When I first arrived in our new town, I set out to find Mom a doctor. I got good referrals. Every office I called said that they were not taking new patients. This week I needed to go to the doc and called one of those offices. Suddenly, they are taking new patients.
Can a doctor legally refuse to take Medicare patients? No one has come out and said this, so I'm not sure now.
I once had a doctor tell me "it" wasn't going to work because I didn't care about my health. She grudginly took me on as a patient. I dumped her as a doctor immediately. Apparently, she only wanted healthy patients... not sick ones. Sick patients don't care about their health, but healthy patients do. What utter garbage! Worthless doctor. But, there are a slew of doctors that share that sentiment. They don't want difficult cases and the aging usually take more time and have more liability I suppose.
Its a show me the money world these days.
if she has a secondary insurer then often they will take Medicare patient. My mom has Medicare and has a federal Blue Cross and her eye & ortho doc's only would see her because they could bill BCBS.
Deb - the reason that hospitals take Medicare is because if they ever got built using federal funds, which until the last couple of decades that included almost ALL hospitals in the US, then they were built under the Hill Burton Act. Under Hill Burton the hospital was legally required to accept any and all federal health care programs and even more importantly they had to accept patients no matter what their ability to pay. When hospitals when thru the big building phases in the late 1970's and 1980's and were built new they could do a partial Hill Burton
by accepting Medicare and not the poverty ones. They would request a waiver from their regional planning body (the Heath System Agency in the region's Council of Government) because of whatever technology that was "special" they were doing - heart surgery was a biggie back then, then MRI buildings in the 80's.
No one back them ever though heath care would get so expensive in the US!
There are still hospitals out there under total Hill-Burton. You have to google to find out what might be in your area. But for the poor elderly and their caregivers, it is worth it. You cannot be billed if you have no ability to pay. Almost all are teaching hospitals too - which IMHO is the best place to go for care.
I would try looking for a geriatric specialist or may be a DO (doctor of osteopathy) as they are more likely to see Medicare patients.