Someone is paying every time a tech shows up, and probably a lot more for 2am so I'm struggling to get the financial benefit of HomeD here. I think I have had 1 tech visit in 9 months for recalibration (+ their annual 3hr service), and I have not called the support team in over 7 months. that's 1,200 hours of treatment.
I guess I'm just saying that if the US is suggesting that funding may need to be reduced due to escalating costs then perhaps a focus should be on getting the best efficiency and productivity out of the process.
DaVita is threatening to close some urban and rural clinics that are most dependent on Medicare and Medicaid payments.
In the context of the rest of medicine, many docs today refuse Medicare and Medicaid patients because of a simple fact.
These government payments for healthcare do not cover in many cases even the overhead for a doctors visit. Medicine today is quite complex and doctors must have folks in their office who bill, collect, keep data bases, fix their computers, compliance officers to keep up with all of the Federal, state and local regulations in addition to all of the medical staff. When you consider the overhead costs of running a modern practice, there is good reason many of my colleagues have decided to avoid these government run programs. They simple cannot afford to do so with such minimal compensation.
There will be real consequences of the CMS cuts for one simple reason, the current payment system does not effect the market cost involved. It is an artificial payment in many ways even though yes, the prior system was quite abused by the industry especially with the separately billable items such as EPO.Nevertheless, simply digging in and saying the LDO's deserve what is coming to them belies the message that it is not Kent Thiry who will suffer when the cuts hit nor will DaVita.
Dear Rocker,Let's look at some of the specifics.
1) It is a well documented fact that the number of doctors who are refusing all Medicare is rising.
2) Medicare is heading for bankruptcy
3) With ObamaCare, there will be a huge doctor shortage brought on by adding millions to the books while at the same time many as noted above are retiring early.
4) You are quite wrong about docs knowing that they will be paid with Medicare. A friend of mine who is a Family Physician in rural CA didn't get paid by Medicare for 18 months for services already rendered. Sorry, you are mistaken. Many procedures are disallowed and many only get a fraction of the going rate.
5) Many docs looking at the long term outcome of Medicare are moving to other more sustainable income possibilities.
Sorry, but your views of the medical community on Medicare are not the views I hear from within the physician community.
I have no doubt that DaVita will dramatically shift to protect their own profits in a much more vigorous manner than they will devote time and effort to protecting individual dialysis patients. If you study their business philosophy, their "village" does NOT include the patients. Following this line of thought, who will they protect more, the folks "in" their "village" or the cogs in the wheels that are the dialysis patients when reimbursement falls by nearly 10%?
I have no doubt that the cuts will be passed on in a much greater fashion to the patients than to anyone in the DaVita village itself, although the lower fringes of the "village" are obviously expendable as well. Whatever you believe about the current reimbursement rates, the LDO's will shift their burden to the patient population. When Kent Thiry states he will shut down the centers with a high Medicare/Medicaid mix, why do you believe that is just smoke and mirrors? I suspect that is exactly what the consequences of a 9.4% cut in dialysis reimbursement will cause. In such a situation, people will die and suffer greatly especially in rural and inner city areas poorly served already.
Rocker, more than happy to give you quite a few links to back up my opinions.
However, please show me that docs are happy with reimbursement rates with Medicare.
Most docs have given up on pure private practice.
As far as Medicare refusals by docs, finding that answer will only take you a few minutes of your time. Yes, it is well documented.
For your information, dialysis companies make most of their profits off of private insurance, it is their preferred payor. In fact, many units "cherry pick" based on private insurance situations. If you believe that they prefer Medicare patients, I don't have much to say to you.
I retired from my renal disease thank you. Personal convenience had nothing to do with that decision. Failing to understand the doctor shortage that the ACA will exacerbate even more leaves me astounded you are unaware of this.
Obama will certainly change the framework of our employer based health care. There are many who now have health care but their employers will choose to pay the IRS fine instead of paying much more for the ever rising health care premiums.
