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#11
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Right now, insurance companies dictate, to your doctor (via what they will pay for), which drugs a doctor should use first, which treatments a doctor must try first, etc. Quote:
For example, the "wear and tear" sore knee with some cartilage tear, effusion, etc. Insurance companies dictate (pay for) the common medical treatment protocol that steroid injections will be used before glucosaminogycan injections. If you or your doctor decided a GAG injection would work, and you don't want to get a steroid injected into your knee because there's good medical evidence that it cuts pain, but may hasten degradation of the joint, you can pay for it yourself, as your insurance company will not. I know that it's $700, btw. For an injection I do to a horse or dog for $45. At the pharmacy, your insurance company will pay for certain brands of drugs, but not others. The pharmacy will substitute (unless your doctor absolutely insists no) the drug your insurance company has approved for the script written. Because the insurance company has made a deal with the drug company, that all their patients will only use "X" antibiotic, not "Y", to keep the cost of "X" down for you. Quote:
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"Have the clean racing people run any ads explaining that giving a horse a Starbucks and a chocolate poppyseed muffin for breakfast would likely result in a ten year suspension for the trainer?" - Dr. Andrew Roberts |