An Arm and a Leg – Details, episodes & analysis

Podcast details

Technical and general information from the podcast's RSS feed.

An Arm and a Leg

An Arm and a Leg

An Arm and a Leg

Society & Culture
Health & Fitness

Frequency: 1 episode/17d. Total Eps: 149

Omny Studio

An Arm and a Leg is a podcast about why health care costs so freaking much and what we can (maybe) do about it.

If you’ve ever been surprised by a medical bill, you’re in good company. But as our team of seasoned journalists has learned from years of reporting — you’re not always helpless. We don’t have all the answers, but we’ll offer you tools and big picture insights with plenty of humor and heart. 

An Arm and a Leg is co-produced with KFF Health News and distributed in partnership with KUOW.

You can support An Arm and a Leg by donating at armandalegshow.com/support/

Show Credits: Created, hosted, and produced by Dan Weissmann with senior producer Emily Pisacreta and engagement producer Claire Davenport, edited by Ellen Weiss. Audio wizard: Adam Raymonda. Music is by Dave Weiner and Blue Dot Sessions. Bea Bosco is our consulting director of operations. Lynne Johnson is our operations manager.

Site
RSS

Recent rankings

Latest chart positions across Apple Podcasts and Spotify rankings.

Apple Podcasts

    No recent rankings available

Spotify

    No recent rankings available



RSS feed quality and score

Technical evaluation of the podcast's RSS feed quality and structure.

See all
RSS feed quality
Excellent

Score global : 94%


Publication history

Monthly episode publishing history over the past years.

Episodes published by month in

Latest published episodes

Recent episodes with titles, durations, and descriptions.

See all

This is An Arm and a Leg

lundi 6 janvier 2025Duration 00:57

An Arm and a Leg is a show about why health care costs so freaking much, and what we can (maybe) do about it. New episodes every three weeks.

See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

A listener fighting the good fight

Season 12 · Episode 10

lundi 30 décembre 2024Duration 11:48

A few weeks ago, a listener sent us a note with a link to a news article about a new resolution that had recently been adopted by the American Medical Association – the largest group representing doctors in the US. 


The resolution said: hospitals need to do more to guarantee charity care to patients who qualify. Legislators and regulators should make them. 


Our listener was the author of that resolution, and he told us he first learned about charity care through this podcast. 


His name is Joey Ballard and he’s an internal medicine resident at the University of Illinois-Chicago (UIC).


We talked with him about his early organizing as a medical student, bringing the resolution to the AMA, and the optimism he feels bringing the fight for charity care to the hospital he works at now.


Here’s a transcript of this episode. 


Send your stories and questions. Or call 724 ARM-N-LEG.


And again... we’d love for you to support this show.


See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

We want to see your hospital bills

Season 12 · Episode 2

jeudi 25 juillet 2024Duration 03:07

We’re starting a new investigation and need your help. We’re looking into something we’ve talked about a lot on this show: hospital financial assistance – also known as “charity care” — which most hospitals are legally required to offer. 


Something like 60 percent of people might qualify to have their hospital bills reduced or even forgiven through charity care — but of course nowhere close to 60 percent of people actually get that assistance. 


A lot of people just don’t know about it. (A survey our friends at Dollar For ran last year found that more than half of patients who might qualify for charity care had never even heard of it.)


Which raises a question: How exactly are hospitals telling you and me about charity care — you know fulfilling their legal obligation to let us know we just might qualify to have our medical bill forgiven? 


This is where you come in: we want to see a LOT of bills from hospitals. If you got one any time in the last year would you please you share it with us here


Even if you weren’t worried about how you’d pay — we just want to see what your hospital was saying about your options (like payment plans vs charity care). We want to see what’s in bold type and what’s in fine print.


And if you were at all worried about how to pay, we’d like to hear the story. Did anyone mention charity care to you? Or what? And how’s it going? 


We also need your help spreading the word to friends and family. Spread the word to your friends and family, share our form with them


Finally, if you’re looking for charity care support, or just to see if you might qualify, you can go to Dollar For’s website and use their screening tool to see if you’re eligible, and their team of amazing volunteers can take it from there. And you can find more information on charity care in our First Aid Kit newsletter.


That’s all for now. Here's a transcript of this short episode. We’ll be back with more new episodes in a few weeks. 


In the meantime, you can send us other stories and questions. Or call 724 ARM-N-LEG.


Of course we’d love for you to support this show.




