In 1962 it cost $10,000 a year for dialysis. In 2006 it cost $10,000 a week for dialysis and that includes epogen. THAT is the 100% that the 80% is based ON!!! Medicare is going to go BROKE over dialysis. NO, what we need to write our congressmen about is putting the DEATH Squad back in place. If you don't know where you are.......you don't get dialysis. If you are not a citizen.....then guess what?!!Hate to tell you, but the techs are not going to get paid more. DaVita will just extend their Las Vegas Party an extra day. They can afford to pay these people more now. They just won't. Don't let them manipulate you into thinking the techs will get a raise if Medicare adjusts their payments. If I write my congressmen they will get the truth from me.
My explanation of benefits (EOB). I'll fax you a copy if you want. That is what they bill. That is not what they get. To me a bill is a bill. I'm not into the games. If my checking account says I have a zero balance I don't write checks knowing my paycheck MAY get there before funds are drawn. That is what I see as being billed to my insurance. Medicare is still secondary for me. $42,000 for one month is what DaVita charged my insurance. Call it what you want. Did you even read the Las Vegas deal DaVita put on for the Mucky Mucks? The techs are underpaid, but Medicare has nothing to do with that.
Hello all, You may all be familiar with this topic - the Medicare compensation to dialysis providers (and how it hasn't been adjusted in something like 30 years).It's a real problem for dialysis clinics who have Medicare patients. I blogged about this last week, but thought I should try to get the word out in other places as well. It's been tossed around on the dialysis_support group as well, but again I'm not sure how many people visit all of these places.Anyway, there's legislation in the works right now that would allow Medicare to change its compensation to dialysis clinics. Medicare covers 80% of your dialysis yes - but what's the 100% that the 80% is based on? It's based on a 30 year old figure of $130 or something. Other insurance companies are paying much more than this, which is good, because dialysis is an expensive service to provide.I think it is important for people to realize that not all of these numbers are just made up - the dialysis providers are businesses, and as such need to be compensated fairly for the service they provide. Not for their profits, but for our level of care. When dialysis providers lose money on Medicare patients, the result is that they have to cut costs in other places. This leads to our staffing problems - both in terms of quality, and quantity.We have fewer techs, and not many of them are being payed appropriately for the importance of their job. This is why we see lots of "not thinking" taking place on the floor - machines set incorrectly, hands not being washed, etc. To make this verbose post a bit more succinct - What we're trying to do is simply allow Medicare to adjust its compensation of dialysis for today's economy and cost. Just like every other insurance provider has done.The way we do this, is by contacting our congressmen and women and letting them know how we as patients are affected, and that we expect them to do their job and support legislation like this that changes lives for the better.This can be done hereIt takes less than 2 minutes, and they will contact your representatives for you, letting them know your expectations on this issue.Thanks for taking the time to read all of this - and thanks for your support in getting better care for dialysis patients.
The real problem with dialysis in the U.S. is that it is mainly delivered by private, for-profit clinics, which cut every corner and search out every loophole in the medicare regulations to squeeze the maximum profit out of each treatment session, at any cost to the patient, all in order to increase the wealth of the company shareholders.
Zach, where did you get Epogen is $10 per 1,000 units. I think you need to add another zero on the end of that. I get 15,000 units and it is $1,500 US dollars. That is $100 per 1,000 units. If it were $10 per 1,000 units I wouldn't have a problem with the cost of Epogen. Hell, that's cheap! My Epogen would be $150 vs. $1,500.My dose varies from 700 units to 1,500 depending on my HTC.
Companies like DaVita are providing a four hour service which is probably worth between $600 and $800 per treatment.
Hate to tell you, but the techs are not going to get paid more. DaVita will just extend their Las Vegas Party an extra day. They can afford to pay these people more now. They just won't. Don't let them manipulate you into thinking the techs will get a raise if Medicare adjusts their payments.
You are so far out of the realm of possibility, it's scary!
It's amazing that as a small business owner you don't see the value-added service a company like DaVita provides? You must not dialyze in-center then?
You would be very surprised at the difference between the cost to medicare vs. the cost to the private insurer. Typically under Medicare, dialysis costs about $133 per session and EPO is $10 per 1,000 units. That very same service by a Davita clinic to a privately insured patient costs $888 for dialysis and $107 per 1,000 units of EPO. That's one of the reasons insurance rates are so high.
Companies like DaVita are providing a four hour service which is probably worth between $600 and $800 per treatment.I would imagine that with their Cost of Sale and a decent profit margin, they're right in that range. In other words, what the other insurance providers are being billed is a mostly fair price.