Well, it has been
an interesting summer, to say the least. On Memorial Day, I was playing
basketball and injured my foot. Another player stepped on it while knocking me
over. The combination of his weight on my foot and my body falling sideways created
enough torque to cause what I will fondly call the “Taysom Hill injury.” The
more technical term is a Lisfranc injury. According to the internet, “The
Lisfranc joint is the point at which the metatarsal bones (long bones that lead
up to the toes) and the tarsal bones (bones in the arch) connect. The Lisfranc
ligament is a tough band of tissue that joins two of these bones. This is
important for maintaining proper alignment and strength of the joint.”
There are all
sorts of Lisfranc injuries, most caused by car accidents. Others are
sports-related, some from contact, like mine, while others, like Taysom’s, are
noncontact injuries. The severity can range from sprains to fractures and
dislocations. In my case, the first two metatarsals were displaced, and the
cuneiform bone was cracked. So it was pretty serious. It took a couple of weeks
for me to find the right doctors and for them figure out how messed up my foot
was, but on June 20 I had surgery. I now have a plate and six screws to hold
all the pieces together. I was instructed to not put any weight on the foot for
seven or eight weeks. Being both active and stubborn, I wasn’t about to spend
almost two months on a scooter and crutches. So I bought a “pirate crutch”
(officially named the iWalk 2.0, see photo). It’s not good for long distances,
but for getting around the house or office (or even walking the dog), it’s
great. Whenever I go to a store, I get comments and questions. Most people
haven’t seen a contraption like this, but they think it’s cool. I do too, but I’m
getting rather tired of it.
I’m five and a
half weeks into the no-weight portion of my recovery and will get an x-ray next
week to see how things are mending. On the surface, things seem to be
progressing nicely, but I know I’m in for a long stretch of no basketball. The
surgeon told me it would probably be a year before the foot feels “normal”
again.
This encounter
with the American health-care system leaves me both amazed and baffled. The
knowledge and technology we have is impressive, and so is our messed-up,
profit-oriented medical industry. I use that word intentionally, because it
really is an industry. It’s not a sector of society aimed at providing a public
good, like, say, education (although some would like to see education become an
industry too). This week I received the itemized bill from Intermountain Health
Care for my morning in the operating room. The doctor’s bill as actually quite
reasonable, but let me share with you a few of the highlights from the hospital’s
“Itemized Statement of Services.” The prices I will list are what IHC billed my
insurance. What the insurance paid was, of course, much lower, since the hospital
was in their network.
I was surprised,
when I received the initial summary from the insurance company that the biggest
item was “medical supplies.” The hospital billed the insurance about $25,460
for these medical supplies. The operating room, by contrast, was a mere
$7,547.40. The total charges amounted to $35,542.13, 70 percent of which was
for medical supplies. I wondered what on earth could be that expensive. Well,
this week I found out.
The plate (Plate
Ankle Lapidus CP 0 Offset) was billed at $5,332.32. I don’t know why the name
includes “ankle,” because my ankle is fine, thank you. The plate is on my
instep, right where you’d expect it, holding the metatarsals in place. One of
the six screws was billed at $2,852.28. I have to wonder about the twenty-eight
cents. Really? They couldn’t round it to $2,850? Three other screws were $907.39
each. The other two were only $653.86. The Home Depot apparently doesn’t carry
these screws. The hospital also billed for a pin, three reamers, a K-wire, and
other odds and ends. One of the reamers was billed at $2,219.32. And some sort
of unthreaded guidewire came in at $2,935.68. I’d hate to see what a threaded
guidewire costs. But the item on this itemized statement that has me scratching
my head is the “Bit Screwdriver T8 AO Quick Coup.” Yes, my insurance got billed
for a $2,201.76 screwdriver. I can’t help but wonder why. Don’t they do
surgeries like this rather frequently? Don’t they have a screwdriver in the
drawer from the last surgery like mine? Couldn’t they sterilize it and reuse
it? If not, then I want the screwdriver from my surgery. I mean, they obviously
don’t need it. I think I’ll ask for it when I see the doctor next week. I’m
sure he’ll look at me like I’m nuts, but hey, that screwdriver is a testament
to the insanity of the American health-care system. I’d bet even the military doesn’t
pay that much for a screwdriver. And even if they did, they’d probably use it
at least twice.
Oh, I almost forgot. By comparison, the iWalk 2.0, which can be purchased on Amazon, cost me $149, and the insurance wouldn’t cover it. Maybe if it had cost $10,000, they would have.
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