See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

The woman who beat an $8,000 hospital fee

Season 12 · Episode 1

jeudi 11 juillet 2024Duration 25:31

Georgann Boatright's local hospital told her she'd need to pay an $8,000 "operating room" charge for a test she was pretty darn sure wouldn't involve an operating room. So she went elsewhere, even though it meant driving to another state.


Avoiding that charge required more than just a willingness to go — literally — way out of her way. Georgann Boatright has knowledge, skills, and grit that most of us don't — although we can maybe learn a thing or two from her.


More and more, people are noticing sneaky new fees like the one Georgann spotted. They’re often called “facility fees,” and they’re kind of like a cover charge for walking through the door. 


Hospitals say these fees go toward overhead on facilities with lots of specialized equipment —places like emergency rooms. But these fees have been increasing in recent years — and becoming more common: As hospitals buy up doctor’s offices, patients are starting to see them tacked onto bills for routine trips to the doctor.


We asked you to send us stories about facility fees. We heard from a ton of you and learned so much. 


We’ve got lots of stories to share. And we’re starting with this epic tale — which also involves the biggest facility fee charge we saw in all your submissions. 


Here’s a transcript of this episode


Send your stories and questions. Or call 724 ARM-N-LEG.


Of course we’d love for you to support this show.


See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Coming soon: your stories on facility fees

mercredi 3 juillet 2024Duration 02:02

For months now, you’ve been sharing stories with us about facility fees, those sneaky fees that keep showing up on your medical bills. 


Facility fees are kind of like a cover charge for visiting a health care facility, usually one owned by a hospital. And many of you have been blindsided by them. 


Some of you have been going to the same place for years, only to one day get a brand new charge, seemingly out of nowhere. Many of you only found out about a facility fee after the fact, while some of you managed to avoid one by going somewhere else. Pretty much all of you were vexed, confused, and wanted answers. 


Next week, we’ll start unpacking these stories, starting with one that’s particularly epic. 


Stay tuned! 


In the meantime, got a story or tip you want to share? Send your stories and questions. Or call 724 ARM-N-LEG.

And of course we’d love for you to support this show.


See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Meet the Middleman’s Middleman

Season 11 · Episode 8

jeudi 13 juin 2024Duration 24:55

Folks who expected their health insurance to cover some out-of-network care have been getting stuck with enormous bills instead. Like one couple from Kansas City: Their insurance hung them out to dry for thousands of dollars, all while sending statements touting a “discount” the couple was supposedly getting. 


Turned out: A middleman was cutting their coverage — actually a middleman’s middleman — working with their insurance company. The couple’s insurer got the “discount,” and the middlemen got big fees. 


And of course this couple wasn’t alone. A recent New York Times investigation from reporter Chris Hamby documented and explained this Russian-nesting-dolls-of-middlemen scheme. 


Insurance companies (middleman #1) work with a with a company called MultiPlan (middleman #2), which slashes the amounts the insurance plans actually pay for care.


To show how it all works — and what we can maybe do about it — we dive into the hidden mechanics of health insurance.  


Here's a transcript of this episode.


Send your stories and questions. Or call 724 ARM-N-LEG.


Of course we’d love for you to support this show.


See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Staying on Medicaid seems tougher than it should be

jeudi 23 mai 2024Duration 23:06

We take our first look at Medicaid— the big, federally-funded health insurance program for folks with lower incomes— for two reasons: 


First, it’s a huge part of our health-care system. Medicaid covers a quarter of all Americans, and four in ten children. 


Second, it’s timely: In the last year, more than 20 million people have lost Medicaid — even though there’s evidence to suggest a lot of those people probably still qualify. 


More than two-thirds have been dropped for “procedural reasons” — basically, missing paperwork.


Of folks who’ve been dropped, 70 percent have ended up either uninsured, or — in most cases — back on Medicaid. 


This is all because of a process called “the unwinding” of COVID-emergency protections that kept folks from getting dropped at all for a few years. It’s been messy.


We’ve been hearing the stories of folks who got dropped, and their fights to get re-enrolled.  


In this episode, we hear about two families in Tennessee who lost coverage they were entitled to — including one family who lost their coverage after their mail got sent to a horse pasture — with help from KFF Health News reporter Brett Kelman. 


Here’s a transcript of this episode.


Send your stories and questions. Or call 724 ARM-N-LEG.


Of course we’d love for you to support this show.


See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

We’re digging into “facility fees.” We need your help.

