this is a firm I almost got a chance to work with, very disappointed it didn’t work out, the carrier that brought it to the table blew the

deal.

"We provide specific cost and quality information for tests, surgeries and other health care Office 2010 is powerful!

services."

We are doing this in house and are working on a way to require it in plan designs. I have seen a number of others do it in conjunction with

HSA plans. Microsoft outlook 2010 is convenient!

Doctors sign PPO contracts that disclose what they will be paid, for a doctor to say they don’t know is really saying I am to lasy to pull

out my contract and look. RBRVS, Scheduled, or Medicare based it is all there and they could easily put it in an electronic format and know

what carrier pays them what. Office 2007 is so powerful.

This speaks to how bad of business people medical providers can be. If you have multiple payors that compensate you from X(medicaid) to 10x

X(cash or private payor out of network) they should never turn down an appointment from the latter. Yet they do all the time. A well ran

pratice would know exacly what they make and treat those higher compensated patients better. If I am earning the doc twice as much as that Windows 7 is the best.

Medicare individual maybe he should think twice about making we wait 3 hours on a work day.

Part of them problem with disclousre is legal. Person calls in asking for the price of one code, then the bill comes in with a modifer we pay

less and they sue. It was bad enough before we added thousands of codes and another digit to ICD Microsoft Office is my best friend.