Zero chance of that happening. Doctors see a cross section of society wherein the first patient is from a slum, the second a Customs officer with loads of cash and the third a person staying at the Taj West End with a tummy upset. All people ask for concessions and medicine is pretty much the only speciality in which the doctor gets paid last. I mean it like this - when a patient is admitted for a procedure the hospital either gets an advance payment or a promise from the insurance company that X amount will be paid. The doctor does not get paid at all till the patient goes home and the hospital pays a cheque. Sometimes my payments have come after 12 months - just like private defence component supplier.Zynda wrote:Hakim saab, any chances of consultation/procedural fees going down in the near future due to decrease demand?shiv wrote:Hospital clinic practice is down 40%.
When patients get admitted they can speak only to their doctor with whom they have relationship. The hospital and pharmacy do not give a flying fuk and will not give one paisa rebate, It is the doctor who gives a rebate because of the relationship. He should not, but he does,
When a person spends his entire life seeing people begging for concession the need to "offer a business incentive" of reducing consultation fees does not sit well with the "business of compassion". Patients get concession on a case by case basis. Only patients know how many times their doctor has seen them without fees. This is a doctor's mistake because he really should charge for every minute of his time. The nation has decided that medicine is a service and doctors are entitled to charge for their service. Patients can and do ask how much treatment will cost. I can't speak for others but I give an up front estimate of how much I will charge. Patients can save money by choosing to go to a general ward or shared room. It will be more expensive if they take a private room or a suite - but my charge remains the same from the moment I declare it.
As an aside I bet my left testimonial, which is still with me that Jayalalitha's hospital expenses for 75 days have probably not been met fully. Hospitals and doctors take a big hit with VIPs who sometimes do not pay.