Nephrology News & Issueshttp://www.nephrologynews.com/articles/109681-davita-income-rises-35-in-second-quarter-of-2013DaVita income rises 35% in second quarter of 2013DaVita HealthCare Partners Inc. reported that income for the second quarter of 2013 rose almost 35% to $197.4 million, or $1.84 a share, compared to $146.7 million, or $1.53 a share, in the same quarter last year. Last year's results included the transaction expenses associated with the acquisition of HealthCare Partners Inc., and a legal settlement.Operating income for the newly acquired HealthCare Partners segment of the business was $81 million, nearly $22 million less than the company guidance.DaVita made 5,867,973, U.S. dialysis treatments in the second quarter of 2013, or 75,230 dialysis treatments per day, representing a per day increase of 7.6% over the second quarter of 2012. Non-acquired dialysis treatment growth was 5% over the same quarter last year.# # #
Dear Rocker,Let's look at some of the specifics.1) It is a well documented fact that the number of doctors who are refusing all Medicare is rising. In addition, for those that still accept Medicare, many are closed to new Medicare patients. As many as 20% of primary care docs will not accept new Medicare patients even though they continue to see their old patients with Medicare leading to great difficulty for new Medicare enrollees to find a primary care doc.2) Medicare is heading for bankruptcy and large cuts loom over the docs every year to the tune of at least 25% threatened cuts that keep getting temporary reprieves. Many docs look on the inevitable fact that one day the cuts will take place and are making adjustments to their practice accordingly. http://www.healthcarereforminsights.com/2012/11/28/medicares-2013-fee-schedule-compared-to-2012/In fact, many are retiring early who remain in private practice because of the implementation of ACO's.3) With ObamaCare, there will be a huge doctor shortage brought on by adding millions to the books while at the same time many as noted above are retiring early.4) You are quite wrong about docs knowing that they will be paid with Medicare. A friend of mine who is a Family Physician in rural CA didn't get paid by Medicare for 18 months for services already rendered. Sorry, you are mistaken. Many procedures are disallowed and many only get a fraction of the going rate. 5) Many docs looking at the long term outcome of Medicare are moving to other more sustainable income possibilities. One of my friends from the world of Army medicine is now involved in a very lucrative concierge practice outside of Boston. That is just the reality of finances in medicine today. If you wish to remain in primary care and be an independent practitioner, doing so depending on Medicare is not a viable financial option especially when you consider the rate of indebtedness many of my colleagues have from medical school and add that to the costs of running an office.Sorry, but your views of the medical community on Medicare are not the views I hear from within the physician community.
Quote from: Hemodoc on August 13, 2013, 05:01:14 PMRocker, more than happy to give you quite a few links to back up my opinions. Still waiting. However, links to opinion pieces with the same opinion as yours are not helpful. We all know people that share our opinion on a topic.QuoteHowever, please show me that docs are happy with reimbursement rates with Medicare.Show me anyone who thinks they are paid too much.QuoteMost docs have given up on pure private practice.This is an undeniable trend, and a sad indictment of corporate "medicine". I used to know a few doctors who had private practices - they have all, one by one, been acquired by large medical corporations seeking monopoly over care. When you have a monopoly over lifesaving care, people will pay whatever you ask or die.QuoteAs far as Medicare refusals by docs, finding that answer will only take you a few minutes of your time. Yes, it is well documented.And yet again you sidestep the fact that this problem is many times larger for private insurance.QuoteFor your information, dialysis companies make most of their profits off of private insurance, it is their preferred payor. In fact, many units "cherry pick" based on private insurance situations. If you believe that they prefer Medicare patients, I don't have much to say to you.I never said anything remotely like they "prefer" Medicare patients. We all prefer the customers who pay us the most. Whether we deserve it or not. That's hardly rocket science.QuoteI retired from my renal disease thank you. Personal convenience had nothing to do with that decision. Failing to understand the doctor shortage that the ACA will exacerbate even more leaves me astounded you are unaware of this.I suppose that I shouldn't be shocked that there are so many people that are callously dismissive of other human lives, but I still am a little. Or at least, that people are willing to be so open about it.Granted, we wouldn't have gotten very far as a species without a survival instinct. But once you are surviving, many people's concern turns to helping others.But obviously, not everyone's.So I'm curious as to how you justify your life being so much more important than others', particularly given that you're retired?Quote Obama will certainly change the framework of our employer based health care. There are many who now have health care but their employers will choose to pay the IRS fine instead of paying much more for the ever rising health care premiums. And where "But all that riffraff will want to see doctors now!" is the most disgusting argument against Obamacare, this is by far the most baffling.I am an employer. I have never been compelled by any law to offer health insurance, and yet I did. Why is that? Was I just that stupid, to offer more than the law required?I believe it had a lot more to do with the fact that in the jobs I offered, a number of benefits were considered standard offerings. A business simply could not attract quality employees without offering insurance. In addition, my employees were highly skilled, and not interchangeable. It would damage my business to have an employee out for an extended period of time, so it was in my best interest to see that they had access to good healthcare.And, you know, I actually knew and cared about my employees and their families. But compassion doesn't appear to have a role in your worldview.So all that said, what part of that changes so radically if there is now a punishment for not offering insurance?Really, it's like saying that no one will drive over 60 if there are no speed limits, but if you set the speed limit to 70 suddenly everyone will drive at over 100mph just so they can pay the fines.
