Quote from: MooseMom on May 07, 2013, 08:34:38 PMQuote from: Hemodoc on May 07, 2013, 04:42:02 PMThe cost over runs and overpayment to docs and hospitals in the early days of the Medicare program are well documented. Doctors before the 1960's were not in general in the highest income brackets, remember chickens, etc in payment especially for the old country docs.Well, I'm not sure that doctors before the 60's, particularly the old country docs, were performing transplants or dialysis, either. I doubt you'd be alive if is was the 60s. Those weren't the good old days if you had ESRD.We weren't discussing the technological revolution in the last 50 years including dialysis of course. Today, we are waiting for new technology to bring home dialysis to more patients since we have not advanced very far past the 1960's technologies of dialysis care outside of the advances in the materials used of the components. NxStage announced FDA approval of higher dialysate flow rates with the NxStage System One. This is a game changer putting NxStage in a great position with an easy to use system, ultra-pure dialysate which others are struggling to obtain and coupled with higher dialysis flow rates in my opinion makes NxStage the system to beat as far as new technology coming on the market. Note, this is private enterprise bringing these innovations, not government programs.America is quite far behind Europe with hemodiafiltration which many believe will help patients live a longer and higher quality of life. The status quo between CMS and the LDO's has not done anything to improve the lives of hundreds of thousands of patients every year. Interjecting private enterprise competition through technological innovation will be the best way to break the current provision of dialysis stalemate with all of its dysfunction.
Quote from: Hemodoc on May 07, 2013, 04:42:02 PMThe cost over runs and overpayment to docs and hospitals in the early days of the Medicare program are well documented. Doctors before the 1960's were not in general in the highest income brackets, remember chickens, etc in payment especially for the old country docs.Well, I'm not sure that doctors before the 60's, particularly the old country docs, were performing transplants or dialysis, either. I doubt you'd be alive if is was the 60s. Those weren't the good old days if you had ESRD.
The cost over runs and overpayment to docs and hospitals in the early days of the Medicare program are well documented. Doctors before the 1960's were not in general in the highest income brackets, remember chickens, etc in payment especially for the old country docs.
Quote from: Hemodoc on May 07, 2013, 10:41:59 PMQuote from: MooseMom on May 07, 2013, 08:34:38 PMQuote from: Hemodoc on May 07, 2013, 04:42:02 PMThe cost over runs and overpayment to docs and hospitals in the early days of the Medicare program are well documented. Doctors before the 1960's were not in general in the highest income brackets, remember chickens, etc in payment especially for the old country docs.Well, I'm not sure that doctors before the 60's, particularly the old country docs, were performing transplants or dialysis, either. I doubt you'd be alive if is was the 60s. Those weren't the good old days if you had ESRD.We weren't discussing the technological revolution in the last 50 years including dialysis of course. Today, we are waiting for new technology to bring home dialysis to more patients since we have not advanced very far past the 1960's technologies of dialysis care outside of the advances in the materials used of the components. NxStage announced FDA approval of higher dialysate flow rates with the NxStage System One. This is a game changer putting NxStage in a great position with an easy to use system, ultra-pure dialysate which others are struggling to obtain and coupled with higher dialysis flow rates in my opinion makes NxStage the system to beat as far as new technology coming on the market. Note, this is private enterprise bringing these innovations, not government programs.America is quite far behind Europe with hemodiafiltration which many believe will help patients live a longer and higher quality of life. The status quo between CMS and the LDO's has not done anything to improve the lives of hundreds of thousands of patients every year. Interjecting private enterprise competition through technological innovation will be the best way to break the current provision of dialysis stalemate with all of its dysfunction.I certainly agree that private enterprise and competition can/does result in the technological innovation that can improve the care of dialysis patients! But when you speak of "traditional America", you often refer to the 60's as if it was a rosy time for all people, and I'm just saying that those were not rosy times for ESRD sufferers or for sufferers of so many horrible maladies that we can now treat, if not cure.The debate of how much government is appropriate rages on, just as it always has and will forever. While it is PEOPLE who innovate, that doesn't mean that government can't help. Some biomedical research needs a lot of funding, and private sources don't always answer the call.I wonder if in "traditional America", hospital charges are as mysterious as they are now?http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/05/08/hospital-prices-cost-differences_n_3232678.htmlIs this something the government should address?
Sorry Bill, no agenda here. I have never been a fan of Obamacare which you know and understand. Out of respect to you, I have not voiced that concern on my blog or in yours while I was writing for you.So, no, I haven't gone so far as to have an agenda. I simply thought we were involved in a discussion on this issue. Is that having an agenda?
