Sarah Witter couldn鈥檛 get a break even though her leg had gotten several.
As she lay on a ski trail in Vermont last February, Witter, now 63, knew she hadn鈥檛 suffered a regular fall because she could not get up. An X-ray showed she had fractured two major bones in her lower left leg.
A surgeon at Rutland Regional Medical Center screwed two gleaming metal plates onto the bones to stabilize them. 鈥淚 was very pleased with how things came together,鈥 the doctor wrote in his operation notes.
But as spring ended, the wound started to hurt more. In June, Witter returned to the doctor. 鈥淗e X-rayed it and said it broke,鈥 she said. 鈥淎nd I was thinking, what broke? And he said, the plate. He said they do sometimes.鈥
The doctor performed another operation, removing the cracked plate and replacing it with a larger one.
Witter said she had been dutifully following all the instructions for her recovery, including going to physical therapy and keeping weight off her leg.
鈥淚 was, of course, thinking, 鈥榃hat did I do?鈥欌 Witter said. 鈥淭he doctor said right off the bat it was nothing I did.鈥
Then the bill came.

The two surgeries Sarah Witter had following her skiing accident last February led to almost $100,000 in bills. Witter paid more than $18,000 of that out-of-pocket.(Matt Baldelli for KHN)
Patient: Sarah Witter, a retired teacher and ski buff who had moved from Pennsylvania to Vermont for the outdoorsy lifestyle.
Total Bill: $99,159 for emergency services, therapy and hospital care, including $52,587 for the first surgery and $43,208 for the second surgery. Altogether, Witter鈥檚 insurer, Aetna, paid $76,783. Witter paid $18,442 鈥 including $7,808 for the second surgery. About half of Witter鈥檚 total expenses were copayments; another $7,410 was the portion of hospital charges that Aetna considered unreasonably high and refused to pay.
Service Provider: Rutland Regional Medical Center, the largest community hospital in Vermont, performed the surgeries. Emergency services, anesthesia and physical therapy were done by other providers.
Medical Service: In February, two metal plates called bone fixation devices and manufactured by Johnson & Johnson鈥檚 DePuy Synthes division were surgically attached to two lower leg bones Witter had fractured in a skiing accident. These plates are long, narrow pieces of metal with holes drilled in them at regular intervals for screws to attach them to the bones. A crack had developed in one of the plates running from the side of one of those holes to the edge of the plate. A second surgery was required to remove the plate and replace it.
What Gives: When devices or treatments fail and need to be replaced or redone, patients (and their insurers) are expected to foot the bill. That may be understandable if a first course of antibiotics doesn鈥檛 clear a bronchitis, requiring a second drug. But it is more problematic 鈥 and far more expensive 鈥 when a piece of surgical hardware fails, whether it鈥檚 a pacemaker, a hip that dislocates in the days after surgery or a fractured metal plate.
Warranties, standard features at an electronic store or a car dealership, are uncommon聽for surgeries and medical devices used in them.
Dr. James Rickert, an orthopedic surgeon in Indiana and president of the , said a plate like the one implanted in Witter鈥檚 leg can fail if the surgeon does not line it up correctly with the bone, although usually that causes the screws to break or back out. A plate also can fail if the patient puts too much weight on it or doesn鈥檛 follow other recovery instructions.
鈥淲hen the plate breaks, it鈥檚 usually from overworking it, or a defect in the plate itself,鈥 Rickert said. 鈥淭he vast majority of people follow their instructions and are honest about it. If a person comes in and tells you they鈥檝e been following their instructions and the surgery鈥檚 done properly, to me that鈥檚 a hardware failure.鈥
Nancy Foster, vice president for quality and patient safety policy at the American Hospital Association, said sometimes hospitals will not charge for a second surgery 鈥渋f they were aware that it was something they did that caused the patient to need follow-up care.鈥
Rutland Regional, Witter鈥檚 hospital, would not discuss Witter鈥檚 care or bills, even though she gave it permission to do so. 鈥淭he organization is not comfortable in getting into the specifics of an individual patient鈥檚 case,鈥 a spokeswoman wrote. The hospital also declined to discuss under what circumstances, if any, it would discount a second surgery鈥檚 cost because of the first鈥檚 failure.
Hospitals do not consider it their responsibility if a medical device failure is the problem, Foster said. But manufacturers are reluctant to take the blame for an unsuccessful surgery.

