• How Fully Private, No-Insurance Hospitals Help The Common Man

    April 15, 2022
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    Reprinted with permission Mises Institute Daniel Diefenbach

    How does one make an economic decision when the price of a good is not evident? To any adherent of the Austrian school, this of course is impossible. There is no way to decide whether to purchase something if the only way of knowing the price is after committing. For example, who would fill up their car only to see what the price was at the end? No one. In no aspect of life would this make sense, yet it is the standard in the American healthcare system.

    This is the predicament I was in. I needed a minor outpatient surgery and tried to weigh my options, but this was impossible without knowing the price of the surgery. If I had some idea, I could at least gauge how much I would need to save. No prices were provided at any nearby facility to someone without insurance.

    Fine, I could go ahead and get health insurance through my employer. But the price was still unclear. I knew what I would pay annually for insurance (about $3,000), I knew my deductible (about $2,000), and I knew the percentage of the procedure’s cost the insurance would cover (80 percent). I didn’t know the amount of the surgery. I could at least search for average prices online and take a guess. The range was ridiculously broad, but at best, this was a $4,000 surgery, so in short, the absolute best-case scenario was $5,800, with me dropping the insurance after a year. I needed the surgery, but I was in no place to consider the $5,800-and-up range. I would have to wait.

     In June 2021, the Mises Institute held the Medical Freedom Summit in Salem, New Hampshire, and one of the speakers was Dr. G. Keith Smith of the Surgery Center of Oklahoma, an institution that is truly free market and receives no money from the federal government. He spoke of the successes of his business and of the simple model he and Dr. Steve Lantier established in 1997. Smith describes their first patient experience as follows:

    The first week we were open, we received a call from a patient who had a breast mass she wanted removed, and she wanted to know how much we would charge her, as she had no insurance. This was the call we had all hoped for, the reason we had opened, and yet I had no idea how to answer her question. I placed her on hold and called our general surgeon and asked him how much he wanted for his fee. He had no idea. I told him to pick a fee or, like a Harvard professor, I’d pick one for him. He said $500. I thought this was very reasonable so I hung up on him before he had a chance to reconsider. As an anesthesiologist, I basically bill for my time and I knew this surgery would take twenty or thirty minutes. The facility supplies were minimal. I was about to take her off hold when I realized she would want to know if she had cancer. I called a pathologist friend and asked him how much he wanted to examine the specimen. He had no idea. I pressed for an answer. Twenty-eight dollars for the pathology. I informed the patient that our price was $1,900. “For what?” she asked. “For everything,” I said. She said, “That’s funny. The hospital down the street from you wanted $19,000 for the facility fee alone.” I knew we were on the right track when after the case and the supply cost was tallied, we’d made a profit. Had the pathology fees that apply to the examination of breast masses not increased, our price would be the same now as it was in 1997, but alas it is now $2,365. Only three other fees have increased since we began quoting them over the phone in 1997.

    In short, Smith asked his colleagues what a fair price would be for them, he cut out all the middlemen, and everyone won; the doctors profited and the patient saved a small fortune. A win-win, as is common in actual free market exchanges. 

    He later told the story of a Georgia man who was quoted $40,000 for his surgery at home. The Surgery Center of Oklahoma quoted him $4,000. Upset at having lost a patient to them already, the man’s hometown surgeon decided to match the price. The patient told Dr. Smith that the Surgery Center of Oklahoma “had saved him $36,000 and … hadn’t even performed his surgery.”

    I was of course curious about their answer to my own problem, so I went to their website. It was simple: $3060 out of pocket for everything. I reached out to the center and they put me in contact with the surgeon’s office to set the date. Since I was coming from out of town, they scheduled me for a Monday morning consultation and surgery in the afternoon—no repeat visits necessary.

    I appreciated their price estimate but expected it to change. Sure, the folks that started the place were free marketeers, but in healthcare the price is always a loose estimate. I was wrong. The date neared, I called to pay, and it was still exactly $3,060. My wife and I hit the road to Oklahoma City, and everything went smoothly, with no delays or uncertainty.

    People like myself, and those with more serious medical issues, are flocking to the Surgery Center of Oklahoma from around America and Canada to experience economic and medical freedom. The cost of travel pales in comparison to the thousands or tens of thousands saved going to a free market medical institution. Their healthcare model easily outcompetes the one created by crony insurance companies and corrupt government-run healthcare facilities. Drs. Smith and Lantier are pioneers, heroes, and champions of liberty. They are actively fighting the government here and in Canada, and thus far have won. We can only hope their success continues. I’m proud to have participated in their efforts at least once. Hopefully, I will not need any other surgeries, but if I do, the Surgery Center of Oklahoma is the only one I would consider. Author:

    Daniel Diefenbach

    Daniel Diefenbach is a freelance writer.

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