this post was submitted on 31 Dec 2023
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Yeah, they provide a ton of transport services that are not emergency-related. If a person is completely bedbound, then any and all trips to the doctor need to be handled by an ambulance service that can provide a transport stretcher (a heavy duty collapsible stretcher with straps on it like a seatbelt) and personnel to transfer the person between their bed and the stretcher.
And we call the ambulance service when we discharge any patient from our hospital to a short term rehab facility, even if the person can move themselves from the bed to the stretcher. Just because it's transfer between medical facilities.
And if we transfer someone to another hospital with a higher level of care, we have to specifically request an emergency ambulance instead of a transport ambulance.
So those services are a lot more complicated than people realize. But in any of these situations, the patient shouldn't get an exorbitant bill because of some insurance company shenanigans, which is all in- vs. out-network stuff is.
It’s bizarre because they solved this with ERs/hospitals forever ago - there used to be in network and out of network ERs/hospitals. Even worse, even if the hospital was in-network, some of the Drs working in the hospital would be out of network - so your surgeon would be in network but the anesthesiologist wouldn’t be somehow.
I don’t know why it’s taken them so long to solve ambulances too.
When you don’t have a choice in providers, it seems bizarre they can pull the in/out of network shit.