US Woman Shocked After Being Charged $40 "For Crying" During Doctor's Visit

Authored by ndtv.com and submitted by ThaiEdition
image for US Woman Shocked After Being Charged $40 "For Crying" During Doctor's Visit

The Twitter post has received more than 486,000 likes and thousands of comments.

A US woman recently shared that her sister was charged $40 (nearly Rs 3,100) “for crying” at a doctor's appointment.

Taking to Twitter, Camille Johnson, who is a popular YouTube and internet personality, shared a picture of her sister's medical bill in which she highlighted a segment of the bill that docked her sibling for a “brief emotional/behavioural assessment”. In the following tweet, she explained that her sister has a “rare disease” and “got emotional because she feels frustrated and helpless” as she is struggled to find care.

My little sister has been really struggling with a health condition lately and finally got to see a doctor. They charged her $40 for crying. pic.twitter.com/fbvOWDzBQM — Camille Johnson (@OffbeatLook) May 17, 2022

The itemised medical bill showed that Ms Johnson's sister had visited the doctor back in January for her condition. The various cost of the doctor's visit included a vision assessment test priced at $20, a $15 haemoglobin test, a capillary blood draw for $30 and a preventative health screening which cost $350. However, what caught Ms Johnson's attention was the $40 charge for “crying”.

In a Twitter, thread, the 25-year-old wrote, “One tear in and they charged her $40 without addressing why she is crying, trying to help, doing any evaluation, any prescription, nothing.”

Also Read | "We Keep Naughty Women At Home," Says Taliban Leader Sirajuddin Haqqani

Since being shared, the photo has gone viral with more than 486,000 likes and thousands of comments. Internet users shared their own experiences with overcharged medical bills, while others offered tips and advice on how to negotiate hospital bills.

“When I got surgery this past June to remove a tumour, I asked them what ‘Women's services' was for. It was for the pregnancy test they administered,” one person wrote, adding, “$1,902 to pee and for them to dip a stick into it. Thankfully most was covered by insurance but geez”. “Tell me you live in America without telling me that you live in America,” another person replied.

According to the Independent, a brief emotional/behavioural assessment is a mental health screening that tests for signs of attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), depression, anxiety, suicidal risk or substance abuse. It is usually issued as a questionnaire that is handed out and filled in before seeing the doctor.

Also Read | US Town Shuts Down After Only Clerk Resigns Over Vacation Denial

However, Ms Johnson told the media outlet that her sibling was never evaluated. She reportedly claimed that the doctor at the unnamed medical facility noticed her sister's tears but said nothing. Ms Johnson revealed that the health care centre did not evaluate her sister for depression or other mental illnesses. Her sibling did not even talk to a specialist, was not referred to anyone nor was she prescribed anything.

The 25-year-old said that thankfully her younger sister was covered by her father's insurance plan, which helped pay for the medical services. Now, Ms Johnson hopes that sharing her sister's medical bill online can help change how the US healthcare system treats others.

kushtiannn on May 21st, 2022 at 00:44 UTC »

I got charged $30 for the questionnaire you fill out before a physical. I had insurance but got sent the bill anyway. When I called to dispute , the billing dept said “Well, you don’t pay that, insurance does!” My response sounded something like….well, who pays the insurance? This is racketeering.

CJess1276 on May 21st, 2022 at 00:34 UTC »

I once got charged $100 for “respiratory therapy” because I started hyperventilating and a nurse had me breathe into a paper bag. True story. This was maybe five years ago.

Half_Past_Five on May 21st, 2022 at 00:30 UTC »

“The billings will continue until morale improves”