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- Path: sparky!uunet!concert!borg!ceti!jge
- From: jge@ceti.cs.unc.edu (John Eyles)
- Newsgroups: triangle.general
- Subject: summary of responses on Kaiser Permanente (LONG)
- Message-ID: <14653@borg.cs.unc.edu>
- Date: 21 Aug 92 16:45:04 GMT
- Sender: news@cs.unc.edu
- Distribution: triangle
- Lines: 539
-
- Recently I solicited opinions on the Kaiser Permanente HMO.
-
- As promised, here is a summary of reponses.
-
- Since my request, a number of additional HMO options have been
- made available to state employees.
-
- Also, not surprisingly, the employee costs of the options other than
- the state health plan has risen considerably. (For employee-only, the
- employee payment for Kaiser now exceeds the deductible for the state plan).
-
- Summay follows:
-
- *****************************************************************************
-
- I've been going to Kaiser for about three years now and I
- really like it. I like the fact that there's no big
- deductible to meet, or insurance forms to worry about -
- you just have to pay $5 every time you go for a visit
- and $5 for any prescription.
-
- I feel as if I've been pretty well taken care of there
- and I haven't really noticed that they skimp on anything.
- Just a few weeks ago they referred me to a cardiologist
- for an ecocardiogram (which is not cheap I would imagine).
- I don't think they would do something like that unless
- they thought it was necessary - they are paying for it
- after all - while a private doctor might go ahead and order
- a test like that because he's not paying for it, you are!
-
- One thing I didn't like at first was that I was seeing
- different doctors every time, according to whatever type
- of problem I was having. You could argue that that's
- good in the sense that you are getting someone who is
- a specialist in that field, but if you're used to seeing just
- one family doctor who you know, you find the lack of that
- a bit disconcerting at Kaiser. However, Kaiser do assign you
- to someone they call your "primary care provider," which is like
- having your own personal doctor, although you may get referred
- to others for particular problems. So now I mostly go to this
- one doctor who is very nice.
-
- I've never had any trouble making same day or next day appointments
- for minor problems. I've never had to use them in an emergency.
- You can call up and talk to an advice nurse too, if you wish, which may
- eliminate the need for you to come in for something minor. The only
- thing I've had trouble scheduling was this once-a-year routine
- gynecological exam. The schedule for that seemed to get filled up
- quite quickly for one month and I had to wait until the next month
- to make the appointment - they only start making appointments for things
- like that a month in advance or so.
-
- Hope that helps. If you have any more specific questions I'll try
- to answer them.
-
- *****************************************************************************
-
- I have been very happy with the Durham-Chapel Hill Office. I have a
- premature baby and they've been very good about getting us the
- specialists/medicines/machines we need. (I think that's sort of
- related to your question about medicines.) You have to be an informed
- and active participatant in your care, and maybe a little more
- agressive than with a "regular" doctor, but that's my nature anyway.
-
- The biggest drawbacks are that they practice out of Durham Regional, so
- UNC is not used (usually). And in quick/emergency/sick visits, you may
- not get "your" regular doctor. I haven't had any trouble getting an
- appointment when I wanted one. I also REALLY like their "advice nurse"
- arrangement. It means that you get to talk with someone reasonably
- intelligent and get some immediate advice, with the promise of a call
- back by the advice nurse and/or doctor if neccessary.
-
- Let me know if you have any other questions, concerns, etc.
-
- *****************************************************************************
-
- I just moved into the area and got a job with a company that offers
- either Kaiser or Managed Benefit Systems (a PPO, I think it's called).
- I chose the Kaiser option mostly because my wife has had good luck with
- HMOs, and because the flat rate of $5 per visit appealed to me. I hate(d)
- the thought of a deductible with a % copayment...
-
- Anyway, I've only had the need to use their services once so far.
