Outpatient Surgery Magazine

ORX Awards and the Winners Are ... - September 2014 - Subscribe to Outpatient Surgery Magazine

Outpatient Surgery Magazine, providing current information on Surgical Services, Surgical Facility Administration, Outpatient Surgery News and Trends, OR Excellence and more.

Issue link: http://outpatientsurgery.uberflip.com/i/378604

Contents of this Issue

Navigation

Page 166 of 170

1 6 7 S E P T E M B E R 2 0 1 4 | O U T P AT I E N T S U R G E R Y M A G A Z I N E O N L I N E John D. Kelly IV, MD CUTTING REMARKS Escaping the Insurance Labyrinth Some days it feels as if there's no way out. I love my job. If there's one aspect I could do without, it's the insurance hassles. In this day and age of pre-certs and denials, I wish I could just take care of folks without navigating the gauntlet of insurance checkpoints in order to get approved. 'Experimental' procedure I've been performing hip arthroscopy for more than 15 years and have helped many patients with this ever-evolving proce- dure. Yet, some insurers will deny coverage for this technique because they deem it experimental. Never mind that the patient's hip has a bone spur the size of Boston or that their labrum is in more pieces than a box of Cracker Jack! "All non-op measures were not exhausted, including physical therapy," insurers will say when explaining a denial, some requiring a whopping 6 months of PT. Great, the labrum is so detached it is in the other room and I am going to subject my patient to PT and all its inherent twisting and probing and prodding for 6 months? Denials are not unique to the hip. I'm lucky to get a biological cartilage knee resurfacing approved. When I do, I light 3 candles at church and throw a party. Here again insurers like to bandy about the "experimental procedure" line. So, the 3cm defect in the 20-year-old knee will respond to copper knee sleeves and gingko? To make matters worse, the kneecap is not covered by some insurers, con- sidered by some as a "non-major weight-bearing area." Last I checked we humans do, in fact, walk on our legs. I remember a patient with a knee chondral lesion so large, it had an area code. The only recourse for him was a biologic, cell-based cartilage trans-

Articles in this issue

Archives of this issue

view archives of Outpatient Surgery Magazine - ORX Awards and the Winners Are ... - September 2014 - Subscribe to Outpatient Surgery Magazine