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Notes -
But if, hypothetically, the OP didn't have insurance and just wanted to pay cash, do you think the bill would have been any lower? My impression is that paying cash for healthcare in the US is strangely difficult, expensive, and prices just as (if not more) opaque.
Short version: costs are weird, sometimes outright unknown (the accounting for some stuff gets bizarre), charges are generally inflated as a result an annoying dance with insurance companies and the federal government to get things paid for (ex: for a lot of stuff medicaid and medicare pay less than cost so things get...creative and the insurance company goes "we'll pay you 1.05 times the cost...").
Professional fees are like likely to do this because it's a little more obvious to pay out a portion of a staff members salary based off of how long the encounter is supposed to go (very doctors, NPs, or PA are self-employed these days, almost everyone is "owned" sometimes by a hospital but also by....).
Based off the absurdly inflated price and and the lack of willingness to negotiate (most health systems will be flexible with cash pay) (and also the fact this is the ED) the PA was probably owned by a practice management group which is when a PE firm buys a physician group and does things like cut salaries, raise prices, and be an asshole (and give the money back to whoever is invested in it). It's a huge problem right now.
It is also possible that this primarily driven by what happens when your insurance company just refuses to pay for things but that's less likely.
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