- They seem to be a little stingy with same day appointments if you call
- after the morning-call-us-for-an-appointment period. I think their
- appointment line opens up at 7:00am, so the scheme is this:
-
- 1. you get up & call at 7:00am, and get put on hold;
- 2. you wait a (seemingly) random amount of time (in my case,
- about 10 or 15 minutes, I think... maybe not quite that
- long);
- 3. you talk to a nurse, who figures out which facility within
- their clinic you should get an appointment with (e.g. internal
- medicine, pediatrics, etc.) & who then makes the
- appointment for you.
-
- If you miss the 7:00am window, you're only given a same day appointment
- if its something they deem to be serious. Also, you CANNOT make appointments
- for the next day -- if you want an appointment for tomorrow, you have to
- call them at 7:00am tomorrow morning.
-
- That's my only real gripe about day-to-day stuff, though...
- My visit was painless & quick, and the doctor was very friendly and
- professional.
-
- To get a physical, you have to call at the beginning of the month & get
- put on their "physicals for the month" list. I asked to be put on that
- list during my visit (and even had the doctor order the lab work for me,
- so I could get it out of the way during my visit), but haven't heard
- any more about it (that was back in the middle of June). I don't know
- if I was supposed to have called them back or if they dropped the ball...
-
- So... The bottom line is that it's relatively cheap (& has a fixed cost),
- and the care you get is good... Their facility (building) is clean
- and comfortable (not hospital-like). On the down side, they serve a lot
- of people, so the appointment system is a little cumbersome. I guess, though,
- that it does the job -- if you're really sick, you can come in that
- same day; if you're kind of sick, you'll call back the next day
- (or have someone do it for you). If you're not all that sick, you won't
- bother to call back & they'll have effectively screened out a wasted visit.
-
- I'm essentially satisfied, based on my limited experience with them...
-
- Hope this helps at least a little bit...
-
- *****************************************************************************
-
- Hi! I've been on Kaiser for three years and think they're pretty good.
- The only problem I've had is getting an annual physical appointment. Granted
- that's not a big deal but just a little annoying. The great thing about
- Kaiser that I like is the price of prescription drugs. Only $5.00 for any-
- thing (thus far for my prescriptions). I think the co-payment range is
- $5-7 for each prescription. That helps us out a lot. I like my doctor and
- am pleased with the care I've received thus far. I have not had anl
- an emergency to date or needed an urgent or same day appointment so I can't
- help you there.
- Just my 0.02 worth.
-
- *****************************************************************************
-
- In article <13673@borg.cs.unc.edu> you write:
- |> I'm considering switching from the state health insurance
- |> plan to the Kaiser Permanente HMO option.
- |>
- |> I'm curious to hear opinions from Kaiser members in the area.
- |>
- |> Particularly:
- |>
- |> 1) how easy is it to get same or next day appointments for minor ailments
-
- Pretty easy. Mondays are tough, but other times generally are not. You
- won't usually see your primary care physician, just whoever has an opening
- on their calendar. I've seen pediatricians for knee pains, etc. I've
- never felt this to be an imposition since I could always see my primary
- care physician within a day or so if I wasn't satisfied with the visit
- with the random physician. I've also used the after hours emergency
- number - I got the on call physician within minutes.
-
- |>
- |> 2) how chinzy are they ? for example, if a pretty expensive non-steriodal
- |> anti-imflammatory works great for me for a chronic problem, how likely
- |> are they to be willing to prescribe it rather than trying to make
- |> me get by with aspirin, ibuprofen, or whatever ?
-
- Hard to generalize, but I doubt that this would really be a problem. I've
- been suffering from chronic sinusitus for years now, and they've never
- hesitated to prescribe any drug they thought would help. They do generally
- prescribe generic drugs to keep down costs and they will tell you to use
- OTC medicines if they belive that is the appropriate treatment for your
- malady. The physicians I've dealt with have been quick to order medical
- tests whenever it seemed appropriate - I've never felt that they were
- scrimping on care to hold down costs.
-
- My family has had lots of treatment at Kaiser (2 broken arms, 1 birth,
- 1 Rocky Mtn. spotted fever, god knows how many visits for chronic
- sinusitus, sinus surgery, chronic condromalacia (sp?), well baby visits, etc.
