- This topic has 250 replies, 21 voices, and was last updated 14 years, 9 months ago by patb.
-
AuthorPosts
-
March 8, 2010 at 7:34 PM #523807March 8, 2010 at 7:49 PM #522890ocrenterParticipant
cardiac bypass or multiple stent placement.
often time the patient would even present to the ER with angiogram and map to a specific hospital from their various countries.
if they come over with “unstable symptoms,” hospitals can not legally turn them away. and since the only way to “stabilize” is the bypass surgery or multiple stents, the surgery or procedure are done essentially free of charge.
March 8, 2010 at 7:49 PM #523031ocrenterParticipantcardiac bypass or multiple stent placement.
often time the patient would even present to the ER with angiogram and map to a specific hospital from their various countries.
if they come over with “unstable symptoms,” hospitals can not legally turn them away. and since the only way to “stabilize” is the bypass surgery or multiple stents, the surgery or procedure are done essentially free of charge.
March 8, 2010 at 7:49 PM #523469ocrenterParticipantcardiac bypass or multiple stent placement.
often time the patient would even present to the ER with angiogram and map to a specific hospital from their various countries.
if they come over with “unstable symptoms,” hospitals can not legally turn them away. and since the only way to “stabilize” is the bypass surgery or multiple stents, the surgery or procedure are done essentially free of charge.
March 8, 2010 at 7:49 PM #523565ocrenterParticipantcardiac bypass or multiple stent placement.
often time the patient would even present to the ER with angiogram and map to a specific hospital from their various countries.
if they come over with “unstable symptoms,” hospitals can not legally turn them away. and since the only way to “stabilize” is the bypass surgery or multiple stents, the surgery or procedure are done essentially free of charge.
March 8, 2010 at 7:49 PM #523822ocrenterParticipantcardiac bypass or multiple stent placement.
often time the patient would even present to the ER with angiogram and map to a specific hospital from their various countries.
if they come over with “unstable symptoms,” hospitals can not legally turn them away. and since the only way to “stabilize” is the bypass surgery or multiple stents, the surgery or procedure are done essentially free of charge.
March 8, 2010 at 8:00 PM #522900patientrenterParticipant[quote=ocrenter]….if they come over with “unstable symptoms,” hospitals can not legally turn them away. and since the only way to “stabilize” is the bypass surgery or multiple stents, the surgery or procedure are done essentially free of charge.[/quote]
Excellent system. Let’s keep it.
March 8, 2010 at 8:00 PM #523041patientrenterParticipant[quote=ocrenter]….if they come over with “unstable symptoms,” hospitals can not legally turn them away. and since the only way to “stabilize” is the bypass surgery or multiple stents, the surgery or procedure are done essentially free of charge.[/quote]
Excellent system. Let’s keep it.
March 8, 2010 at 8:00 PM #523479patientrenterParticipant[quote=ocrenter]….if they come over with “unstable symptoms,” hospitals can not legally turn them away. and since the only way to “stabilize” is the bypass surgery or multiple stents, the surgery or procedure are done essentially free of charge.[/quote]
Excellent system. Let’s keep it.
March 8, 2010 at 8:00 PM #523575patientrenterParticipant[quote=ocrenter]….if they come over with “unstable symptoms,” hospitals can not legally turn them away. and since the only way to “stabilize” is the bypass surgery or multiple stents, the surgery or procedure are done essentially free of charge.[/quote]
Excellent system. Let’s keep it.
March 8, 2010 at 8:00 PM #523832patientrenterParticipant[quote=ocrenter]….if they come over with “unstable symptoms,” hospitals can not legally turn them away. and since the only way to “stabilize” is the bypass surgery or multiple stents, the surgery or procedure are done essentially free of charge.[/quote]
Excellent system. Let’s keep it.
March 8, 2010 at 8:35 PM #522910ocrenterParticipantif you add everything up, a hospital stay really shouldn’t be that costly.
The ER doc probably spent at the most an hour for a stroke patient. they get paid at $200/hour. (that’s $430k yearly, so I’m not shortchanging any professional fees here)
The radiologist interprets the CT and MRI, takes a trained radiologist half an hour per study, that’s basically $200 as well.