Well, now my questions have become less of "what is traditional America" and more of "what would certain aspects of life be like if we still lived in 'traditional America'". So, Hemodoc, what do you think dialysis/healthcare would look like if the government in the form of Medicare/CMS had not intervened? What do you think our healthcare system would look like if we still lived in "traditional America" but had modern America's health woes? (In traditional America, it was actually thought that autism was caused by "refrigerator mothers". ) If the ACA were to be overturned or for whatever reason not implemented, do you think that what we would be left with would be more in line with the values of "traditional America"? Do you think there is no place for the NIH?
Unfortunately, since we are heading into a European style medical system, we will now have politicians telling doctors what to do at the patients bedside just as happens in the NHS in England for instance. Instead of NICE as the Brits have, we will have PCORI doing comparative effectiveness research. The issue is whether the CER outcomes will become limiting to those treatments that do not have significantly better benefits than others. As a physician, there are times where we try lower effective treatments in patients who have failed to respond to other treatment modalities. In some cases, the patients respond well even though the data would suggest it is a bit of a long shot.
Quote from: Hemodoc on May 08, 2013, 01:40:20 PMSorry Bill, no agenda here. I have never been a fan of Obamacare which you know and understand. Out of respect to you, I have not voiced that concern on my blog or in yours while I was writing for you.So, no, I haven't gone so far as to have an agenda. I simply thought we were involved in a discussion on this issue. Is that having an agenda? Blog all you want but as always using primary sources is what makes a good and useful blog post. I didn't say you have an agenda, I pointed out that the articles you linked to to support your position, misrepresented what the CBO wrote. All the Obamacare articles you linked to commented on various CBO reports and purposely mislead the reader by strategic use of ellipsis (...) You seem quite unconcerned that the articles were designed to mislead which does make one wonder why.
Quote from: Bill Peckham on May 08, 2013, 09:29:31 PMQuote from: Hemodoc on May 08, 2013, 01:40:20 PMSorry Bill, no agenda here. I have never been a fan of Obamacare which you know and understand. Out of respect to you, I have not voiced that concern on my blog or in yours while I was writing for you.So, no, I haven't gone so far as to have an agenda. I simply thought we were involved in a discussion on this issue. Is that having an agenda? Blog all you want but as always using primary sources is what makes a good and useful blog post. I didn't say you have an agenda, I pointed out that the articles you linked to to support your position, misrepresented what the CBO wrote. All the Obamacare articles you linked to commented on various CBO reports and purposely mislead the reader by strategic use of ellipsis (...) You seem quite unconcerned that the articles were designed to mislead which does make one wonder why.Bill, the bottom line is that the incentives in Obamacare favor employers paying the fines instead of the health insurance rates which have risen dramatically since the ACA passed. The articles I linked to reflected that fact and the CBO projection of 7 million to as many as 20 million who will lose their insurance and switch over to the exchanges.
Quote from: Hemodoc on May 08, 2013, 09:50:48 PMUnfortunately, since we are heading into a European style medical system, we will now have politicians telling doctors what to do at the patients bedside just as happens in the NHS in England for instance. Instead of NICE as the Brits have, we will have PCORI doing comparative effectiveness research. The issue is whether the CER outcomes will become limiting to those treatments that do not have significantly better benefits than others. As a physician, there are times where we try lower effective treatments in patients who have failed to respond to other treatment modalities. In some cases, the patients respond well even though the data would suggest it is a bit of a long shot. we will now have politicians telling doctors what to do at the patients bedside just as happens in the NHS in England for instanceThis would be shocking if it were true - other than Terri Schiavo give one example. As someone who has and continues to participate with several PCORI projects - from initiation through completion - I know you are not accurately describing CER or PCORI; please stop posting things that are not true. I feel obliged to point this out each time you do it.
