Please do not quote: Not representing anyone. Not legal advice, if anyone takes legal advice from anyone online, then they are stupid. If you need a lawyer find one licensed near you as appropriate.
Agreed. it is a menu of costs for the most common procedures that could occur. Of course, it depends on what the physician says, but I imagine it is unlikely it would get to that point of the whole thing. Trimming and perhaps debridement would be most likely from a wide statistical standpoint, but again it depends on what the doctor says is wrong. Simply most would not have the whole nail removed, but someone could if things were bad. Hopefully just looking at one of those + initial visit cost. (Note different hospitals have different charges).
***** Primarily the point was to show some price differences, particularly if it ends up being self pay. Big difference for nail trim of $214 gross standard charge v. $74.90 for self pay/denial, right? Although I've gotten it lower before, though not easily.
[rant]
Very complicated and a major problem in the US. So basically, most insurance in the US does not cover foot care except in the event of metabolic (e.g. diabetic) or peripheral vascular disease, etc. If you don't have one of those magical qualifying diagnosis(es), then they deny you and don't care. One of the many things I have done is settle amounts with billing departments (who do not want to give you a lesser charge because they are in it to make money). Showing up with an attorney and basically challenging the cost/liability/(and coding in my case) can yield massively lower bills. I'm not exactly happy that multiple hospital administrators just groan when I show up at treatment facilities for this reason/doing my job. The facts that a.) Most bankruptcies in the US have a significant medical debt component and b.) most people (yes even many lawyers, but most also don't practice healthcare law) cannot read medical records, are tragic.
I did several types of law including personal injury law the right way, while others got more business because they are flashy. I am not flashy and am that disabled one with a nose in a book. Even far too many personal injury lawyers I have seen don't do things right, because they can't read medical records. Yes, I've fought them on this, yes they hate me for it, and I dislike most of humanity right back. I have three letters for them (MSP: Medicare Secondary Payer). By disputing the actual hospital, rehab and treatment billing and coding, the cost gets lowered. If the cost gets lowered, the amount Medicare takes out of the settlement or verdict goes down. Same goes for other payment sources like Medicaid, etc., etc. Yes, Medicare (remember, for the aged and disabled....) can take back money it paid for treatment from lawsuit funds.... Far too many lawyers would consider this not the practice of law and I would tell them they are lazy, don't know how to read medical records, cost their clients money, are missing an opportunity to bill for very reasonable and quite economically viable (for client and lawyer) services, and enriching the large corporate hospitals at their clients' expense, but they sure look good doing it. [rant]
TL;DR (We need more literacy focus in society): Keep careful tabs on medical treatment and cost stuff and your medical records. Get copies of things. It will cost you in the long run if you don't. I do not do this sort of thing anymore though and am not presently in a position to do so.
Practically:
Perhaps consider taking a picture of your toe with your phone every day, perhaps zoomed in. Create a timeline for your doctor to see that you can swipe for your physician so they can observe the progression of the area as relates to healing and possible infection. I have found physicians appreciate the few seconds of photographic evidence of an infected wound so they can see it progressing and apply their expertise, rather than rely upon only verbal descriptions of "It's red and swollen." How red? How swollen? O, it's right there in the picture for the doctor to see... The ones I have talked to have told me it is a useful tool.
Please do not quote: