After several rounds of treatment for a rare eye cancer—weekly drug infusions that could cost nearly $50,000 each—Paul Davis learned Medicare had abruptly stopped paying the bills.
That left Davis, a retired physician in Findlay, Ohio, contemplating a horrific choice: risk saddling his family with huge medical debt—if he has to pay those bills from the hospital out-of-pocket—or halt treatments that help keep him alive.
“Is it worth bankrupting my family for me to hang around for a couple of years?” Davis pondered. “I don’t want to make that choice.”
How much Davis will end up owing for his care remains unclear. One of the hospitals that has administered the costly drug is appealing Medicare’s initial payment denials. And the family might not even know their total balance until Medicare rejects all the appeals….
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