Wednesday, March 16, 2011

What Medstar Surgical Fails to Acknowledge

Gerry, your attempts to explain the overwhelming problems with documentation issues with Medicare are not in vain. I understand them. The "small delay" you identified spanned more than five months! Gail Ferrentino-Walsh said the chair would be ready by October 2010. The lies began in September, as Gail's assistant, Janine Radice, told me on numerous occasions application had been made to Medicare. THE TRUTH IS, YOUR EMPLOYEES LIED REPEATEDLY OVER THE COURSE OF SEVERAL MONTHS! It was only after I threatened legal action while on the phone with Janine was any action taken. You took Gail and Janine off my case because even you could not trust them to act. How on earth is that the fault of Medicare issues?

Is there anyone at Medstar Surgical honest enough to take responsibility for the mistakes your company has made? Or are you callous enough to ignore the fact a disabled man has to bear the burden of your misdeeds?

Still no further word from St. Charles Hospital.

Medstar Surgical's Response

March 16, 2011

Mr. Marc Charest
256 Sebonac Road
Southhampton, NY 11968

Re: Wheelchair processed under the Medicare Program

Mr. Charest,

We have tried, in vain, to explain to you the overwhelming problems with the documentation issues with the Medicare Program in the procurement of a powered mobility device.
People just like you all over the country struggle everyday, sometimes for much longer periods of time than you, to get a new power mobility intervention.

We want you to have your chair. We are completely aware of the difference a properly designed device can have in your quality of life. The documentation burden put on suppliers, physicians and clinicians can, and has, caused untenable delays in the service delivery process. The problem remains with the system. Until that is corrected delays will continue.
Medstar identified a gap in our process tracking that caused a small delay and corrected it. We do not now, nor have we ever, been involved in lies or deceit, with you or any other entity we deal with.

The system that was approved by the ADMC process will result in a “no cost” to you. You have Medicare primary and Medicaid secondary to cover those costs
The power base, the power independent tilt, headrest and back that were specified in clinic are covered and approved.

The seat elevator, discussed in clinic, is never a covered item under Medicare. Now that we have the Medicare determination, we have submitted to Medicaid for a determination. Private payment is the only way for this to be included on your chair in the event of a denial from Medicaid

Items that were, or may be not covered, and there for not paid by your insurance can only be provided on a private pay basis. Items not covered or paid for privately will not be included on the new power chair.

We have the affirmative ADMC approval for your chair. Further processing is on hold until you decide the next course of action. As a point of information, to long of a delay in final delivery will render the ADMC approval invalid.

Gerry Dickerson
VP Rehab Technology
Medstar Surgical, Inc.
College Point, NY 11356

Thursday, March 10, 2011

Letter to Medstar Surgical and St. Charles Hospital

Marc E. Charest
256 Sebonac Road
Southampton, NY 11968
631-259-3828

March 9, 2011

Mr. Zeb Pirzada, CEO
Medstar Surgical and Breathing
15-40 128th Street
College Point, NY 11356
and
Mr. James O’Connor, CEO
St. Charles Hospital
200 Belle Terre Road
Port Jefferson, NY 11777

Re: New wheelchair.

Dear Sirs,
This week, the wheelchair I have been waiting nine months for has finally been approved. The delays were caused by errors, inaction or outright deceit by one or both of your corporations. I have been endeavoring for months simply trying to get someone to provide proper patient care. I have been more than flexible in trying to work with everyone.

The entire purpose of obtaining a new wheelchair was to provide a chair with better back and head support. My current chair is inadequate in this regard. I have endured several months of unnecessary neck and back pain while waiting for the chair that was promised to me by October 2010.

After again consulting with my attorney, I am offering a proposal to resolve this issue once and for all.

First, Medstar and St. Charles will provide, at no cost to me, the wheelchair as approved by Medicare.

Second, in addition to the power options discussed at the wheelchair clinic, I request the seatback also be motorized. In the nine months since my evaluation at the wheelchair clinic, my hands have weakened and I will be unable to operate the seatback angle manually in the very near future. The cost for this will also be borne by your corporations.

I will not compromise on the above proposal. Throughout this ordeal I have been offered nothing but excuses, finger-pointing and platitudes. As I have stated to several people involved, I will not back down.

If the above proposal is not accepted, I fully intend on filing suit to recover treble damages for the costs I have incurred repairing my old wheelchair and any out of pocket costs for my new wheelchair. I estimate this will amount to about $25,000. In addition, I will be seeking compensation for pain and suffering since October 2010 caused by the extended use of the inadequate chair I am using. I have no estimate for that.

I am eager to put this problem behind me, as my only desire is to be comfortable and independent in a wheelchair that works for me. Given all that has transpired and all I have endured, this is a more than reasonable proposal.

I look forward to your response.

Sincerely,


Marc Charest

What are Medstar Surgical and St. Charles Hospital thinking?

While getting my old wheelchair repaired last week, I spoke with the vendor regarding a new chair. I learned several surprising facts.

First, if I change vendors, I'll need a new evaluation from the wheelchair clinic. No vendor will accept a nine month old evaluation. I had to wait three months to get an appointment at the wheelchair clinic last year. That would put me in June, an entire year after I started this whole fiasco. And then the paperwork starts all over again!

Second, Medicare won't accept an evaluation more than three months old. So how the hell did Medstar Surgical get my nine month old information approved? Were these the dates Medstar and St. Charles' wheelchair clinic have been talking about recently with me on the phone? Have my medical records been changed to cover their asses?

Most frustrating through all this is dealing with the daily back and neck pain I have. The whole purpose of getting a new wheelchair was to have a chair that provided better back and head support. Nine months later, I'm still in the same crappy chair.

Could I have gone with another vendor at any time? Of course. But every time I called Medstar or St. Charles, I was told the paperwork was almost done and delivery was imminent. Changing vendors would waste time as far as I knew. They all did a spectacular job of stringing me along.

Medstar Surgical continues to fail to take responsibility for it's fraudulent actions in supplying my wheelchair. I suspect there will be more to the story too, once I see my full medical record and what was submitted to Medicare.

St. Charles Hospital I believe fails to see it's culpability in the substandard care I have received through the wheelchair clinic. Allowing the antics of Medstar to occur under their watch is foolhardy at best.

What is Medstar Surgical Hiding?

After my letters of February 25, I got a positive response from St. Charles Hospital. I spoke with Laura Beck, director of Patient Care Services (631-476-5606). She was very apologetic about what transpired and promised to help me get what I needed from Medstar. Amazingly however, I haven’t heard from her since.

Medstar, naturally, was absolutely no help. Gerry Dickerson is refusing to release any information regarding my file, claiming it contains proprietary information. How correspondence regarding my medical file could hurt Medstar is beyond me. What are they hiding?

The weekly updates promised by Zeb Pirzada, president of Medstar Surgical, never materialized either.