- I've always felt that the Kaiser physicians bent over backwards to make
- sure that we received the best possible medical care. With few exceptions
- (any large group practice is going to hire a dud occasionally, and to Kaiser's
- credit, the physicians I thought were duds didn't last long), I've found
- the physicians at Kaiser to be excellent. My family has been extremely
- happy with the medical care we've received through Kaiser.
-
- Now for the negatives: First, their handling of medical records eats shit
- with a spoon. I've been referred to outside physicians and specialists
- at other Kaiser offices and they _invariably_ loose some or all of my
- records in transferring them between offices. I no longer let them forward
- my records - if I see a physician off site, I hand carry my records and
- also take the x-rays or whatever back to Kaiser. Sooner or later someone
- is going to be seriously injured, miss critical treatment, or something
- similar because they screwed up the records, and Kaiser is going to be
- sued to hell and back for negligence in handling records. The second
- negative is the Kaiser pharmacy. It's OK when you call in prescription
- refills ahead of time, etc., but if you try to get a new prescription
- filled while you wait, you had better have a good book or your needlepoint
- along to amuse you while you wait. I've waited as long as two hours for
- a prescription to be filled. Half an hour is about average. The pharmacy
- is only open during hours that are very inconvenient for us working stiffs,
- too. You are SOL if you run out of some critical drug on a weekend.
-
- In summary, I really like Kaiser. The excellent medical care is better
- than I've ever had at any private family practice. The price is eternal
- vigilance when dealing with their bureaucracy. I trust the Kaiser
- physicians with my life, but I never trust their paper shufflers and follow
- up on everything to make sure they correct their mistakes after they screw
- up the records the first time or three.
-
- *****************************************************************************
-
- In article <13673@borg.cs.unc.edu> you write:
- >I'm considering switching from the state health insurance
- >plan to the Kaiser Permanente HMO option.
- >
- >I'm curious to hear opinions from Kaiser members in the area.
- >
- >Particularly:
- >
- >1) how easy is it to get same or next day appointments for minor ailments
-
- It is very easy. However, you must realize that if you want a same-day
- appointment you will never see the same doctor twice. This has proven
- to be a real problem for me. If you have lots of minor chronic health
- problems, they will not realize that that is so--after all, how can a
- doctor note that something is chronic if he only sees you once? Even
- for appointments scheduled well in advance, I have rarely had my so-called
- "personal" physician--she is usually off on maternity leave. I'm told
- by other Kaiserites that that is unusual for advance appointments.
-
- However, I have had, in the past, a very serious accident involving
- emergency medical care (at Duke--it was the closest emergency room) and
- followup surgery (at Durham County, Kaiser's hospital). They were great.
- They covered everything. There was one small hassle after the accident
- regarding followup care at Duke. They wanted me to go to Kaiser for it.
- I had to have the Duke doctor call them and yell at them to straighten
- that out. Kaiser really wants you to see their doctors since it is,
- of course, lots cheaper for them. You will have similar problems should
- you ever want to see a specialist. A Kaiser doctor must refer you to the
- specialist, and, of course, you don't have any say as to who that
- specialist is.
-
- In addition, it took a VERY long time for Kaiser to pay Duke. I got unpaid
- bills for months.
-
- >2) how chinzy are they ? for example, if a pretty expensive non-steriodal
- > anti-imflammatory works great for me for a chronic problem, how likely
- > are they to be willing to prescribe it rather than trying to make
- > me get by with aspirin, ibuprofen, or whatever ?
-
- I don't know. Our plan covers prescriptions at 2.00/per regardless of how
- expensive it may in reality be. So yes, they might be inclined to prescribe
- something cheaper. This is just idle speculation, but it would make sense.
-
- I have toyed with the idea of leaving Kaiser for quite some time now because
- of the above-mentioned problems. If you are a healthy person, I think it's
- probably great. Should you have problems, it is very hard to have any
- control over your care.
