Reference: American Health Care Compared

07 Health, Briefings (Core)
Chuck Spinney
Chuck Spinney

Phi Beta Iota: The briefing below, flagged by Chuck Spinney from the New America Foundation, fails to make the one really big point: that PriceWaterHouseCoopers has found that 50% of all health care spending in the USA is WASTE.  However, given the profit motive, that waste generates overhead, and so there is no incentive for our greedy irresponsible health care corporations, who have fulfilled all Congressional demands for bribes, to actually try to deliver the best care at the lowest price.  In that light, our health care is actually better than everyone elses, we just charge twice as much as we should.  The other point that the Obama Administration is assiduously avoiding is the cost of Medicare drugs–the so-called “reform,” which is not a reform at all, just the health equivalent of the Wall Street bail-out, finally seeks to acquire drugs at Canadian price levels, or 10% of what we pay now, but avoids completely the disclosure of the fact that other countries such as  Thailand and South Africa pay 1% of what we pay, not 10%.  There is so much dishonesty across every aspect of the health care “dialog” (more like theater of the macabre) that we don't find it at all surprising to see Senator Chris Dodd (D-CT) right in the middle of BOTH the Wall Street bailout with unlimited bonuses, AND the health care debacle.

Briefing Online (No Notes)
Briefing Online (No Notes)
New America Web Site
New America Web Site

Journal: True Cost of Health Care–Fraud Squared

07 Health, Ethics

Full Story Online
Full Story Online

A Doctor Walks into the ER. The Punchline? A $5,000 Bill

He needed 29 stitches to patch up a two-inch cut, and was in and out of the ER in two hours. The nearly $5,000 price of the bill was only one aspect that disgusted Dr. Budris:

It listed something called “M/S SUPPLY GENERAL,” which came to $1,247. Then there was another $2,425 for “EMERGENCY ROOM GENERAL.”

“I'm a doctor and I can't tell you what all of that means,” said Budris.

Continue reading “Journal: True Cost of Health Care–Fraud Squared”

Journal: Real-Time Intelligence & Medicare Fraud

07 Health, Ethics, Law Enforcement, Real Time

Full Story Online
Full Story Online

Govt: Medicare paid $47 billion in suspect claims

By HOPE YEN

The Associated Press
Sunday, November 15, 2009; 1:58 AM

WASHINGTON — The government paid more than $47 billion in questionable Medicare claims including medical treatment showing little relation to a patient's condition, wasting taxpayer dollars at a rate nearly three times the previous year.  . . . . . .

n recent years, the suspect claims have included Medicare prescriptions from doctors who were dead, and requests for payment for medical supplies such as blood glucose strips for sexual impotence and diabetic shoes for leg amputees. Patients, many of them new citizens who barely speak English, are sometimes recruited by brokers who go door-to-door offering hundreds of dollars for use of their Medicare numbers.  . . . . . .

Records released in the past week showed that CMS for three years ignored internal watchdog warnings about swindlers stealing millions of dollars by scamming several Medicare programs. The agency received roughly 30 warnings from inspectors but didn't respond to half of them, even after repeated letters.

Continue reading “Journal: Real-Time Intelligence & Medicare Fraud”

Journal: True Cost of War–Insanity & Murder at Home

07 Health, 08 Proliferation, 09 Justice, 10 Security, 11 Society, Reform, True Cost

Full Story Online
Full Story Online

A Groundbreaking PTSD Court Decision

Week of November 02, 2009

A groundbreaking verdict for accused veterans with Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) was decided recently in Canyon City, Ore. when former Soldier Jesse Bratcher, on trial for murder, was found guilty by reason of insanity.  It appears to be the first trial in the U.S. where a veteran's post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) was successfully considered to mitigate the circumstances of a crime.  For more information on the case, visit the National Veterans Foundation website.

Journal: Ron Paul as Truth-Teller & Weak Signal

03 Economy, 07 Health, Civil Society, Collective Intelligence, Government, Methods & Process, Reform

Intelligence Minuteman Dr. Ron Paul
Intelligence Minuteman Dr. Ron Paul
Full Story Online
Full Story Online

Dr. Ron Paul calls Obama's H1N1 swine flu program a ‘total failure'

Rep. Ron Paul, the 11-term Republican congressman from Texas who mobilized millions of supporters and about $35 million for his unsuccessful presidential run last year, has added the federal government's faltering flu immunization program to his list of things worthy of denunciation.

A medical doctor himself, Paul, who at 74 is older even than John McCain, sees the Obama administration's oft-delayed H1N1 swine flu immunization plan as typical of many government-run programs — poorly planned, overloaded, inefficient, too expensive, late and quite possibly not even necessary.

Just another government grab for more federal power, as he puts it in a video….

Continue reading “Journal: Ron Paul as Truth-Teller & Weak Signal”

Journal: True Cost of Drugs

07 Health, True Cost

Explaining Research – How much do drugs really cost to develop?

Although this does not seem like a fact that most people would commit to memory, somehow the average American has come to know that, not only is it insanely expensive to create a new drug and bring it to market, but it is expensive to the tune of $800 million dollars. Why is this important?  It is the reason most often cited for why medications are so expensive in the United States.

So what is wrong with the figure?  A number of things.  First, let’s just approach the study from an economic standpoint.  The actual out of pocket costs for developing a drug in the Tufts study were about $400 million, half of the final number.  How did it get to $800 million then? Through a fancy piece of economic sleight of hand known as “opportunity costs of capital.”

Continue reading “Journal: True Cost of Drugs”

Journal: Junk food turns rats into addicts

03 Economy, 07 Health, 11 Society, Ethics
Bacon, cheesecake and Ho Hos alter pleasure centers in rats' brainsScienceNews By Laura Sanders October 21st, 2009

CHICAGO — Junk food elicits addictive behavior in rats similar to the behaviors of rats addicted to heroin, a new study finds. Pleasure centers in the brains of rats addicted to high-fat, high-calorie diets became less responsive as the binging wore on, making the rats consume more and more food. The results, presented October 20 at the Society for Neuroscience’s annual meeting, may help explain the changes in the brain that lead people to overeat.

“This is the most complete evidence to date that suggests obesity and drug addiction have common neurobiological underpinnings,” says study coauthor Paul Johnson of the Scripps Research Institute in Jupiter, Fla.

Schwartz Report Comment:

I think there is a more fundamental and alarming trend here. Both the chicken story and this one, are further examples of the results of America's decision to make greed and profit the only social priorities — the core values of our society. We are destroying ourselves as surely as the Easter Islanders cut down the trees upon which their environment and society depended.