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Scorpion Peppers Caused Him ā€˜Crippling’ Pain. Two Years Later, the ER Bill Stung Him Again.

Maxwell Kruzic said he was in such ā€œcripplingā€ stomach pain on Oct. 5, 2023, that he had to pull off the road twice as he drove himself to the emergency room at Mercy Regional Medical Center in Durango, Colorado. ā€œIt was the worst pain of my life,ā€ he said.

Kruzic was seen immediately because hospital staff members were pretty sure he had appendicitis. They inserted an IV, called a surgeon, and sent him off for a scan to confirm the diagnosis.

But the scan showed a perfectly normal appendix and no problems in his abdomen. Doctors racked their brains for other possible diagnoses. Could it be a kidney stone? Gallstones? Here was a 37-year-old man in agony, but nothing really fit.

Then, someone asked what Kruzic had eaten the night before. He said he’d consumed tacos with some hot sauce that he’d made from a kind of scorpion pepper, grown from seeds he ordered from a chile pepper research institute.

The peppers measure over 2 million Scoville heat units on the spiciness scale, he noted, compared with a jalapeƱo at up to 8,000 or a habanero at 100,000 to 350,000.

The peppers are among ā€œthe world’s hottest, incredibly hot,ā€ Kruzic said. ā€œDelicious.ā€ He loves spicy food and had never had a problem with it, but apparently this was just too much burn for his digestive system.

Kruzic spent much of the night on a gurney in the ER. After about four hours, the pain decreased, and he was sent home with medicine to treat nausea and vomiting.

Then the bill came — about two years later.

The Medical Procedure

Kruzic underwent blood work and a CT scan of his abdomen during his ER visit for acute abdominal pain.

Consuming very spicy foods painful inflammation and irritation of the digestive system. The discomfort typically resolves on its own.

The Final Bill

$8,127.41, including $5,820 for the CT scan. Kruzic paid $97.02 during his visit to the hospital, which was in-network under his insurance. After insurance payments and discounts, he owed $2,460.46 — the remainder of the $1,585.26 he owed toward his plan’s deductible and $972.22 he owed in coinsurance.

The Problem: Ghost Bills From Visits Past

This September, Kruzic received a bill for his pepper-induced ER visit in 2023.

Unfortunately for patients, there are no uniform rules for timely billing.

Anticipating a bill, Kruzic repeatedly checked the hospital’s online portal, as well as that of his insurer, UnitedHealthcare. He noted that the insurer said the claim had been processed shortly after his treatment. For about eight months, he kept checking the hospital portal’s billing section, which indicated he owed ā€œ$0.ā€ He called UnitedHealthcare, and Kruzic said a representative assured him that if the hospital said he owed nothing, that was the case.

It is unclear what caused the nearly two-year delay. At least part of the problem seems to have involved protracted disagreements between the insurer and the hospital over how much his visit should have cost.

A photo of Maxwell Kruzic standing on steps outside his home.
It took two years for Kruzic to get a bill for his October 2023 trip to the ER. There are no uniform rules requiring hospitals and other medical providers to bill patients in a timely manner after care. (Jeremy Wade Shockley for Ńī¹óåś“«Ć½Ņ•īl Health News)

Lindsay Radford Foster, a spokesperson for CommonSpirit Health, the hospital system, said in a statement to Ńī¹óåś“«Ć½Ņ•īl Health News: ā€œUnited Healthcare, the insurer responsible for the medical claim, underpaid the account based on the care provided. As a result, CommonSpirit contacted UnitedHealthcare’s Payer Relations Department to rectify the underpayments.ā€

Asked why it had taken two years, she cited a reorganization at UnitedHealthcare and a change in the insurer’s representative assigned to the case.

But UnitedHealthcare contested that view. ā€œThis was paid accurately,ā€ said Caroline Landree, a spokesperson for the insurer.