Quote from: Bill Peckham on May 08, 2013, 10:17:08 PMQuote from: Hemodoc on May 08, 2013, 09:50:48 PMUnfortunately, since we are heading into a European style medical system, we will now have politicians telling doctors what to do at the patients bedside just as happens in the NHS in England for instance. Instead of NICE as the Brits have, we will have PCORI doing comparative effectiveness research. The issue is whether the CER outcomes will become limiting to those treatments that do not have significantly better benefits than others. As a physician, there are times where we try lower effective treatments in patients who have failed to respond to other treatment modalities. In some cases, the patients respond well even though the data would suggest it is a bit of a long shot. we will now have politicians telling doctors what to do at the patients bedside just as happens in the NHS in England for instanceThis would be shocking if it were true - other than Terri Schiavo give one example. As someone who has and continues to participate with several PCORI projects - from initiation through completion - I know you are not accurately describing CER or PCORI; please stop posting things that are not true. I feel obliged to point this out each time you do it.Bill, I am also on PCORI teams as well. Back to my comment which I don't believe you read accurately: "The issue is whether the CER outcomes will become limiting to those treatments that do not have significantly better benefits than others."That is indeed a legitimate concern voiced by many, especially within the physicians community. So I am not sure what you believe I have described inaccurately.
Quote from: Hemodoc on May 08, 2013, 10:33:17 PMQuote from: Bill Peckham on May 08, 2013, 10:17:08 PMQuote from: Hemodoc on May 08, 2013, 09:50:48 PMUnfortunately, since we are heading into a European style medical system, we will now have politicians telling doctors what to do at the patients bedside just as happens in the NHS in England for instance. Instead of NICE as the Brits have, we will have PCORI doing comparative effectiveness research. The issue is whether the CER outcomes will become limiting to those treatments that do not have significantly better benefits than others. As a physician, there are times where we try lower effective treatments in patients who have failed to respond to other treatment modalities. In some cases, the patients respond well even though the data would suggest it is a bit of a long shot. we will now have politicians telling doctors what to do at the patients bedside just as happens in the NHS in England for instanceThis would be shocking if it were true - other than Terri Schiavo give one example. As someone who has and continues to participate with several PCORI projects - from initiation through completion - I know you are not accurately describing CER or PCORI; please stop posting things that are not true. I feel obliged to point this out each time you do it.Bill, I am also on PCORI teams as well. Back to my comment which I don't believe you read accurately: "The issue is whether the CER outcomes will become limiting to those treatments that do not have significantly better benefits than others."That is indeed a legitimate concern voiced by many, especially within the physicians community. So I am not sure what you believe I have described inaccurately.Then you know that PCORI is a real thing that has an actual mission and is constrained by federal legislation to conduct research to provide information about the best available evidence to help patients and their health care providers make more informed decisions. PCORI’s research is intended to give patients a better understanding of the prevention, treatment and care options available, and the science that supports those options. PCORI does CER through data mining and retrospective analysis, it isn't a plot to substitute politician's judgement for a physician's.
I happened to be paying attention during the whole death panel nonsense and remember it was the republican reaction to the proposal to pay physicians for providing voluntary end of life counseling. It was complete and utter nonsense then and it is complete and utter nonsense now. This is the first time you've mentioned the IPBA in this thread so yeah another effort you can misconstrue. I don't think talking turkey means what you think it means.
I don't think you understood what I wrote - I am denying that talk of the death panels in 2009/10 had anything to to do with the IPAB - when you wrote: "This is perhaps the MOST controversial aspect of Obamacare and is where the "death panels" originated for those in opposition." you were misstating the origin of the death panel nonsense.In addition I am saying that you keep changing what it is you are objecting to - first it was people moving from EGHP to the Exchanges and then it was CER and PCORI and now it is the IPAB. And my point is that your post is not an example of talking turkey it is an example of obfuscation, which is an intransitive verb meaning to be evasive, unclear, or confusing
Bill: I stopped arguing with Hemodoc. When you make a valid point he just completely ignores it or changes the point of the conversation. He has admitted to being a Troll. He said he has made posts just to upset people. I know for a fact that he has posted complete lies. When he gets frustrated he resorts to name calling and tries to be patronizing. So glad there is one less person "packing" in southern California! I have been following this thread and just shaking my head.
Quote from: YLGuy on May 09, 2013, 02:02:41 PM Bill: I stopped arguing with Hemodoc. When you make a valid point he just completely ignores it or changes the point of the conversation. He has admitted to being a Troll. He said he has made posts just to upset people. I know for a fact that he has posted complete lies. When he gets frustrated he resorts to name calling and tries to be patronizing. So glad there is one less person "packing" in southern California! I have been following this thread and just shaking my head. Dear YL, I have nothing against you and if I have in anyway offended you, I humble beg your forgiveness. However, all that you state about me is patently false. No name calling, no lies, just an honest discussion about a very controversial government takeover of our health care system. Is that not the purpose of the a discussion forum?
