Pennsylvania · 24515

Treatment Of Broken Middle Part Of Upper Arm Bone With Placement Of Stabilizing Device (plate/screws) in Pennsylvania

Pennsylvania Medicare Avg
$624.48
4% above national avg
National Medicare Avg
$600.26
All states combined
Billed Charge (PA)
$3,548.65
What providers submit
Est. Commercial (PA)
$1,732.11
National avg: $1,691.15
Est. Cash / Self-Pay (PA)
$1,566.37
Typical self-pay discount

Estimated using RAND 2024 commercial-to-Medicare ratios. Actual prices vary by insurer, plan, and facility.

179
Services in PA
125
Providers
N/A
Min Payment
N/A
Max Payment

Pennsylvania Pricing in Context

In Pennsylvania, CPT code 24515 (Treatment Of Broken Middle Part Of Upper Arm Bone With Placement Of Stabilizing Device (plate/screws)) carries an average Medicare payment of $624.48 — 4% above the national benchmark of $600.26. 125 providers across the state submitted claims for this procedure in 2023, performing 179 total services. Individual payments in PA ranged from N/A at the low end to N/A at the high end, reflecting differences in provider setting (office vs. facility), modifiers, and the specific geographic locality code applied within the state.

The average billed charge in Pennsylvania is $3,548.65, which is the figure uninsured patients would most likely encounter before any negotiation or charity discount. Medicare, by statute, only reimburses the allowed amount — the balance between billed and paid is written off under provider participation agreements. Insured patients generally pay a negotiated rate that falls between these two figures; the exact amount depends on plan design, deductible status, and in-network participation. Because Pennsylvania sits above the national Medicare average, commercial rates in the state may also run higher than the US median.

Using RAND 2024 commercial-to-Medicare ratios for Musculoskeletal Surgery procedures, the estimated commercial insurance price in Pennsylvania lands near $1,732.11, with self-pay cash prices typically around $1,566.37. Before scheduling, patients can request a Good Faith Estimate under the No Surprises Act, compare cash rates from hospital Machine-Readable Files, and confirm whether the provider is in-network with their specific plan. This page presents CMS reference data for informational use; it does not constitute medical or financial advice.

Frequently Asked Questions

How much does Treatment Of Broken Middle Part Of Upper Arm Bone With Placement Of Stabilizing Device (plate/screws) cost in Pennsylvania?

The average Medicare payment for Treatment Of Broken Middle Part Of Upper Arm Bone With Placement Of Stabilizing Device (plate/screws) in Pennsylvania is $624.48, which is 4% above the national average of $600.26. Providers in PA typically bill $3,548.65 for this procedure.

What does Treatment Of Broken Middle Part Of Upper Arm Bone With Placement Of Stabilizing Device (plate/screws) cost with insurance in Pennsylvania?

With commercial insurance in Pennsylvania, Treatment Of Broken Middle Part Of Upper Arm Bone With Placement Of Stabilizing Device (plate/screws) costs an estimated $1,732.11. Without insurance, the estimated cash price is $1,566.37. These estimates are based on RAND 2024 commercial-to-Medicare ratios and vary by insurer, plan, and facility.

How many providers perform Treatment Of Broken Middle Part Of Upper Arm Bone With Placement Of Stabilizing Device (plate/screws) in Pennsylvania?

125 providers in Pennsylvania billed Medicare for Treatment Of Broken Middle Part Of Upper Arm Bone With Placement Of Stabilizing Device (plate/screws) in 2023, performing 179 total services. Medicare payments ranged from N/A to N/A depending on the provider.

Is Treatment Of Broken Middle Part Of Upper Arm Bone With Placement Of Stabilizing Device (plate/screws) cheaper in Pennsylvania than the national average?

No — Treatment Of Broken Middle Part Of Upper Arm Bone With Placement Of Stabilizing Device (plate/screws) costs 4% above the national average in Pennsylvania. The state average Medicare payment is $624.48 compared to $600.26 nationally. Factors like local cost of living, provider competition, and regional Medicare fee schedules all influence state-level pricing.

Related

Data sourced from the CMS Medicare Physician and Other Practitioners dataset. See our methodology for details. Retrieved and formatted by PlainProcedure Editorial