Going to Mayo Clinic EDS Florida

Posted by mdwatnik1 @mdwatnik1, Feb 20 5:44pm

So I’m at the point where they can’t figure out my autoimmue
My mom is a teacher and retiring in June there for im really wanting insight on if my health insurance will cover flights and hotels maybe food maybe a rental car or at least finding a ronold McDonald house I’m 24 and if can more insight on how and what I’ll need to do to hopefully get everything covered by insurence plus all the testing they do and possible in hosptial stay

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@mdwatnik1. Hello and welcome. If you are asking if your insurance will be accepted at Mayo Clinic in Florida here is the information you need and the number to call. We cannot answer that question here as we are not directly connected with the business offices at Mayo Clinic.

Insurance Types at Mayo Clinic:

-- https://www.mayoclinic.org/patient-visitor-guide/billing-insurance/insurance/accepted-insurance/contracted-health-plans

If you have specific information about what your insurance will cover such as hotels, flights, a car, and housing then that is a question to ask your insurance company. If I'm understanding your questions you are on your mother's insurance? Is that correct? If so, then ask your mother to call her insurance company and ask these questions.

Does this answer your questions?

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Oh thank god my insurence will be taken

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@mdwatnik1

Oh thank god my insurence will be taken

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@mdwatnik1. Did you click on the link I provided and call Mayo Clinic? I don't know if your insurance will be taken at Mayo. You will have to call and ask.

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@naturegirl5

@mdwatnik1. Did you click on the link I provided and call Mayo Clinic? I don't know if your insurance will be taken at Mayo. You will have to call and ask.

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I looked at the list and my insurence was on it

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@mdwatnik1, I add my welcome. I'm glad that you are able to go to the Ehlers-Danlos Clinic at Mayo Clinic.

You may wish to follow the Ehlers-Danlos Syndrome Blog written by the EDS team at Mayo. Click here: https://connect.mayoclinic.org/blog/ehlers-danlos-syndrome/

As @naturegirl5 suggested, you can also call Mayo Clinic to confirm what your insurance at Mayo and with respect to travel and accommodations. Call Patient Account Services toll free at 844-217-9591 Monday through Friday.

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Hi there- That’s great that you got an appointment at the EDS Clinic. I had my appointment last spring, and I’m not done with my full workup yet because I live out of state and had some trouble coordinating the other appointments the EDS Clinic requested.

I’m happy to help with any questions I might be able to answer about the experience and what to expect. It looks like you got pretty well covered with the insurance question.

As far as I know, insurance does not cover housing or travel. If you have a flexible spending account for healthcare (this would usually be a benefit through your job) it can be reimbursed. Unfortunately, I don’t think there’s free medical housing offered for this type of condition. At least, there are two listed in their website and one is for transplant and the other for cancer.

Thankfully, where I live, there were multiple direct flights via Southwest which were not super expensive (still a cost nonetheless). There are many hotels in Jacksonville and Jacksonville Beach very close to Mayo, but the hotel stay was probably what cost me the most. I would think there are Air B&Bs that might be less expensive since the beach is so close?

It was a very expensive trip for me, but I don’t regret going. I’ve had chronic pain since 2015 and while I learned a lot on my own and with my care team at home, they filled in some gaps I was missing, even if more gaps remain.

Full disclosure, and I’ve alluded to this elsewhere in the forum: I have not had the most positive experience with the EDS Clinic. And they know this; we’ve talked about it. The staff is really kind and dedicated, but administratively and in terms of getting the other appointments in other departments coordinated, it’s been a huge mess—which is why it’s almost a year later, and I’m still not done with all the appointments. I don’t want that to color your view of it; I don’t regret going. And where others have referenced it on Connect, they’ve had all positive things to say.

