{¶ 1} This matter is before the court upon the motion of plaintiff, Akron General Medical Center, for summary judgment on two accounts for unpaid medical expenses against defendant, Timothy D. Welms.
{¶ 2} At this stage of the proceedings, the granting of judgment is proper only when no genuine issue of material fact remains for determination, the evidence
{¶ 3} In its motion, Akron General offers an affidavit and two itemized accounts supporting the claim for unpaid medical expenses. In his affidavit opposing summary judgment, Welms asserts that the medical care for which he is being billed was unreasonable and unnecessary.
{¶ 4} Welms was twice treated at Akron General. Welms was first admitted to Akron General in August 27, 2006, and a stent was placed in an interior artery in his heart. He remained in the hospital three days and was discharged. The total charges were $32,567.72, and Akron General seeks this amount from Welms.
{¶ 5} On February 4, 2007, Welms was again admitted to Akron General for similar, though not identical, treatment. He received a second stent, which was placed in his “1st heart vessel.” He remained in the hospital three days and was discharged. The total charges for this hospital stay were $40,683.80. Of this total, Akron General seeks only $1,000 from Welms.
{¶ 6} Akron General’s account of charges for the February 2007 admission shows two credits. Welms was credited with a payment from his insurer, United Healthcare Insurance Company, for $21,092.80. This credit was coded “PMT-UNITED HLTHCARE IP.” It is clear that this credit represented a payment from Welms’s insurer. But Welms was also credited with an additional $18,591.00, which was coded “AJDJ-UHC IP.” Apparently, construing the evidence most favorably for Welms, this credit was simply an “adjustment” to the bill, rather than an actual payment.
{¶ 7} The Supreme Court of Ohio has determined that both the original medical bill and the amount accepted as full payment are admissible to prove the reasonableness and necessity of charges rendered for medical and hospital care. Robinson v. Bates,
{¶ 8} Robinson v. Bates,
{¶ 9} Welms’s two stays in the hospital were for similar, though not identical, treatment. Both involved placing a stint in blood vessels in or around the heart. Both hospitalizations were for three days. But the final charges for these two separate hospitalizations were vastly different.
{¶ 10} For the February 2007 hospital stay, Akron General credited Welms with a $18,591 “adjustment” that neither he nor his insurer had to pay. This “adjustment” amounted to almost half the medical bill.
{¶ 11} The medical bill from Welms’s August 2006 hospitalization included no “adjustment.” Akron General demands the whole cost. The only reasonable conclusion for this evidence is that an “adjustment” amounting to almost half the bill was available only because Welms was paying his bill through an insurer in 2007.
{¶ 12} Construing the evidence most favorably for Welms, it seems that Akron General grants substantive reductions to patients who are paying their bill through an insurer, but refuses reductions to those patients who pay out of their own pockets. This circumstance raises a real question as to the reasonable value of the medical treatment provided to Welms during his August 2006 hospital stay.
{¶ 14} Upon that same review, the court finds that there exist genuine issues of material fact of the reasonableness of medical charges related to Welms’s August 2006 hospitalization, and Akron General is not entitled to judgment as a matter of law on that claim.
{¶ 15} It is therefore ordered that the motion of plaintiff Akron General Medical Center for summary judgment for unpaid medical expenses from the February 2007 hospitalization against defendant Timothy D. Welms be and hereby is granted, and Akron General is hereby granted judgment against Welms for $1,000.
{¶ 16} It is further ordered that the motion of plaintiff Akron General Medical Center for summary judgment for unpaid medical expenses from the August 2006 hospitalization against defendant Timothy D. Welms be and hereby is denied.
So ordered.
