Call it sweet, delicious vindication. It was clinic day yesterday. No longer had I completed my rant in this blog about UnitedHealthcare’s program to require all cardiac elecrophysiologists to obtain a “notification number” before performing any pacemaker or defibrillator procedure, I discovered my letter from them dated??June 3,??2010, on my desk stating that this requirement will begin September 1, 2010, for all Illinois electrophysiologists for “all electrophysiology procedures.”
Not longer than an hour later I was seeing a 67-year-old patient in the clinic who asked me: “I just got my Medicare (Part A) card and must decide about which insurer I should use for Part B, C, D, E, and F,” he said jokingly. “Since I have the medical problem and might need some care in the future, is there a company you would recommend?”
I sat stunned, relishing my ever-so-brief, influential role. I showed him UnitedHealthcare’s letter.
“I’d avoid UnitedHealthcare,” I found myself saying, “and any other frontman like AARP that healthcare.com/products/medsupp/default.aspx?" >peddles their supplemental insurance products and drains value from your policy.”
My new role: Insurance broker.
-WesMusings of a cardiologist and cardiac electrophysiologist.
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