Pricing Transparency
At Forrest City Medical Center, our goal is to provide patients with high quality care and the best possible hospital experience. We know that the billing and payment process may seem overwhelming at times, and we want to be as helpful as possible.
Click here for Pricing Transparency
To make the process more transparent, we are happy to follow CMS (Centers for Medicaid and Medicare Services) guidelines that require all hospitals to make available a Standard Charge List for products and services provided at the facility.
Before reading the list, please note that:
- The Standard Charge List does not generally reflect what a patient or insurer pays and not what the hospital receives in payment.
- In 2018 Forrest City Medical Center was paid, on average, less than 20 percent of charges.
- The charges included in the Standard Charge List do not reflect any discounts negotiated by insurance providers or other payment discounts that can greatly reduce the prices.
- What a patient will actually pay (or a patient’s responsibility) may vary depending on his/her individual health insurance plan, deductible amounts and co-pays.
Uninsured or under-insured patients should always consult with our staff to determine if they qualify for discounts. Our financial counselors welcome questions and are available to provide assistance. Contact our Business Office and Patient Access Department at 870-261-0275.
What is a charge?
A hospital charge is a federally-required maximum “list price” for an item or service that does not reflect any negotiated discount by the insurance provider. Hospitals are required to maintain a catalog of procedures, descriptions and list prices in a complex accounting tool, known as the hospital Standard Charge List.
What do health insurance providers pay?
Insurers (including Medicare, Medicaid, commercial health insurance providers, and others) do not pay the charges listed in the Standard Charge List. Instead, they pay a set price that is negotiated in advance. Every insurance company pays the hospital differently based on their contract. Patients pay only the out-of-pocket amounts set by their insurance providers.
How can I use this hospital charge information for comparing prices?
Charge information, by itself, isn’t generally useful to determine how much patients may need to pay, or to compare what a patient might owe a hospital. Discounts and fee schedules are used to determine how much insurance providers pay and may vary from hospital to hospital.
How are charges different from what insurance companies pay?
Again, Medicare, Medicaid and commercial insurance providers negotiate set prices for what they will pay for medical services. In most cases, what your insurance company sets as the reimbursement will be less than the hospital Standard Charge List. For example, the charge for staying in a hospital room for one day may be listed in the Standard Charge List as $1,500, but the negotiated fee agreed upon by the insurance provider may only be $700.
How are charges different from your possible out of pocket costs, like your deductible or co-insurance?
Deductibles and co-pay amounts are based on the reimbursement terms set by your insurance provider for covered services. They are rarely ever based on the actual hospital Standard Charge List.
How can you receive a clearer customized estimate of your actual out of pocket costs?
For more information about your potential out-of-pocket costs, please contact your insurance provider prior to receiving care. Please contact our Business Office and Patient Access Department at 870-261-0275 to discuss any specific questions or to speak with a counselor about payment options.