If you are insured, prior to your call, it is important that you contact your insurance company to ensure that the services required are “covered services”. In the event that they are not a covered service under your plan, please refer back to our Uninsured information. If you have insurance, you will also need: Your...Read More
Those figures are estimates of what an Uninsured Patient would have to pay. If you have insurance or some form of medical coverage, your out of pocket typically can include a deductible, coinsurance, co-payment or even non-covered services. The prices for your services are based on the contract terms negotiated by your insurance company with...Read More
It means that you have to pay for your services and that you do not have coverage for the hospital services by a third party like Medicare, Medicaid, Workers Compensation or an insurance company. Other common terms used when referring to Uninsured patients are: Self Pay and Private Pay.Read More
Your personal physician or other physicians providing you with services related to your hospital stay or visit will bill you separately. Independent laboratory will also bill you separately for lab work. If ambulatory services were used those would also be separately.Read More
If you are viewing estimates provided on this website, the pricing includes estimated room and board, supplies, nursing care, equipment use, nutritional services, and any services handled by the staff of the hospital within the walls of the hospital. It does not include services from outside providers such as lab or doctors fees.Read More
“Pricing Transparency” is the term used to describe initiatives in the healthcare industry to provide meaningful pricing information to consumers. The healthcare industry is often complex and difficult for consumers to navigate. Price transparency is a means of providing consumers price information on common services. Our hospital is committed to presenting pricing information on its...Read More
For some people, the end stages of alcoholism are when they hit absolute rock bottom and they simply cannot stop drinking. But this doesn’t have to be the true end—when you decide to get addiction treatment for alcoholism at a facility like Georgetown Behavioral Hospital, you can work your way up from rock bottom to...Read More
The number of stages in alcoholism might vary depending on your school of thought. Typically, however, there are five recognized stages of alcoholism that begin with increased alcohol consumption and progress through all of the physical and emotional struggles that come with this disorder.Read More