The patient in this article is a perfect example of misplaced advocacy. She is misinformed on most things she said.
Quote from: Zach on November 23, 2007, 01:19:36 PMThe patient in this article is a perfect example of misplaced advocacy. She is misinformed on most things she said.Zach, I'm curious as to which items she mentioned that you feel she is misinformed about?
Read the following NY Times article on how the Oxygen Suppliers are using their patients to lobby congress to keep Medicare reimbursing at higher rates -- as much as $8,280, -- or more than double what somebody might spend at a drugstore.http://www.nytimes.com/2007/11/30/business/30golden.html?hpUnless these "Caring Kidney" folks open their books so we can see where the money goes, people on dialysis should not do their bidding.
According to the article "Medicare spends billions of dollars each year on products and services that are available at far lower prices." hmmm Where can one get dialysis for less than Medicare rates? South Africa? They charged $175 but I think they changed locals less. Zach was it South Africa you were thinking about? Where dialysis is "available at far lower prices."
Once again? Hello kettle? This is Zach. You're black.
A rather longterm solution. I imagine to some the hard work of changing the structure of US healthcare is less appealing than blaming equity profits.
Let's finish this Bill. DaVita makes a HUGE profit. Why oh why does Medicare need to pay more? If we as patients (dialyzors) aren't getting the right care now.... no amount of money from Medicare will make a difference. It will go right into the CEO's pockets.
A review of data concerning Renal Care Group and DaVita shows that these companies have average payment rates, including ancillaries, of about $315 per treatment, which implies commercial payment rates in the neighborhood of $700 per treatment. Because the net payment rates from commercial payers are usually subject to contractual allowances, the implied charge per treatment is higher. Anecdotal evidence suggests that a charge of $600 per treatment, excluding ancillaries, is not unusual.
The head of HealthSouth (the dominant provider of rehabilitation care, mostly paid for by Medicare) made $112m in 2002, the year before his indictment for fraud (charges of which he was later acquitted) and four years before his conviction on unrelated bribery charges. http://www.bmj.com/cgi/content/full/335/7630/1126#REF30
Reimbursement for medications used by the larger dialysis organizations (LDOs) was reduced in one proposed bill in Congress, since these LDOs have economy of scale. Smaller dialysis centers would continue to receive current reimbursement based on average sales price + 6%, while the larger dialysis organizations (LDOs) would receive reimbursement based on average sales price + 2% -- reduced but still a good profit.The "Caring Kidney" lobby screamed bloody murder and had patients write-in to stop the so-called 4% "cut" in Dialysis Reimbursement.Economies of scale dictate that the larger centers such as DaVita should be reimbursed at a slightly lower rate than the smaller, struggling dialysis centers. That's how you help prevent consolidation. It's fair and equitable.But as we've already seen, the "Caring Kidney" lobby won't allow that.Now I'm going to keep my mouth shut and let others speak up.
If it were up to me we'd leave things as they are until after the elections in 2008.
Here is some independent information from the census bureau.
You need the RSN to tell you why an inflation adjustment is fair?