But those explanations don’t satisfy Kruzic, a geological consultant: ā€œReceiving a bill two years after the service wouldn’t fly in any other industry. We could never contact a client two years after we completed a project and say, ā€˜By the way, we missed this charge.ā€™ā€

ā€œHow could this be considered anything but surprise billing?ā€ he added.

The federal No Surprises Act doesn’t protect against all types of medical bills that patients find surprising. It primarily protects patients from out-of-network charges when they visit an in-network hospital, or in an emergency.

But in medical billing, what’s legal and what’s reasonable are two very different issues.

ā€œThe bill certainly sounds outrageous,ā€ said Maxwell Mehlmen, co-director of the Law-Medicine Center at the Case Western Reserve University School of Law. ā€œThe question is whether it’s legal.ā€

That, he said, ā€œis a matter of state law and the terms of the insurance policy and the agreement between the hospital and the insurer.ā€

In Colorado, there are extensive regulations about how long health care providers have to file a claim and . For instance, claims for Medicaid patients must be filed from the date of service. For patients with private insurance, the terms may be outlined in their insurers’ contracts with individual providers.

If a hospital and the provider and insurer were working out payment in good faith, then a patient can be billed for their share of the costs years later.

The Resolution

Within hours of Ńī¹óåś“«Ć½Ņ•īl Health News contacting the hospital’s media relations department for this article, Kruzic got a call from a hospital executive telling him his bill had been adjusted to zero.

Blaming administrative changes at the insurer, Radford Foster of CommonSpirit said that UnitedHealthcare had taken so long to properly pay the bill that the hospital couldn’t collect from the patient. She said that Kruzic’s statement balance ā€œwas to be adjusted to zero, but due to a clerical error, a statement was sent to the patient in error.ā€

UnitedHealthcare’s Landree said that ā€œgiven the significant delay, we are addressing this issue directly with the physician’s office.ā€

ā€œMr. Kruzic will not be responsible for any additional costs related to this bill,ā€ she said.

A photo of Kruzic posing for a photo outside by a wooded area.
ā€œReceiving a bill two years after the service wouldn’t fly in any other industry,ā€ says Kruzic, who works as a geological consultant. ā€œWe could never contact a client two years after we completed a project and say, ā€˜By the way, we missed this charge.ā€™ā€ (Jeremy Wade Shockley for Ńī¹óåś“«Ć½Ņ•īl Health News)

The Takeaway

Ńī¹óåś“«Ć½Ņ•īl Health News’ ā€œBill of the Monthā€ series receives complaints every year about ghost bills — bills that arrive long after a service is rendered.

Sometimes it’s because the insurer and hospital are haggling over payment, and the patient’s responsibility — usually a percentage of that number — can’t be calculated until the dispute is resolved. Other times, insurers audit old bills and, determining they overpaid, try to claw back the money, resulting in the patient (or even the patient’s surviving spouse) being billed for the difference.

For now, the legality of billing long after treatment depends primarily on the fine print of insurance contracts.

An insurer’s word that a claim has been ā€œprocessedā€ doesn’t mean that the insurer has agreed to pay and that the billing is resolved. It could also mean that the insurer balked at the bill or completely denied payment.

As for Kruzic and his affinity for hot peppers? He said he still loves spicy food, but in his cooking, ā€œI will not use scorpion peppers again.ā€

Bill of the Month is a crowdsourced investigation by Ńī¹óåś“«Ć½Ņ•īl Health News and that dissects and explains medical bills.ĢżSince 2018, this series has helped many patients and readers get their medical bills reduced, and it has been cited in statehouses, at the U.S. Capitol, and at the White House. Do you have a confusing or outrageous medical bill you want to share? Tell us about it!

Ńī¹óåś“«Ć½Ņ•īl Health News is a national newsroom that produces in-depth journalism about health issues and is one of the core operating programs at KFF—an independent source of health policy research, polling, and journalism. Learn more about .

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