Published
I have no idea.
I have never met a nurse or doc who does this in the ER unless a particularly expensive medication is prescribed at discharge...In this case, the MD checks with the patient to ensure that the patient can afford to fill it prior to discharge. We don't check the chart because this can lead to sticky questions about fraud.
Your preceptor sounds less than inspiring...
Does your work involve choosing treatments for patients? If so, knowing their insurance will help you pick the treatment that will cost them the least money. For example, Insurance A might prefer that their patients use a specific drug and cover the expenses of that drug 100% -- but if you choose drug B (equally effective), the insurance may only cover 80% and the patient may be stuck with a significant co-pay.
The same economics play out with other treatments, lab tests, post-discharge services, etc. Insurance companies often "dictate" the specific orders by making some choices expenses and other patients cheap. A good physician or NP will take do their patients a favor by taking the finances into consideration as they write their orders. They'll help their patients (and promote compliance) by choosing the cheaper options when reasonable -- or at least asking the patient their preference.
Years ago, when my father was a resident ... one of his mentors required him to write the cost of any test he ordered as part of the order. That forced my dad to consider whether or not the test was really worth the expense to the patient, who would ultimately would be paying for that test or treatment.
Could that be the reason?
I would ask the preceptor how this will benefit the patient and improve your care.
I have 30 years of bedside nursing.. never had the inclination or the time to check.
Now that I am in a managed care position .. I can see how that information may benefit the patient when the bill comes and of course the PROVIDER and PAYOR.
But in the real world... that is something bedside nurses cannot possibly add to their already overflowing plate.
Despareux
938 Posts
One of my preceptors told me she looks up insurance information for every one of her patients. She didn't explain why, but told me I would figure it out soon enough.
So what did I miss, because I can't figure out why knowing my patient's insurance information is important.