-
- *****************************************************************************
-
- I have been a member of Kaiser Permanente in the Raleigh area
- for over 2.5 years now, and in the Denver, CO area for 1.5 years
- prior to that, so I would be happy to tell you whatever I know.
-
- In general, I prefer Kaiser to my current alternatives for the
- following reasons:
- 1) My out-of-pocket expenses are lower than with other
- alternatives. This includes both the per-paycheck
- cost and the per-visit cost. The plan my employer
- (BNR) participates in costs me $30 per paycheck
- (biweekly), $5 for an office visit, and $5 for
- each prescription filled at the Kaiser pharmacy.
- This covers my entire family. The office visit
- and prescription costs for me are really important
- primarily because my 2 year old has had many trips
- to the doctor since his birth.
- 2) I don't have to fill out forms. As long as I
- see a doctor at a Kaiser facility, I don't have
- to fill out claim forms. If I have to go somewhere
- else (e.g. while traveling), claim forms are
- necessary. but the process is very simple.
- 3) Advice over the phone when needed. There have
- been LOTS of times with our child that we needed
- to talk to a doctor or nurse, but wanted to avoid
- the trip to the doctor. Kaiser provides advice
- phone lines staffed by registered nurses around
- the clock (off-hours are to handle emergency
- requests only). This has saved us many trips
- to the doctor and given us a lot of peace of
- mind when we weren't sure we were doing the
- right thing.
-
- As to your specific questions:
- 1) How easy is it to get same or next day appointments for minor ailments?
- Kaiser provides what they call Urgent Care that fills this
- need. Typically, you will be unable to see your regular
- doctor without an appointment scheduled in advance.
- (For children, it is much easier to get appointments
- with their regular doctor if needed). This seems to be
- one of the things that many people dislike about HMOs in
- general, but for my family it is not. We don't care so
- much about seeing the same doctor each time, just that
- we see a highly-skilled, competent doctor; and we do
- get that.
- Urgent Care is open on weekends and until at least 9:00 pm
- during the week for minor and not-so-minor ailments.
- (Try getting that from a regular doctor.)
- You typically call the advice line, and a nurse will
- help you decide if you can treat it yourself or should
- come to urgent care.
- 2) How chinzy are they?
- My doctor has asked me to try cheaper alternatives for
- effectiveness, but has never pushed this on me. We
- then determined that the generic was just as good,
- but if this had not been so, I could have gone
- back to the name brand.
- My son has had a number of ear infections and each
- time, he has been prescribed very expensive antibiotics.
- We found quickly that most of the cheaper ones just don't
- get the desired results, and our pediatrician has never
- hesitated to give us the more expensive medicine.
-
- If you have other specific questions, I'll do my best to answer.
-
- *****************************************************************************
-
- I have had very good luck with Kaiser. The biggest problem has been
- turn-over in doctors. I'm on my 3rd one in 5 years. As far as appt's
- for minor problems. If you call at 7:30 in the morning, they can
- sometimes squeeze you in, but there's no guarantees, particularly if
- it's specialist.
-
- I also know of some folks who have tales of woe trying to get
- appointments or get a problem resolved. A lot has to do with whom you
- get as a physician.
-
- I can't answer the drug question. I have very specific prescription
- needs so there's no generic alternatives.
-
- Hope this helps.
-
- *****************************************************************************
-
- I have excellent experiences with all aspects of care with Kaiser. We use
- the West Raleigh branch. Wife has had 2 major operations, with one being
- spinal related which took a lot of investigation to uncover the problem
- (growth on vertebra into the spinal cord, which required MIR scan to discover,
- and other was emergency surgery for multiple fractured ankle). Have been
- with them since 1985.
-
- *****************************************************************************
-
- We find Kaiser sufficient to cover our needs. Some anecdotes:
-
- They allowed us to pick between 4 treatments, one of which was $375
- PER VIAL (which contains 2 shots, but we could only use one of them)
- and would require 6 vials of medicine. This was a special case (not
- everything is 0% co-payment), so we would have had to have paid $75
- per vial if we could have found another person willing to buy the
- rest of each vial... In general, though, if a need is present and no
- alternatives are available, they will pay, in our experience. As for
- your expensive medicine, you could simply ask them before you
- switch.