Rocker, HemoDoc has never, ever supported For-Profit Dialysis companies.
If you think Kent Thiry would not protect his wallet over a dialysis patient, you are drunk and have been drinking. Davita DOES NOT have compassion for any dialysis patient. If you believe that, you are nuts.
Yes, I have been in management, just like you.
Look at the numbers, do you think the employer is going to pay a fine of $2,000 or health insurance costs that are thousands upon thousands of dollars? Many employees are not highly skilled, not like the majority of people in your company, that is not reality.
What happens to a business who pays an employee much more than that employee produces???
I guess, Rocker, that you will not like hearing this but, I have been invited to go to Washington DC as part of an advocacy group to argue AGAINST the proposed cuts to the ESRD program. And, Yes, I am going!Anyone who thinks that it will only be ESRD effected is in for a huge surprise. No, it will only START with the ESRD program...
Quote from: NDXUFan on August 14, 2013, 03:34:49 AMRocker, HemoDoc has never, ever supported For-Profit Dialysis companies. I don't understand how this is in any way related to this thread, nor how you imagine that I thought that.He has, however, argued against the cuts, and takes their hostage rhetoric seriously. I am for the cuts, and think their rhetoric is bull.QuoteActually, you are quite wrong once again Rocker. I have not yet taken a formal position on the cuts. When I do, I will write a post on my blog. I have voiced concern that the threatened shut down of clinics by DaVita is likely not an idle threat and that the 9.4% cut will passed to the patients, not the share holders. That is my opinion of how DaVita and the other LDO's will likely respond to protect their profits which is their motivation for staying in this business.That places advocacy in a very divided position where we have no doubt that the greed and profiteering of these companies is out of control and at the same time that the burden of these cuts will be placed on the backs of the patients even further than they are now. Yes, the dialysis industry does hold a dagger to our throats in their threats, but as history would tell us, the game that they have played will result in further pain, suffering and misery for an untold number of patient as they have done for over 40 years already. Just as Obama is intentionally making the sequester cuts hurt as much as possible to gain political advantage over the GOP (even though the sequester was his idea), so likewise do I believe that LDO's will do the same.So what is the correct response to the cuts. 1) support the cuts and risk the outrage when DaVita and other LDO's follow through with their threats or 2) oppose the cuts and support the greed and profiteering of the LDO's. What my friend is the right path that will unite dialysis patients, that will protect dialysis patients and that will improve care for dialysis patients in America?
Actually, you are quite wrong once again Rocker. I have not yet taken a formal position on the cuts. When I do, I will write a post on my blog. I have voiced concern that the threatened shut down of clinics by DaVita is likely not an idle threat and that the 9.4% cut will passed to the patients, not the share holders. That is my opinion of how DaVita and the other LDO's will likely respond to protect their profits which is their motivation for staying in this business.That places advocacy in a very divided position where we have no doubt that the greed and profiteering of these companies is out of control and at the same time that the burden of these cuts will be placed on the backs of the patients even further than they are now. Yes, the dialysis industry does hold a dagger to our throats in their threats, but as history would tell us, the game that they have played will result in further pain, suffering and misery for an untold number of patient as they have done for over 40 years already. Just as Obama is intentionally making the sequester cuts hurt as much as possible to gain political advantage over the GOP (even though the sequester was his idea), so likewise do I believe that LDO's will do the same.So what is the correct response to the cuts. 1) support the cuts and risk the outrage when DaVita and other LDO's follow through with their threats or 2) oppose the cuts and support the greed and profiteering of the LDO's. What my friend is the right path that will unite dialysis patients, that will protect dialysis patients and that will improve care for dialysis patients in America?
This may be a simple question regarding a complex subject, but it seems to me that most politicians are telling us that entitlements need to be cut. So, why are any of you surprised and/or outraged that cuts will be made to the ESRD program? It's an "entitlement", isn't it? Aren't there a lot of people out there telling us that government shouldn't be involved in our health care? And don't a lot of people vote for these politicians who run on this sort of platform?
As nearly as I can tell, MM, the definition of "entitlement" that they use is "anything that does not directly benefit me."