an orthopedic device that's from a third-party supplier that will bill you separately. That's how a $10 brace becomes a $150 brace, or a $65 walking cast becomes a $743 walking cast.

jamiemccarthy,
@jamiemccarthy@mastodon.social avatar

@waldoj This is just how healthcare billing works. They know your insurance will only pay a few bucks for an office visit. And they also know the insurance company will let them mark up ordinary medical supplies 1000%.

For a chronic issue of my own, I’d spent a decade trying out various $30 Amazon orthopedic devices, and then I saw a specialist whose office staff handed me something nearly identical and billed my insurance $200. I guess it’s a little better? I can’t really tell.

acdha,
@acdha@code4lib.social avatar

@jamiemccarthy @waldoj I bet they also factor the likelilikelihood of bad media coverage into it. Refusing to cover a device means lawmakers are hearing about the insurance company stranding someone unable to walk out.

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