When George Lai of Portland, Oregon, took his toddler son to a pediatrician last summer for a checkup, the doctor noticed a little splinter in the child’s palm. “He must have gotten it between the front door and the car,” Lai later recalled, and the child wasn’t complaining. The doctor grabbed a pair of forceps — aka tweezers — and pulled out the splinter in “a second,” Lai said. That brief tug was transformed into a surgical billing code: Current Procedural Terminology (CPT) code 10120, “incision and removal of a foreign body, subcutaneous” — at a cost of $414.
They should sue the clinic for the child getting the splinter there. Let the clinic’s insurance company fight the health insurance company.
I originally parsed your comment as saying “they should sue the child”, which I took as an ironic joke at litigation culture.
That’s genius, pit tweedle removed against other tweedle removed and see who is more annoying.
Result: minimum payouts, premiums go up