Hello Bill,I attach two documents both in response to your comments on the blog I hate dialysis in response to our published AJT paper ( Cost Benefit Analysis of Government Compensation.....).The first is a brief response which I hope you can post on the blog in response to your comments. I must say I tried for quite some time but was unable to jump the hurdles required to post this response. If you cannot or choose not to post this to the blog , please advise and I will go back to the grinding phase of posting it myself.The second document is longer and more detailed on the same topic and includes results of reestimating our analyses using your suggested price levels. This document is for your use as you see fit and is obviously too long for the blog site unless you can arrange to have the blog post it in some fashion. In any case, this document should answer in extreme detail any questions you may have about our methods.All the best,Philip
The numbers being tossed around are off and looking at the article I can't work out where they get their numbers.The number of people using dialysis has gone from about 250,000 in 1995 to about 450,000 today, with the year to year increase slowing significantly in recent years, it's currently flat and even falling in some parts of the country. But it is in the paper where they reckon costs that it is impossible to understand the numbers they use. The Paper assumes that yhe total medical cost of someone using dialysis is $121,000 a year - that is a nonsense number. It is averaging the costs of Medicare beneficiaries and people using dialysis who have private insurance, yet the point of the paper is talk about Medicare savings. Why include the private payer numbers unless the objective is to inflate potential savings? The cost to Medicare of someone who is using dialysis and is eligible to receive a transplant is much lower, in the range of 50 to 60,000 a year. It is hard to take the analysis seriously when they bugger the numbers so badly.