Post
by Ontario CPAP » Mon Nov 25, 2013 9:45 pm
Canadian here.
Given this is a CPAP forum, I'll give my experience in going through the sleep test process here in Ontario (downtown Toronto to be exact.) At the steps along the way where I had to pay something, I'll let you know with this: $$$.
I haven't been sleeping well, and had been experiencing what could be described as strange feelings in my chest -- sort of like palpitations or sudden onsets of a strange heart rhythm. After a while I grew concerned. I called my family doctor, and set an appointment for two weeks later.
On the day of the appointment, I went to his office and told the receptionist I had arrived. She asked if my home address had changed, I said no, and sat down. My health card number is already on file with them. 10 minutes later, I saw my doctor. He performed about 20 minutes of checking, etc. and typed a few things into his laptop (he uses electronic records.) He printed out a requisition form for a blood test and ECG, as well as a referral for a sleep clinic.
I immediately went to another floor in the building (it's a medical services centre) and gave the receptionist the requisition and my Ontario health card (it looks like a drivers license -- has a photo, my name, address, birth date, a magnetic stripe and a long ID number.) She swiped my card into her workstation and said sit down. 15 minutes later they took a blood test and hooked me up to an ECG. 15 minutes after that, I'm walking out the door.
I called the sleep clinic, and they scheduled me for a consultation with a doctor in two weeks. On the day of the consultation I showed up, gave my health card. The receptionist swiped my health card and 20 minutes later I was out the door with an appointment in another two weeks for an overnight sleep study.
On the night of the study, I showed up, again gave my card, swiped it again, and the next morning I was out the door. Another two weeks after that I was back for a consultation to find out I had an AHI of over 40. The doctor hands me a prescription for an APAP trial and gives me the name of a CPAP provider in the same building. I also set an appointment for a titration study at the end of the month.
I go to the CPAP provider, give them the prescription and my health card, and they hand me an APAP to take home for a month. I also went back to my family doctor to follow up on the blood test and ECG.
A month later I go for the titration study. Pulled out the health card. Leave the next morning. Two week later, show up for a follow-up appointment, again pull out the health card, and walk out with a prescription for a permanent CPAP with a setting of 9.0 cmH2O. Go back downstairs, hand in the APAP, and select an CPAP for purchase. The government will cover up to $780, but not everything. $$$ Here is the first time I have to pay out of pocket -- I had to pay the difference between the CPAP + mask cost minus the $780 covered by the government. However, my company health insurance paid 100% of the rest, except the SD card. I used my visa so I get travel points.
So at the end of this process, I had two visits to my family doctor, one visit to a blood test / ECG lab, two consultations with the sleep doctor, two overnight studies, an APAP on loan for a month, and a CPAP and mask that I had to pay for part out of pocket but was 100% reimbursed by my company except the SD card. The whole process took about three months and cost me $75 (a very expensive SD card.)
Ontario has a population of 13.5 million, which would make it the fifth largest state in the US (if it were a state.) The annual health care budget is $48 billion. That's $3,500 per year per person. Scaled up to the population of the US, that would be nearly $1.2 trillion per year.