Talk of The Villages Florida - Rentals, Entertainment & More
Talk of The Villages Florida - Rentals, Entertainment & More
#16
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Apparently you neglected to read the entire thread. The VA referred this vet to this doctor.
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#17
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Is the VA on 42 able to help
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“Living is Easy with Eyes Closed” |
#18
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Both work great pain
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“Living is Easy with Eyes Closed” |
#19
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What the hell does this have to do with anything?
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#20
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Along with the referral the appointments should be made through the VA's Community Care office. That way the billing goes directly to the VA.
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#21
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This war hero with a disability rating 100% should be getting
free care and prescriptions at the VA or the VA sends the veteran to a private doctor under what the VA terms it Community Care . The VA pays the provider who accepts VA insurance ( Tri Care ) for service related injuries . I have VA healthcare not Tri Care , and make a little bit more money than most veterans and am charged co-pays . $9 or $15 dollars for prescriptions. $15 for a primary care doctor . $50 for a specialty doctor . Although if you see more than one doctor in the same day the copay covers all VA doctor visits . Alternatively since turning 65 my Medicare , Medicare part D and supplemental turn out to be less expensive than the VA . I have a $208 deductible for the whole year I suggest calling or visiting the the office of Patient Experience. They will make it happen, I guarantee. Call Florida department of veteran affairs to get a briefing on his benefits. If the veteran is low income he can apply for a VA pension. His Primary care VA doctor is the gatekeeper for prescriptions and specialty doctors . If the VA sent him to a private doctor they would be paying his bill . Tri Care is a wonderful thing for our war hero’s . Thank him for his service. |
#22
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Years ago I had lower back pain and my pcp sent me to that doctor. His office staff were the worst. Bad attitude on one hand. A few months passed after my treatment (that didn't help the issue---but that's not his fault) and we got a bill from our "former" insurance---I think what we had BEFORE we retired and moved here. I personally took it to the office and spoke with the person that handled it. It's been 12 yrs so I can't remember all the details now but I will say I decided "IF" I needed another pain dr. it wouldn't be that one. He's fine but it's his office staff that's lacking. I'm so sorry you're friend is dealing with this!!!
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#23
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Call Richard Blair Veteran Service Officer 352-689-4400 email va@sumtercountyfl.gov . He is at 7375 Powell Rd in Wildwood (building with the library). He is great and will get this straightened out for your vet.
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#24
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I would find another doctor. Quickly. Has your friend gone to the VA to apply for VA benefits? If not he should give it a try. It takes time and is a process, but in the end worth it. It is not a perfect process but cost of meds is determined by income. If your friend is in a low tax bracket this could be a tremendous help with the cost of prescription meds and more. If your friend goes this route once he has applied for benefits have him go the local VA to register. Call first to find out if he is in the system yet. Once he is head down to register immediately. This speeds up the process and will get your friend in to see a VA primary care physician quicker. I am a caregiver to a disabled veteran and am still learning to navigate the VA system. It's not always easy and is time consuming. Sometimes I just don't get answers, ever. I spend a tremendous amount of time and energy getting through the mess. But I did before my loved one applied and was approved for VA benefits too. Your friend could reach out to the United Way. Within the United Way is a department (volunteer based) that helps veterans. I wish your friend the best with this. |
#25
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#26
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EXCUSE? Thanks to Medicare etc they are so overworked they cannot spare the time to do a good job. I of course do not know all the details. Pain meds? In an effort to control FROM excessive use of OPIOIDS, the government has clamped down on pain meds. Prescriptions are for 30 days. The problems with OPIODS is they are habit forming and while they are the most effective pain killers, it takes higher and higher dosages to get the same relief. The mentioned $500 for the year, have it or not, is not much money. ADVICE TO YOUR FRIEND, he should contact VA MEDICAL. My dad did two tours of COMBAT duty in WWII. He got cancer. His prescriptions were like $600 a week. The VA would fill his prescriptions at, it I recall, a flat rate of $20. ASIDE-with cancer, the hidden reality. It is not the cancer that kills you, though it would eventually. It is the poisons and pain killers they give you that kill you. TO REPEAT-prescriptions, if they are OPIODS are 30 days and not refillable. |
#27
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Well, if this is the case then he should contact the VA and let them know he needs a new doctor. They can assign him a new one through community care. I'm not sure if there is a doctor at the VA in Gainesville who can help him but there might very well be. If so it could be worth the trip depending on his pain level for travel.
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#28
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#29
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#30
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I don’t know what the VA pays doctors who agree to work with them, but I do know that my combination of Medicare and the Blue Cross I pay for through my retirement benefits pays doctors, hospitals, and imaging centers around a dime on the dollar and usually doesn’t allow them to charge me anything at all. I don’t know how doctors can pay for office rent, employees, bookkeeping, taxes, and insurance on what may turn out to be a payment of only $6 to $10 for an office call. Sometime, medications are more expensive because of a new, more convenient formulation or delivery method for which the pharmaceutical company charges a lot of money. For example, an easier way of giving an insulin injection or an epinephrine injection or a slow release capsule. Sometimes, less fancy forms of the same med are much cheaper. Pharmacy fees vary a lot. For example, often CVS is much more expensive, but sometimes it is cheaper. Get the App GoodRX and find out what the various pharmacies around here are charging for the drugs you take. (That doesn’t help you know what your insurer actually pays, however—sometimes they get highly discounted rates.) |
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