I am profoundly and overwhelmingly grateful that my insurance covers the cost of my rituximab infusions as the picture of my statement above illustrates.
$58,589.40 for ONE DOSE of rituximab? REALLY?
8 comments:
sue
said...
Oh my goodness. That is quite the bill. Benefits are a wonderful thing.
Far out brussel sprout! Is that for real? I'm so sorry. Knowing you (al beit only as a long time reader of your blog) learning the cost of your treatments must have been a shock.
so very very very very( did I say very enough?1) glad to be Canadian!! I can't IMAGINE the extra burden of stress a chronic illness must put upon families in your country who have to pay for healthcare or hope insurance will cover.
No doubt this was administered at a hospital. Hospitals are obscenely overcharging for Rituxan infusions. I too have insurance but I get it done at a Drs office on principal (my little way of protesting) where the cost is $468 for the infusion and $7,000 per 1000mg for Rituxan so for both infusions within the 2 weeks cycle the bill is about $15,500 for two infusions of 1000mg each (total 2000mg). Includes premeds, saline etc. I only pay my deductible but still if I was uninsured I would do the Drs office route. $15,500 at drs office vs nearly $120,000 for hospital is ridiculous
A Body Out of Balance by Nancy Carteron and Ruth Fremes
A Delicate Balance - Living Successfully With Chronic Illness by Susan Milstrey Wells
In Defense of Food by Michael Pollan
Peripheral Neuropathy - When The Numbness, Weakness, and Pain Won't Stop by Norman Latov, MD, PhD
The Autoimmune Connection by Rita Baron-Faust and Jill P. Buyon, M.D.
The Balance Within - The Science Connecting Health and Emotions by Esther M. Sternberg, M.D.
The New Sjogren's Syndrome Handbook (Sjogren's Syndrome Foundation) by Daniel J. Wallace
The Sjogren's Syndrome Survival Guide by Terri P. Rumph Ph.D, and Katherine Morland Hammitt
You Don't Look Sick - Living Well with Invisible Chronic Illness by Joy H. Selak and Steven S. Overman, MD, MPH
Information on this blog is not intended as medical advice. Always check with your healthcare provider before taking any medications, vitamins, or supplements; before beginning exercise programs, or making changes in your health care practices.
8 comments:
Oh my goodness. That is quite the bill. Benefits are a wonderful thing.
Far out brussel sprout! Is that for real? I'm so sorry. Knowing you (al beit only as a long time reader of your blog) learning the cost of your treatments must have been a shock.
You are blessed to have great insurance.
Its' scary to be sick, but to be sick and not have insurance or bad insurance is very scary indeed. You are fortunate.
so very very very very( did I say very enough?1) glad to be Canadian!!
I can't IMAGINE the extra burden of stress a chronic illness must put upon families in your country who have to pay for healthcare or hope insurance will cover.
...yikes! I feel for anyone with poorer, or no insurance, for whom that treatment would presumably not be an option. Scary expensive!
Wowzers! So glad you're covered!
No doubt this was administered at a hospital. Hospitals are obscenely overcharging for Rituxan infusions. I too have insurance but I get it done at a Drs office on principal (my little way of protesting) where the cost is $468 for the infusion and $7,000 per 1000mg for Rituxan so for both infusions within the 2 weeks cycle the bill is about $15,500 for two infusions of 1000mg each (total 2000mg). Includes premeds, saline etc. I only pay my deductible but still if I was uninsured I would do the Drs office route. $15,500 at drs office vs nearly $120,000 for hospital is ridiculous
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