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He Returned to the US for His Daughter鈥檚 Wedding. He Left With a $42,000 Hospital Bill.

Last June, Jay Comfort flew to the United States from his home in Switzerland to attend his only daughter鈥檚 wedding. But the week before the ceremony 鈥 on a Friday evening 鈥 Comfort said he found himself in 鈥渆xcruciating pain.鈥

鈥淚 tried to gut it out for three hours because of the insurance situation,鈥 said Comfort, a retired teacher and American citizen who has Swiss insurance.

When the pain became unbearable, Comfort called his brother, who drove him and his wife, Nazuna, a few miles to the nearest emergency department, at the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center鈥檚 hospital in Williamsport, Pennsylvania.

Every bump of the drive was 鈥渓ike someone taking something and just jabbing it into my abdomen,鈥 he said.

At the hospital, Nazuna Konishi Comfort handed over her husband鈥檚 Swiss insurance card, which confirmed coverage by Groupe Mutuel. Jay recalled the staff making copies of his insurance card and then treating his acute appendicitis. Doctors performed emergency surgery to remove the inflamed appendix.

Diagnostic tests confirmed he had a rare cancer, which doctors in Switzerland later removed with another surgery after he returned home. 鈥淚t was a miracle,鈥 Comfort said, adding that the cancer was completely removed.

After his appendectomy, Comfort recalled vomiting and then waiting in a recovery room. In all, he spent about 14 hours at UPMC Williamsport before being released. He attended his daughter鈥檚 wedding and, eventually, traveled back to Switzerland.

Then the bill came.

The Patient: Leslie 鈥淛ay鈥 Comfort, 66, a retired educator who worked in Japan and Switzerland. Comfort pays a monthly fee and deductible for Switzerland鈥檚 mandatory basic health insurance, which he has with the Swiss-based Groupe Mutuel. His benefits 鈥 and the prices for procedures 鈥 are defined by the Swiss government.

Medical Service: Emergency laparoscopic appendectomy and diagnostic tests, which showed Comfort had a rare subtype of cancer called goblet cell adenocarcinoma.

Service Provider: University of Pittsburgh Medical Center Williamsport, which is about 3陆 hours northeast of Pittsburgh. The UPMC health system is , with 40 hospitals.

Total Bill: $42,156.50, covering emergency surgery, scans, laboratory testing, and three hours in a recovery room. His insurer has said it will pay him about $8,184 (7,260.40 in Swiss francs), which is double the procedure鈥檚 price in Switzerland. This left him to cover the remaining roughly $34,000.

What Gives: Although Comfort has health coverage, his Swiss insurance had no contract with the U.S. hospital where he underwent emergency surgery 鈥 or with any other provider outside Switzerland.

With what is considered an excellent health system, Switzerland has the highest prices for medical care in Europe. As in the U.S., the country relies on private insurers and hospitals. But the cost of care in Switzerland is substantially lower than what is charged in the U.S., so the reimbursement his insurer offered is a fraction of what Comfort owes the U.S. hospital.

鈥淚鈥檓 trying to do the right thing and say I鈥檓 willing to pay my responsibility,鈥 he said.

Groupe Mutuel does not have agreements with foreign providers, such as UPMC, and does not deal with them directly, said Lisa Fl眉ckiger, a spokesperson for Groupe Mutuel. The insurer originally agreed to reimburse Comfort what would have been paid in Switzerland for the same treatment in a public hospital and then double that because it was an emergency in a foreign country 鈥 a total of 4,838 in Swiss francs, or about $5,460.

While helpful, Comfort said, that amount wouldn鈥檛 pay off the $42,156.50 he owes UPMC.

UPMC has expanded its reach throughout Pennsylvania and is now the largest provider of care in many parts of the state. In 2016, it and now runs two major hospitals, UPMC Williamsport and UPMC Williamsport Divine Providence Campus.

that in areas where hospital consolidation is high, prices go up. Because there is less competition, hospitals have more power to charge what they want when patients have private insurance or are paying out-of-pocket.

In the U.S., the amounts charged for medical care are 鈥渁ll over the map,鈥 said Johnathan Clarke, vice president of strategy and business development at Penfield Care, a medical cost-containment company in Canada. The company negotiates medical bills on behalf of individuals, including international visitors to the U.S., but is not involved in Comfort鈥檚 case.

Clarke said he would expect an appendectomy to be priced between $6,500 and $18,800, based on his analysis of Medicare payments in the Pittsburgh area. 鈥 which evaluates insurers鈥 claims data to provide cost estimates based on what insurers have paid, rather than what providers charge 鈥 says a fair price for a laparoscopic appendectomy in Williamsport is about $14,554.

Comfort said a 鈥渞easonable price estimate鈥 based on his own internet research would be between $7,500 and $12,000.

Comfort鈥檚 care included an X-ray and an EKG, or electrocardiogram for his heart, because 鈥渢here was no information relating to past medical/surgical history for this patient,鈥 wrote Susan Manko, vice president of public relations at UPMC. The staff also conducted pathology work that identified cancer.