Patients are usually out of luck when a second surgery is needed because of the failure of a medical device, like Sarah Witter鈥檚 broken plate. 鈥淭he biggest annoyance with this whole thing, even though it took eight months out of my life,鈥 Witter says, 鈥渋s I hate to pay for it again, and the doctor clearly said it wasn鈥檛 anything I did.鈥(Matt Baldelli for KHN)
AdvaMed, the trade group for medical device manufacturers, said some companies will provide replacement devices if theirs failed, but others do not, especially if the failure of a procedure cannot 鈥渆asily be attributed鈥 to the device, the group said in a written statement.
鈥淭here are numerous factors outside of a manufacturer鈥檚 control 鈥 and unrelated to the safety of the device as designed 鈥 that could result in a device not performing as intended,鈥 AdvaMed said.
These devices aren鈥檛 cheap: Witter’s hospital billed $9,706 for the first set of plates. It billed $12,860 for the replacement and an extra piece of equipment to attach it.
DePuy Synthes, which manufactured Witter鈥檚 plates, said in a written response that 鈥渋n rare circumstances鈥 metal plates 鈥渕ay fracture under normal weight-bearing or load-bearing in the absence of complete bone healing.鈥 Even then, the company said, that is a chance patients have to take.
AdvaMed said it does not keep statistics on device performance, and DePuy did not respond to questions about how often its plates fail.
Resolution: The second surgery delayed Witter鈥檚 recovery by four months and prevented her from gardening, golfing, hiking, biking and motorcycling through the summer and fall, as she usually does. 鈥淚 was pretty much chair-bound for 20 weeks,鈥 she said.
In November, she was not able to join her husband and son on a trip to Iceland. Instead of volunteering at a nearby ski resort, as she had done for six years 鈥 and which carries the benefit of a free season pass 鈥 Witter said she tried selling hand warmers and lip balm out of a small kiosk and watching the skiers through a window. She said she had to quit after six days because of the pain in her feet.
鈥淭he biggest annoyance with this whole thing, even though it took eight months out of my life, is I hate to pay for it again, and the doctor clearly said it wasn鈥檛 anything I did,鈥 she said.

The second surgery on Sarah Witter鈥檚 lower left leg delayed her recovery by four months and prevented her from gardening, golfing, hiking, biking or motorcycling through the spring, summer and fall, as she usually does. 鈥淚 was pretty much chair-bound for 20 weeks,鈥 she says.(Matt Baldelli for KHN)
Aetna said in a statement that while it does not allow providers to charge for indisputably inept medical mistakes such as leaving a surgical sponge in a patient or operating on the wrong limb, a broken plate does not qualify for such protection.
After reviewing Witter鈥檚 records, Aetna said it concluded the hospital had billed Witter for the portion of charges Aetna had considered excessive 鈥攁 practice known as 鈥.鈥 While Aetna cannot reject those charges because the hospital does not have a contract with it, the spokesman said Aetna would try to negotiate with the hospital on Witter鈥檚 behalf to reduce the bill.
Rutland Regional, however, indicated in its statement that the only reason it would discount a bill was for people who had inadequate insurance or were suffering financial hardship from the size of the bills. Witter said she does not meet the hospital鈥檚 .
The hospital invited her to meet with her surgeon and its chief financial officer.
The Takeaway: Witter brought up the seeming unfairness of the double charges to the hospital鈥檚 billing department as well as to her doctor, who, she said, was 鈥渃harming,鈥 but told her 鈥渉e had no wiggle room to do anything.鈥
Patients are usually out of luck when a second surgery is needed because of the failure of a medical device or a surgeon鈥檚 mistake. A few places, most prominently the Geisinger health system in Pennsylvania, offer warranties for hip and knee, spine and coronary artery bypass surgeries, among other procedures.
AdvaMed says that if a company provides a replacement, the hospital or surgeon is not supposed to bill Medicare or the patient for the equipment 鈥 even if the operation incurs charges.
Patients should scrutinize their bills and question their doctor and hospital or surgical center about charges for replacement devices.
If the doctor or hospital is partially at fault for the failure of the first procedure, request that part or all of the costs of the second surgery be waived. Get it in writing so you can make sure the billing department follows through. Also, in a medical market where insurers want to pay only for value-based care, let your insurer or employer鈥檚 human resources department know that you are being charged twice for the same surgery. Let them fight the battle for you.
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