-
- My wife just had a minor but invasive surgical proceedure, sometimes
- viewed as elective. Our above-premium cost: $0.
-
- I cut my thumb with rusty metal and they gave me an appt immediately
- (I was bleeding profusely)
-
- I had an emergency on a weekend and had to go to Durham County
- hospital -- I waited for over 3 hours for a 2-minute exam to rule
- out a serious condition. A private doctor might have been more
- convenient.
-
- They may make you wait UP TO 2-3 days for minor conditions, especially
- around X-mas and in summertime, when they are swamped with patients
- and have staff on vacation, respectively. I have been known to have
- gotten an appt in 1 day for cold symptoms. Prepare to wait up to an
- hour past your appt time to see the doc. I think that this is because
- they get emergency cases during working hours, but we've been going
- there for 2 years and the delay was only about 15 minutes when we
- started with them. Draw your own conclusions, or better yet, ASK them
- what the delay is and why it has been on the increase...
-
- Some of the docs are exceptional, and others are absolutely horrible.
- The good thing is that if you don't like your doctor, you can switch
- (we did). You get a primary doc who knows your entire medical history
- and knows you personally, and he or she can refer you to others for
- treatments outside his or her training.
-
- Medication is dirt cheap during working hours, and slightly more
- expensive ourside working hours (if you need them in an emergency from
- a pharmacy.)
-
- Note that Kaiser has been around since the mid-40's (!) and, although
- longevity is not an accurate indication of quality, I think that it
- says something about Kaiser.
-
- *****************************************************************************
-
- >>>>> On 9 Jul 92 18:58:50 GMT, jge@ceti.cs.unc.edu (John Eyles) said:
-
- John> I'm considering switching from the state health insurance plan
- John> to the Kaiser Permanente HMO option.
-
- I think HMOs are a good option for relatively healthy people who only
- need to see the doctor for regular physicals and minor illnesses.
-
- John> I'm curious to hear opinions from Kaiser members in the area.
-
- I've been a member for about three years, and have been satisfied,
- although their appointment system leaves something to be desired.
- It's such a pain to hear a recording say crap like: "Thank you for
- calling Kaiser Permanente. Our office is currently closed. If you
- have a serious injury or a life threatening problem, please press '1'
- now. If you'd like to make an appointment, please call back during
- our regular office hours." This isn't an exact quote, but you get the
- picture.
-
- Also, it's possible, if not likely, that you'll be assigned a "Primary
- Care Provider" who's a physician's assistant rather than an actual MD.
- Again, for minor illness, this isn't a big deal. For someone with a
- chronic illness or serious ailment, I'd say that a personal physician
- would be best.
-
- John> 1) how easy is it to get same or next day appointments for minor
- John> ailments
-
- I've never been able to get a next day appointment (at the
- Durham/Chapel Hill office on Rt. 54). My experience has been that you
- must call the same day, typically early in the morning to get an
- appointment. You can usually get a same day appointment without too
- much hassle, though. I don't know why they do it this way, but maybe
- they figure that if you're really sick, you'll go to their
- emergency/night care areas.
-
- John> 2) how chinzy are they ? for example, if a pretty expensive
- John> non-steriodal anti-imflammatory works great for me for a chronic
- John> problem, how likely are they to be willing to prescribe it
- John> rather than trying to make me get by with aspirin, ibuprofen, or
- John> whatever ?
-
- I've heard from a co-worker that they can be chintzy (sp?). His kid
- gets the same illness yearly (ear infection?) and he knows that the
- standard treatment isn't enough, and that something stronger is
- required. But the Kaiser people refuse to prescribe the stronger
- medicine to start with. They will only prescribe the standard stuff,
- have the family wait a few days until they're sure it's not working,
- and return for another visit for the stuff that they already knew was
- required. This used to cost only the time, discomfort and $$$ for the
- extra prescription. Now our company's plan requires a $5 payment for
- *every* visit, so every extra visit, even just for getting a new a
- prescription, costs $$$.