So I’m honestly not sure if my experience was just a one-off, or if it’s because I live so far away that things for bungled. My hypothesis is it’s a newer clinic and around the time I went they experienced two big changes: The end of the COVID public health emergency threw them into confusion about what could be offered as telehealth (because they had been relying on it for almost everything and suddenly services they promised me could be done remotely no longer could) and they doubled they number if new patients they see per week when they hired a new PA. But all of us have complex cases, and there’s still only one point person to coordinate.

Hopefully it’s better now, but the one piece of advice I wish someone had told me before I went is to: Be your own best advocate. Meaning: Ask questions, keep tabs on your schedule, follow up, be prepared with your medical history because you’re the best voice to represent you and communicate your goals so they can help you.

Wishing you all the best and I’m happy to help if I can!

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I am a long time patient of Mayo, and I think it is absolutely second to none for comprehensive and cutting edge medicine. I also work with an organization called Angel Flight East who coordinates with volunteer private pilots to offer free air transportation as well as ground transportation for people who need to travel for medical treatment. They have geographic limitations, but if your travel fits their footprint, it would be a free service. If you think it would be helpful, you can visit their website. Good luck with your treatment.

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Would this be a commercial air craft I have a fear of small planes

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@emo

Hi there- That’s great that you got an appointment at the EDS Clinic. I had my appointment last spring, and I’m not done with my full workup yet because I live out of state and had some trouble coordinating the other appointments the EDS Clinic requested.

I’m happy to help with any questions I might be able to answer about the experience and what to expect. It looks like you got pretty well covered with the insurance question.

As far as I know, insurance does not cover housing or travel. If you have a flexible spending account for healthcare (this would usually be a benefit through your job) it can be reimbursed. Unfortunately, I don’t think there’s free medical housing offered for this type of condition. At least, there are two listed in their website and one is for transplant and the other for cancer.

Thankfully, where I live, there were multiple direct flights via Southwest which were not super expensive (still a cost nonetheless). There are many hotels in Jacksonville and Jacksonville Beach very close to Mayo, but the hotel stay was probably what cost me the most. I would think there are Air B&Bs that might be less expensive since the beach is so close?

It was a very expensive trip for me, but I don’t regret going. I’ve had chronic pain since 2015 and while I learned a lot on my own and with my care team at home, they filled in some gaps I was missing, even if more gaps remain.

Full disclosure, and I’ve alluded to this elsewhere in the forum: I have not had the most positive experience with the EDS Clinic. And they know this; we’ve talked about it. The staff is really kind and dedicated, but administratively and in terms of getting the other appointments in other departments coordinated, it’s been a huge mess—which is why it’s almost a year later, and I’m still not done with all the appointments. I don’t want that to color your view of it; I don’t regret going. And where others have referenced it on Connect, they’ve had all positive things to say.

So I’m honestly not sure if my experience was just a one-off, or if it’s because I live so far away that things for bungled. My hypothesis is it’s a newer clinic and around the time I went they experienced two big changes: The end of the COVID public health emergency threw them into confusion about what could be offered as telehealth (because they had been relying on it for almost everything and suddenly services they promised me could be done remotely no longer could) and they doubled they number if new patients they see per week when they hired a new PA. But all of us have complex cases, and there’s still only one point person to coordinate.

Hopefully it’s better now, but the one piece of advice I wish someone had told me before I went is to: Be your own best advocate. Meaning: Ask questions, keep tabs on your schedule, follow up, be prepared with your medical history because you’re the best voice to represent you and communicate your goals so they can help you.

Wishing you all the best and I’m happy to help if I can!

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Not yet no appointment yet

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@awsears

I am a long time patient of Mayo, and I think it is absolutely second to none for comprehensive and cutting edge medicine. I also work with an organization called Angel Flight East who coordinates with volunteer private pilots to offer free air transportation as well as ground transportation for people who need to travel for medical treatment. They have geographic limitations, but if your travel fits their footprint, it would be a free service. If you think it would be helpful, you can visit their website. Good luck with your treatment.

Jump to this post

Would this be commercial aircraft
I have fear of small planes

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