Quote from: Hemodoc on May 09, 2013, 02:44:37 PMQuote from: YLGuy on May 09, 2013, 02:02:41 PM Bill: I stopped arguing with Hemodoc. When you make a valid point he just completely ignores it or changes the point of the conversation. He has admitted to being a Troll. He said he has made posts just to upset people. I know for a fact that he has posted complete lies. When he gets frustrated he resorts to name calling and tries to be patronizing. So glad there is one less person "packing" in southern California! I have been following this thread and just shaking my head. Dear YL, I have nothing against you and if I have in anyway offended you, I humble beg your forgiveness. However, all that you state about me is patently false. No name calling, no lies, just an honest discussion about a very controversial government takeover of our health care system. Is that not the purpose of the a discussion forum?Wrong again! EVERYTHING I posted was the absolute truth.
Quote from: Bill Peckham on May 09, 2013, 11:08:52 AMI don't think you understood what I wrote - I am denying that talk of the death panels in 2009/10 had anything to to do with the IPAB - when you wrote: "This is perhaps the MOST controversial aspect of Obamacare and is where the "death panels" originated for those in opposition." you were misstating the origin of the death panel nonsense.In addition I am saying that you keep changing what it is you are objecting to - first it was people moving from EGHP to the Exchanges and then it was CER and PCORI and now it is the IPAB. And my point is that your post is not an example of talking turkey it is an example of obfuscation, which is an intransitive verb meaning to be evasive, unclear, or confusingBill, yes of course you are correct. Sarah Palin made a comment about death panels and the language authorizing end of life counseling which is a standard part of medical practice. She was deservedly criticized by both the left and the right for that absurd comment.However, the "death panel" discussion resurrected itself after the IPAB and it is actually referred to that in many right wing blogs today. Whether you like it or disagree with it, death panels is in wide use for the IPAB today.http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/wonkblog/wp/2013/01/28/who-wants-to-sit-in-the-hot-seat-on-a-federal-health-care-panel/Now, conversations evolve in a natural flow. I noted that CER is now in vogue but the question was how that information will be used. You juxtaposed something about PCORI in some sort of alleged conspiracy allegation on my part and I then clarified as we both know that PCORI only does research, it is the IPAB that has the decision making power. So that was in response to your allegation of some sort of conspiracy which I never ventured. Just legitimate questions about a huge program taking over the entire health care industry in America. Not sure why you appear not to want an honest discussion of controversial issues.
The IPAB is an important enough topic I'll start a new thread and this one can return to discussions of tri cornered hats and such.
TTFN
Quote from: Hemodoc on May 09, 2013, 02:05:22 PMQuote from: Bill Peckham on May 09, 2013, 11:08:52 AMI don't think you understood what I wrote - I am denying that talk of the death panels in 2009/10 had anything to to do with the IPAB - when you wrote: "This is perhaps the MOST controversial aspect of Obamacare and is where the "death panels" originated for those in opposition." you were misstating the origin of the death panel nonsense.In addition I am saying that you keep changing what it is you are objecting to - first it was people moving from EGHP to the Exchanges and then it was CER and PCORI and now it is the IPAB. And my point is that your post is not an example of talking turkey it is an example of obfuscation, which is an intransitive verb meaning to be evasive, unclear, or confusingBill, yes of course you are correct. Sarah Palin made a comment about death panels and the language authorizing end of life counseling which is a standard part of medical practice. She was deservedly criticized by both the left and the right for that absurd comment.However, the "death panel" discussion resurrected itself after the IPAB and it is actually referred to that in many right wing blogs today. Whether you like it or disagree with it, death panels is in wide use for the IPAB today.http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/wonkblog/wp/2013/01/28/who-wants-to-sit-in-the-hot-seat-on-a-federal-health-care-panel/Now, conversations evolve in a natural flow. I noted that CER is now in vogue but the question was how that information will be used. You juxtaposed something about PCORI in some sort of alleged conspiracy allegation on my part and I then clarified as we both know that PCORI only does research, it is the IPAB that has the decision making power. So that was in response to your allegation of some sort of conspiracy which I never ventured. Just legitimate questions about a huge program taking over the entire health care industry in America. Not sure why you appear not to want an honest discussion of controversial issues.Of course the Republicans are resurrecting the Death Panel canard, I'm sure they think that since it worked once it will work again. And I don't remember anyone in the Republican political leadership disabusing Palin of the talking point at the time, I remember the Republican leadership running with it. The latest talk about the IPAB is in the same vein, sowing canard seeds to harvest during next year's Congressional campaigns. The IPAB is an important enough topic I'll start a new thread and this one can return to discussions of tri cornered hats and such.