-
- This kind of co-payment really sucks! I got a physical last year and
- had to get a special type of TB test because I was born in Hong Kong.
- Supposedly, I most likely got some innoculation that can test false
- positives on Tyne tests. Of course, this alternate test requires a
- second visit to check results (a two second visual inspection by a
- nurse) while the usual 4-pin Tyne test can be checked visually by the
- patient. This year, it'll cost me $10 while it cost zip last year.
-
- *****************************************************************************
-
- In article <13673@borg.cs.unc.edu> you write:
- >I'm considering switching from the state health insurance
- >plan to the Kaiser Permanente HMO option.
- >
- >I'm curious to hear opinions from Kaiser members in the area.
- >Particularly:
- >1) how easy is it to get same or next day appointments for minor ailments
- >2) how chinzy are they ? for example, if a pretty expensive non-steriodal
- > anti-imflammatory works great for me for a chronic problem, how likely
- > are they to be willing to prescribe it rather than trying to make
- > me get by with aspirin, ibuprofen, or whatever ?
- >I'll summarize if there is interest (certainly seems like there would be).
- >Thanks for your responses; I'll anonymize them in my summary, upon request.
- >John Eyles
-
- We have been with Kaiser for three years now and think that it is
- great. For my first two years here we used the PCP plan through BCBS
- but they dropped it so we switched. The main reason that we have it
- is because of the kids. We went through a period where they were at
- the office at least once a week.
-
- Our oldest daughter uses a special RX lotion every day for her dry
- skin and we have had no problems with them trying to "push" something
- else on us. When she needed it she has seen a dermatologist (outside
- referal before they had there own).
-
- We are very satisfied and would never switch back unless the state
- keeps cutting back and the cost of Kaiser get to high. At first we
- paid $2.00 for RX's and $0.00 for a visit but now it is $5.00 for a RX
- and $5.00 for a visit. This was caused by the increase in costs and
- the state didn't want to pay more/pass on to the employees a increased
- cost so we got reduced coverage.
-
- *****************************************************************************
-
- In article <13673@borg.cs.unc.edu>, jge@ceti.cs.unc.edu (John Eyles) writes:
- >1) how easy is it to get same or next day appointments for minor ailments
-
- In two years, I never had a problem. But you may have to wait as much as
- an hour, typically more like 30 minutes.
-
- >
- >2) how chinzy are they ? for example, if a pretty expensive non-steriodal
- > anti-imflammatory works great for me for a chronic problem, how likely
- > are they to be willing to prescribe it rather than trying to make
- > me get by with aspirin, ibuprofen, or whatever ?
-
- I found them anything but chinzy. To my taste, they really seemed to overdo
- some things, such as sending you to a specialist.
-
- *****************************************************************************
-
- In article <13673@borg.cs.unc.edu> you write:
- |> I'm considering switching from the state health insurance
- |> plan to the Kaiser Permanente HMO option.
- |>
- |> I'm curious to hear opinions from Kaiser members in the area.
- |>
- |> Particularly:
- |>
- |> 1) how easy is it to get same or next day appointments for minor ailments
-
- Tough
- |>
- |> 2) how chinzy are they ? for example, if a pretty expensive non-steriodal
- |> anti-imflammatory works great for me for a chronic problem, how likely
- |> are they to be willing to prescribe it rather than trying to make
- |> me get by with aspirin, ibuprofen, or whatever ?
-
- If it isn't significantly better then tough luck. They're actually
- not bad here, though they'd prescribe 3 ibus and make you pay for
- them rather than prescribe 600mg Motrin and pay for it themselves.
- Also, they have a "preferred" prescription drug list. I couldn't
- get a decongestant I liked because it wasn't on the list. Check
- things like this first.
-