The internist pulls in $100/hour, he/she comes and see your dad once a day, let’s say your dad was admitted for 5 days, that’s $500.
there was probably a neurologist, paid at $150/hour, saw your dad for an hour the first day, and half an hour for the next 4 days, so that’s $450.
that’s all of the doctor fees, a grand total of $1350.
an RN cost about $300 per day, but they divide their time with 4 patients, so that’s $80 per day, or $500 for the whole admission.
Let’s just assume everyone else involved from the speech therapist to the physical therapist to the radiology tech to the phlebotomist and the cleaning lady added up to another $500.
So all of the support staff cost $1000.
5 days of medications at best say another $1000.
assuming $200/day hotel fee for room and board, that’s $1000 for the 5 days.
so the total is $4350, plus $650 for administrative cost, $5000 is about right.
March 8, 2010 at 8:35 PM #523051ocrenterParticipantif you add everything up, a hospital stay really shouldn’t be that costly.
The ER doc probably spent at the most an hour for a stroke patient. they get paid at $200/hour. (that’s $430k yearly, so I’m not shortchanging any professional fees here)
The radiologist interprets the CT and MRI, takes a trained radiologist half an hour per study, that’s basically $200 as well.
The internist pulls in $100/hour, he/she comes and see your dad once a day, let’s say your dad was admitted for 5 days, that’s $500.
there was probably a neurologist, paid at $150/hour, saw your dad for an hour the first day, and half an hour for the next 4 days, so that’s $450.
that’s all of the doctor fees, a grand total of $1350.
an RN cost about $300 per day, but they divide their time with 4 patients, so that’s $80 per day, or $500 for the whole admission.
Let’s just assume everyone else involved from the speech therapist to the physical therapist to the radiology tech to the phlebotomist and the cleaning lady added up to another $500.
So all of the support staff cost $1000.
5 days of medications at best say another $1000.
assuming $200/day hotel fee for room and board, that’s $1000 for the 5 days.
so the total is $4350, plus $650 for administrative cost, $5000 is about right.
March 8, 2010 at 8:35 PM #523489ocrenterParticipantif you add everything up, a hospital stay really shouldn’t be that costly.
The ER doc probably spent at the most an hour for a stroke patient. they get paid at $200/hour. (that’s $430k yearly, so I’m not shortchanging any professional fees here)
The radiologist interprets the CT and MRI, takes a trained radiologist half an hour per study, that’s basically $200 as well.
The internist pulls in $100/hour, he/she comes and see your dad once a day, let’s say your dad was admitted for 5 days, that’s $500.
there was probably a neurologist, paid at $150/hour, saw your dad for an hour the first day, and half an hour for the next 4 days, so that’s $450.
that’s all of the doctor fees, a grand total of $1350.
an RN cost about $300 per day, but they divide their time with 4 patients, so that’s $80 per day, or $500 for the whole admission.
Let’s just assume everyone else involved from the speech therapist to the physical therapist to the radiology tech to the phlebotomist and the cleaning lady added up to another $500.
So all of the support staff cost $1000.
5 days of medications at best say another $1000.
assuming $200/day hotel fee for room and board, that’s $1000 for the 5 days.
so the total is $4350, plus $650 for administrative cost, $5000 is about right.
March 8, 2010 at 8:35 PM #523585ocrenterParticipantif you add everything up, a hospital stay really shouldn’t be that costly.
The ER doc probably spent at the most an hour for a stroke patient. they get paid at $200/hour. (that’s $430k yearly, so I’m not shortchanging any professional fees here)
The radiologist interprets the CT and MRI, takes a trained radiologist half an hour per study, that’s basically $200 as well.
The internist pulls in $100/hour, he/she comes and see your dad once a day, let’s say your dad was admitted for 5 days, that’s $500.
there was probably a neurologist, paid at $150/hour, saw your dad for an hour the first day, and half an hour for the next 4 days, so that’s $450.
that’s all of the doctor fees, a grand total of $1350.
an RN cost about $300 per day, but they divide their time with 4 patients, so that’s $80 per day, or $500 for the whole admission.
Let’s just assume everyone else involved from the speech therapist to the physical therapist to the radiology tech to the phlebotomist and the cleaning lady added up to another $500.
So all of the support staff cost $1000.
5 days of medications at best say another $1000.
assuming $200/day hotel fee for room and board, that’s $1000 for the 5 days.
so the total is $4350, plus $650 for administrative cost, $5000 is about right.
-
AuthorPosts
- You must be logged in to reply to this topic.