A story that will shock amaze all who read it.

Serious Business 14 replies 290 views
THE4RINGZ's avatar
THE4RINGZ
Posts: 16,816
Jun 28, 2012 5:52pm
Three days ago one of my daughter's who is 13 (no pictures) decideds to take the "salt and ice challenge" you wet the back of your hand, coat the back of your hand with table salt and place an ice cube in the salt to see who can leave it on the longest.

The black rectangle on her was diagnosed as second degree frost bite (not sure if she won, but she gave it one hell of an effort apparently), and she was given a prescription for both an oral and a topical antibiotic.

Last evening my wife went to the pharmacy to pick up the medicine. The topical was available but they were out of the oral and offered to obtain the medicine from another source today. My wife picked up the topical antibiotic and paid the co-pay (bolded font which will make sense later) of eight dollars and some change.

She calls the pharmacy today before leaving work to inquire if the oral medication is ready for pick up. It is.


She drives to the pharmacy and is told "since we have no insurance on file for your daughter, you will have to pay retail price for this prescription". Weren't we just there last night? What the fuck happened to the insurance you had on file for her last night?

Was the pharmacy just trying to jack us around, or do you think this is legitimate? Seems rather shady to me. And will Obamacare correct shit like this?


/coolstorybro
F
friendfromlowry
Posts: 6,239
Jun 28, 2012 5:59pm
According to my Facebook newsfeed, your daughter shouldn't get the antibiotics because it's her fault.
I'd say fuck the oral antibiotics anyways. Just wait and see if she does develop sepsis from frostbite on her hand that's already being treated with a local antibiotic.
ernest_t_bass's avatar
ernest_t_bass
Posts: 24,984
Jun 28, 2012 6:01pm
With whom did she do this challenge?
S
Steel Valley Football
Posts: 4,548
Jun 28, 2012 6:02pm
The bigger story is why your 13 yr old is doing shit like that to her body.
M
MontyBrunswick
Jun 28, 2012 6:25pm
THE4RINGZ;1214264 wrote:Three days ago one of my daughter's who is 13 (no pictures) decideds to take the "salt and ice challenge" you wet the back of your hand, coat the back of your hand with table salt and place an ice cube in the salt to see who can leave it on the longest.
Your daughter is a moron.

Hope this helps.
Rotinaj's avatar
Rotinaj
Posts: 7,699
Jun 28, 2012 6:28pm
dlazz;1214332 wrote:Your daughter is a moron.

Hope this helps.
Odds are it didn't.

Hope this helps.
DeadliestWarrior34's avatar
DeadliestWarrior34
Posts: 3,101
Jun 28, 2012 7:56pm
Your daughters got some balls. I like a woman with balls.
Glory Days's avatar
Glory Days
Posts: 7,809
Jun 28, 2012 8:05pm
never heard of this challenge. will go try, then sue you....
Trueblue23's avatar
Trueblue23
Posts: 7,463
Jun 28, 2012 8:06pm
DeadliestWarrior34;1214462 wrote:Your daughters got some balls. I like a woman with balls.
Repz
W
WebFire
Posts: 14,779
Jun 28, 2012 8:21pm
I have some questionable things happen at pharmacies, usually involving more expensive, non-generic drugs.
ptown_trojans_1's avatar
ptown_trojans_1
Posts: 7,632
Jun 28, 2012 8:23pm
THE4RINGZ;1214264 wrote:Three days ago one of my daughter's who is 13 (no pictures) decideds to take the "salt and ice challenge" you wet the back of your hand, coat the back of your hand with table salt and place an ice cube in the salt to see who can leave it on the longest.

The black rectangle on her was diagnosed as second degree frost bite (not sure if she won, but she gave it one hell of an effort apparently), and she was given a prescription for both an oral and a topical antibiotic.

Last evening my wife went to the pharmacy to pick up the medicine. The topical was available but they were out of the oral and offered to obtain the medicine from another source today. My wife picked up the topical antibiotic and paid the co-pay (bolded font which will make sense later) of eight dollars and some change.

She calls the pharmacy today before leaving work to inquire if the oral medication is ready for pick up. It is.


She drives to the pharmacy and is told "since we have no insurance on file for your daughter, you will have to pay retail price for this prescription". Weren't we just there last night? What the **** happened to the insurance you had on file for her last night?

Was the pharmacy just trying to jack us around, or do you think this is legitimate? Seems rather shady to me. And will Obamacare correct **** like this?


/coolstorybro

As someone who worked in the Pharmacy for 4 years during undergrad, my guess is they did the $8.00 generic straight co-pay. Several of the main chains offer generic that are really cheap, for 8 bucks, and they don't use the insurance for it.

That's my guess. We did that a lot at my pharmacy.
GOONx19's avatar
GOONx19
Posts: 7,147
Jun 29, 2012 1:15am
^ This. It was likely a cheap drug the first night, so whoever was entering the script just billed it to cash. It's easy to catch and ask the patient for insurance information at the register if the copay is unusually high, but if it's not it can go unnoticed. The second day it was high so they asked you for it. If you have insurance it's easy to go back and rebill it after you bring in the needed account numbers. Nothing shady here.
hoops23's avatar
hoops23
Posts: 15,696
Jun 29, 2012 1:25am
GOONx19;1214850 wrote:^ This. It was likely a cheap drug the first night, so whoever was entering the script just billed it to cash. It's easy to catch and ask the patient for insurance information at the register if the copay is unusually high, but if it's not it can go unnoticed. The second day it was high so they asked you for it. If you have insurance it's easy to go back and rebill it after you bring in the needed account numbers. Nothing shady here.
Bingo.

Trust me, we don't try to jack your shit. We don't benefit from it and it's illegal. I get paid the same whether your prescription is $4 or $24.

The pharmacy doesn't lose money because an item is billed to insurance, we get paid the same.

What were the scripts for? That would help shed some light on the situation.

Also, I doubt the pharmacy said "Since we have no insurance on file, you'll HAVE to pay the cash price"

We have this happen all the time. At the window, we just ask if the patient has insurance, and if so, can we see the card/information so we can re-bill it out for them.
DeadliestWarrior34's avatar
DeadliestWarrior34
Posts: 3,101
Jun 29, 2012 7:54am
Trueblue23;1214479 wrote:Repz
You lie
BORIStheCrusher's avatar
BORIStheCrusher
Posts: 1,893
Jun 29, 2012 12:03pm
THE4RINGZ;1214264 wrote: you will have to pay retail price for this prescription".

/coolstorybro
How much was that? I'm sure it's nothing close to what my prescriptions cost.