But those additional services did not fully explain the gap between cost estimates and what the hospital charged. For instance, UPMC charged $8,357 for Comfort鈥檚 three-hour stay in the recovery room.

Manko said Comfort鈥檚 total bill aligns with UPMC鈥檚 standard charges.

The cost disparities highlight the stark difference in international pricing. showed the average amount paid for an appendectomy in the U.S. was 鈥渘early exactly double鈥 that paid in Switzerland, said Christopher Watney, chief executive of the International Federation of Health Plans, an industry association whose members include health insurers on six continents.

Health care in Switzerland, though, is often expensive compared with other European countries, Watney said. The Swiss pay double for an appendectomy compared with Germans, and more than three times that of those in Spain, he said. Across the globe, Watney said, many countries include an overnight stay in the cost of an uncomplicated appendectomy in contrast to Comfort鈥檚 experience, which was billed as outpatient care.

Comfort, who has dual residency in Switzerland and Japan after nearly three decades working abroad, said he worked in the U.S. long enough to qualify for Social Security benefits and Medicare. He said he had previously tried to gain Medicare coverage at one point but still is not enrolled, after being transferred to a couple of offices and 鈥減laying phone tag.鈥

Still, unlike many patients dealing with a five-figure medical bill, Comfort said he is not concerned about UPMC harming his financial reputation. The health system doesn鈥檛 鈥渟eem to put bad marks against people鈥檚 credit record 鈥 and I don鈥檛 have credit in the United States. I鈥檝e been out for 30 years.鈥

Manko confirmed that, saying UPMC reviewed and updated its last year; it states the health system will not engage in 鈥渆xtraordinary collection actions鈥 such as lawsuits, liens on homes, arrests, or reporting to credit agencies.

She said the health system 鈥 which, as a nonprofit system, is tax-exempt 鈥 maintains a 鈥渞obust financial assistance program鈥 for patients unable to pay. But 鈥渢o our knowledge鈥 Comfort has not applied for financial assistance, Manko told 麻豆女优 Health News.

A photo of Jay Comfort standing for a photo by the water as a swan swims nearby.
After emergency surgery last year, Jay Comfort, an American expatriate with Swiss insurance, is facing a five-figure bill. Costs for medical care in the U.S. can be two to three times the rates in other developed countries, so foreigners and expats with good insurance in their home countries need travel insurance to protect themselves from 鈥渃razy prices.鈥 (Aria Konishi)

The Resolution: Comfort said he spent months waiting for a bill and finally reached out to UPMC because, if the bill had arrived this year, he would have had to pay his insurance deductible again on top of the charges.

Comfort received a full UPMC bill six months after his surgery. Manko said there was 鈥渃onfusion鈥 at the time of Comfort鈥檚 ER registration. Comfort鈥檚 wife provided the insurance information, she said, 鈥渂ut there was no documentation in the patients record for address, policy number or policy holder information.鈥

Once Comfort received his bill, he realized it was much higher than his Swiss insurance reimbursement and, frustrated, contacted 麻豆女优 Health News.

Fl眉ckiger said the original payment amount Comfort鈥檚 insurer calculated was by episode and did not include the scan or laboratory costs. After receiving questions from a 麻豆女优 Health News reporter, Groupe Mutuel 鈥渞ealized that we have not included the laboratory analysis and the CT scan,鈥 which are not routinely part of an appendectomy, Fl眉ckiger wrote.

After 麻豆女优 Health News provided a detailed summary of the UPMC bill, the insurer increased the amount it would pay Comfort. In all, the insurer said, Comfort should receive 7,260.40 in Swiss francs, or about $8,184.

Comfort still hopes to negotiate directly with UPMC to reduce what he owes.

鈥淚 don鈥檛 want to try to walk away, saying I don鈥檛 owe you anything,鈥 Comfort said. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 not right. We鈥檙e moral people, you know. But if you鈥檙e going to try to gouge me and play the power trip and think you鈥檙e going to try to get everything you can out of me, I won鈥檛 play that game.鈥

The Takeaway: Though the Affordable Care Act was meant to provide insurance to more Americans and bring down the cost of care, hospital bills remain extraordinarily high and highly variable.

For a nonemergency, Comfort could have tried to compare prices at other hospitals. But most hospitals in the area where he fell ill are owned by UPMC. And an inflamed appendix can鈥檛 wait for comparison shopping.

Clarke, the cost-containment expert, said the 鈥渙nly thing鈥 Comfort could have done differently was to purchase a travel health insurance policy before leaving Switzerland. While prices for health care in continental Europe are comparable to Switzerland, the high cost of care in the U.S. means Groupe Mutuel insurance is 鈥渋nsufficient.鈥

That is especially important for visitors to the U.S. since, as Robin Ingle, CEO of travel insurance company Ingle International, said: U.S. prices are 鈥渒ind of crazy numbers.鈥

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