Season 11 · Episode 6

jeudi 2 mai 2024Duration 10:22

We’re launching a brand new project and need your help!


We’re zooming in on charges that are becoming more and more common on your medical bills: facility fees. 


Facility fees are charges tacked onto your bill for visiting a doctor’s office or clinic related to a hospital or larger health care system… or even talking with a doctor who’s in one of those places on a telehealth visit. 


If you’ve ever seen a charge for a facility fee on your medical bill, we want to hear from you


... and if you haven't, we'd love your help spreading the word!


Consider sharing our posts on any of these networks:


Instagram | TikTok | Facebook | Ex-Twtitter | LinkedIn


We’ll be back with more new episodes in a few weeks. 


In the meantime, send your stories and questions. Or call 724 ARM-N-LEG.


And of course we’d love for you to support this show.


See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

The Hack

Season 11 · Episode 5

jeudi 11 avril 2024Duration 21:39

When a subsidiary of the giant UnitedHealth Group got hit by a cyberattack recently, a big chunk of the country’s doctors, pharmacists, hospitals and therapists just stopped getting paid. 


It’s been a huge disruption, with some providers wondering if they can keep their doors open.


But thanks to their huge size and reach, the situation may have had a silver lining — for United.


Which seems like a big problem, and got us wondering: What can we maybe do about it?


The answer turns out to be: Maybe more than we think, via antitrust enforcers at the Federal Trade Commission and the U.S. Department of Justice.


Strap in for a wild ride — and then maybe check out FTC Chair Lina Khan’s talk with Jon Stewart on The Daily Show. We include some short excerpts, but the whole thing is worth a watch.


Thanks to reporters Brittany Trang (STAT News) and Maureen Tkacik (The American Prospect) for guiding us through their reporting.


And to the novelist/journalist/activist Cory Doctorow, who has been writing about antitrust enforcement for years. Here are a couple of his columns about Lina Khan and what she and other antitrust enforcers are up to.


If you want a deeper dive on the new antitrust movement: It’s summed up in a terrific (and short) book by Tim Wu, a Columbia University law professor and former White House adviser: The Curse of Bigness: Antitrust in the New Gilded Age


And you may be able to get it for free! If your local library uses a system called Hoopla, you can borrow it as either an audiobook or an ebook.


Super-fun tangent: Cory Doctorow and Tim Wu went to elementary school together — and apparently played a lot of Dungeons and Dragons — when they were kids in Toronto


Here’s a transcript of this episode


Send your stories and questions. Or call 724 ARM-N-LEG.


And of course we’d love for you to support this show.


See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Son of Medicare: Attack of the Machines

Season 11 · Episode 4

jeudi 21 mars 2024Duration 30:05

Reporter Bob Herman from STAT News unpacks his blockbuster investigation about the country’s biggest health care company.   


Covering the American health care system means we tell some scary stories. But this episode is almost like a horror movie


It’s got some of Hollywood’s favorite tropes: Machines taking over. Monsters from separate franchises meeting face to face in a new movie, like Godzilla and King Kong, or Jason and Freddy. And a couple perceptive folks warning everyone, ”Hey, look, something really bad is happening!” 


Those folks are Bob and his STAT News colleague Casey Ross. The monsters are United HealthGroup — a “behemoth” as one expert called them in an episode from last year — and Medicare Advantage, which we looked at in our last episode. And the “machines” belong to United.


Bob describes what some of United’s own employees said about the result: “For some of us, it's creating this moral crisis. Like we know that we are having to listen to an algorithm to essentially kick someone out of a nursing home, even though we know that they can barely walk 20 feet.” 


Scary stuff. But Bob and Casey’s reporting has caught the eye of some powerful people in government, and right now, Medicare Advantage plans are on notice from the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, the U.S. Senate is holding hearings, and the Department of Justice reportedly has an anti-trust investigation in the works


Here’s a transcript of this episode


Send your stories and questions. Or call 724 ARM-N-LEG.


And of course we’d love for you to support this show.


See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.


Related Shows Based on Content Similarities

Discover shows related to An Arm and a Leg, based on actual content similarities. Explore podcasts with similar topics, themes, and formats, backed by real data.
Myths and Legends
Monocle on Design
Podcasts from Le Monde d‘Hermès
WARDROBE CRISIS with Clare Press
Point of Origin
Immaterial: 5,000 Years of Art, One Material at a Time
مغامرات في المتحف
Masters in Business
A Bit of Optimism
Best of Both Worlds Podcast
© My Podcast Data