Wednesday, May 10, 2017 The Nugget Newspaper, Sisters, Oregon FEES: Ambulance service mostly covered by insurance Continued from page 3 middle of the pack. While the contemplated increase is a big jump, Chief Johnson told The Nugget that the proposed rates still fall well below the cost of operation. “I’m very confident that we’re well below our costs — and even with the new rates,” he said. In fact, he said, the new fee level wouldn’t cover the staff costs of a run, leaving aside the costs of equipping and maintaining the ambulances. The vast majority of patients transported are cov- ered for the run by health insurance — the majority by Medicare or Medicaid. However, Medicare and Medicaid only reimburse a portion of the billed rate. “In the Sisters-Camp Sherman Fire District, roughly 61 percent of the patients transported by ambulance are covered by Medicare or Medicaid,” Johnson reported. “Medicare reimburses a maximum of $425 for an advanced life- support transport while Medicaid reimburses $421. Estimates provided by the District’s third-party billing company project that if the increase in rates is approved the District will collect 45 cents for every dollar billed.” Most others have ambu- lance fees at least partially covered in their health plan. Only 4.8 percent of last year’s transports had no health insurance. For those who are not covered or only partially cov- ered, District administrative assistant Julie Spor notes that the District offers a Sisters Country FireMed ambulance membership program that provides family coverage for emergency ambulance trans- ports for $50 per year. That plan is also available as a package with Life Flight to cover air ambulance transport as well. Spor also noted that the fire district often bills before the hospital, and ambulance fees can be counted toward an insurance deductible. For those who simply can- not pay an ambulance fee due to financial hardship, or who can only pay a little at a time, the District provides waivers and payment plans. “We have systems in place to minimize the impact on people,” Chief Johnson said. Worrying about the out- of-pocket cost of a ride is the last thing a patient and their loved ones should be thinking about in an emergency — but such concerns are a reality in a world of high healthcare costs and big deductibles. Chief Johnson notes that it costs nothing for an ambu- lance to respond to a poten- tial emergency and assess the Oops... PHOTO BY BRETT MILLER BARRAGE PHOTOGRAPHY A driver missed a turn and went through a fence and a yard, stopping just short of an uninvited visit to someone’s garage in a neighborhood near Sisters last weekend. DON’T MISS OUT on this week’s inserts in the Nugget: BI-MART: Seattle’s Best Coff ee in a Bi-Mart best deal! 12-ounce packages (ground beans in various roasts) are now on sale for $3.99! RAY’S FOOD PLACE: Don’t miss the Fantastic Friday One-day Deal! Sweet Cantaloupes, 2 for $3 (for the fi rst two) . Only off ered on May 12! situation. “We’ll respond to their home or to the scene and do an assessment for free,” he said. Paramedics will advise on whether a transport is in order or not. “It’s always the patient’s choice to be transported or not,” the Chief said. However, it is worth not- ing that even the full cost of an ambulance ride, if one is necessary, is likely to be the smallest portion of a bill in an emergency. Health and safety is ultimately more critical than dollars and cents. The District provides advanced life-support ambu- lance service to roughly 800 square miles of territory sur- rounding Sisters and eastern portions of Lane County. The District responded to 1,230 emergency incidents in 2016, with more than 83 percent of the incidents being medical in nature. The District trans- ported 522 patients to the hospital in 2016 — a 24 per- cent increase from the previ- ous year. “It’s an essential service that we have to have, I think,” Chief Johnson said. Ambulances and the equipment carried on them are very expensive. A new ambulance can cost $200,000 and a heart monitor costs over $25,000. Chief Johnson told The Nugget that recovering costs through increased fees — even if they don’t cover actual costs — will help enable the District to continue to maintain an appropriate equipment replacement fund and to maintain currency on life-saving equipment, while preforming all the duties and services ambulance crews offer to the patrons of the district. 19 Agenda... Sisters-Camp Sherman Rural Fire Protection District Board of Directors May 16, Sisters Fire Hall Administration Building, 5 p.m. • Resolutions a. Ordinance 2006-07-100 ambulance rate increase. b. Resolution 2016-2017- 003 cell phone reimburse- ment amendment. • President report. • Correspondence. • Fire Chief report: • Call activity and person- nel response. • Fire Safety Manager report. • Fire Corps minutes. NuggetNews.com is your online source for BREAKING NEWS