More whistleblowing from insiders would be a good start. What's your excuse?
Greed.
DaVita's net income in 2010 was 400 million on 6 billion in sales. One way to look at it is they made about $27 per treatment on 17,992,805 total treatments delivered. Here's a link to their 10k http://quicktake.morningstar.com/stocknet/secdocuments.aspx?symbol=dvaDaVita operates their clinics to meet Medicare's standards, they're profitable because they have economies of scale and they have economies of scale because legislation passed by Congress encourages dialysis providers to seek economies of scale. The provision of dialysis is working the way Congress wants it to work.It doesn't have to be this way, but change would have to start with Congress. If Congress wanted to they could capture the majority of economic scale savings by purchasing EPO directly, rather than as they do under today's payment ... today they over pay DaVita and FMC to purchase EPO on their behalf because they have to fairly pay all nonLDO providers (or you could argue, as I do, that they fairly pay DaVita and under pay nonLDOs). If you removed EPO from the bundle then there would be a lot less of a benefit gained from being an LDO. An LDO would get supplies cheaper (needles, blood tubing, saline) but actual dialysis supplies comprise a tiny part of the cost of treatment. Other costs - labor, bricks and mortar, insurance - do not see the same scale savings, thus if you remove EPO from the bundle you would do a lot to make Medicare payment provider neutral.I'd also note that while there is legislation prohibiting Medicare from negotiating the prices of Part D drugs there is no such prohibition on Medicare negotiating Part B drugs.
Quote from: Bill Peckham on June 01, 2011, 08:34:13 PMDaVita's net income in 2010 was 400 million on 6 billion in sales. One way to look at it is they made about $27 per treatment on 17,992,805 total treatments delivered. Here's a link to their 10k http://quicktake.morningstar.com/stocknet/secdocuments.aspx?symbol=dvaDaVita operates their clinics to meet Medicare's standards, they're profitable because they have economies of scale and they have economies of scale because legislation passed by Congress encourages dialysis providers to seek economies of scale. The provision of dialysis is working the way Congress wants it to work.It doesn't have to be this way, but change would have to start with Congress. If Congress wanted to they could capture the majority of economic scale savings by purchasing EPO directly, rather than as they do under today's payment ... today they over pay DaVita and FMC to purchase EPO on their behalf because they have to fairly pay all nonLDO providers (or you could argue, as I do, that they fairly pay DaVita and under pay nonLDOs). If you removed EPO from the bundle then there would be a lot less of a benefit gained from being an LDO. An LDO would get supplies cheaper (needles, blood tubing, saline) but actual dialysis supplies comprise a tiny part of the cost of treatment. Other costs - labor, bricks and mortar, insurance - do not see the same scale savings, thus if you remove EPO from the bundle you would do a lot to make Medicare payment provider neutral.I'd also note that while there is legislation prohibiting Medicare from negotiating the prices of Part D drugs there is no such prohibition on Medicare negotiating Part B drugs.So Congress expects state surveyors to turn a blind eye to the quality of care in dialysis units? Is that why less than 10% of facilites actually are surveyed in a given year and that only a dozen or so facilities have actually been shut down over the last 10 years? Is it explicit that it is OK to set the bar so low for expectations?
Quote from: PatDowns on June 01, 2011, 08:57:57 PMQuote from: Bill Peckham on June 01, 2011, 08:34:13 PMDaVita's net income in 2010 was 400 million on 6 billion in sales. One way to look at it is they made about $27 per treatment on 17,992,805 total treatments delivered. Here's a link to their 10k http://quicktake.morningstar.com/stocknet/secdocuments.aspx?symbol=dvaDaVita operates their clinics to meet Medicare's standards, they're profitable because they have economies of scale and they have economies of scale because legislation passed by Congress encourages dialysis providers to seek economies of scale. The provision of dialysis is working the way Congress wants it to work.It doesn't have to be this way, but change would have to start with Congress. If Congress wanted to they could capture the majority of economic scale savings by purchasing EPO directly, rather than as they do under today's payment ... today they over pay DaVita and FMC to purchase EPO on their behalf because they have to fairly pay all nonLDO providers (or you could argue, as I do, that they fairly pay DaVita and under pay nonLDOs). If you removed EPO from the bundle then there would be a lot less of a benefit gained from being an LDO. An LDO would get supplies cheaper (needles, blood tubing, saline) but actual dialysis supplies comprise a tiny part of the cost of treatment. Other costs - labor, bricks and mortar, insurance - do not see the same scale savings, thus if you remove EPO from the bundle you would do a lot to make Medicare payment provider neutral.I'd also note that while there is legislation prohibiting Medicare from negotiating the prices of Part D drugs there is no such prohibition on Medicare negotiating Part B drugs.So Congress expects state surveyors to turn a blind eye to the quality of care in dialysis units? Is that why less than 10% of facilites actually are surveyed in a given year and that only a dozen or so facilities have actually been shut down over the last 10 years? Is it explicit that it is OK to set the bar so low for expectations? I think if Congress thought surveys were as important as I think they are Congress would fund Medicare to do the surveying, instead of giving the job to the states as an unfunded mandate. I think Congress thinks that the pathetic job California does when it comes to surveying is a California problem. Washington State has an effective survey system so I know it can be done.
Then this needs to be made a priority. No?
Oh I don't think it is benign. I've written a lot about the bad deal we got when we traded a system based on medical ethics for one based on business ethics. However, I think that what we have is what was intended. Medicare payment makes no distinction between DaVita and a nonprofit provider.
Quote from: Bill Peckham on June 01, 2011, 08:52:31 PMOh I don't think it is benign. I've written a lot about the bad deal we got when we traded a system based on medical ethics for one based on business ethics. However, I think that what we have is what was intended. Medicare payment makes no distinction between DaVita and a nonprofit provider.I don't think Congress understands what it will create when it passes laws and creates whole cultures of industry like what has grown up around dialysis. There are many impulses reflected in legislation like the ESRD bills and Medicare D act. In the case of dialysis, it failed to design a method to insure transparency and accountability for vast outlays of public funds.What we have is not what patient advocates want, nor fiscal conservatives, nor liberal economists: a few people getting rich by delivering medical care on a Walmart model.