southernhybrid
Contributor
The problems with America's healthcare system are numerous. Among them is the fraud and abuse that happens in Medicare and Medicaid, the absurd high prices that we or our insurance companies pay for services, etc. etc. But, when I read about the misuse of federal funds that were supposed to be used to help maintain the pay of workers, that was something that even I never expected.
I read the following linked article and even I was shocked at how these hospitals misused the funds.
https://www.nytimes.com/2020/06/08/business/hospitals-bailouts-ceo-pay.html
The article contains a lot more information and this didn't happen only at profit making hospitals. It also happened at so called non profits like the Mayo Clinic, for example. These large non profits are a bit of a scam imo. I'm not saying that their care is inferior and to be honest, I don't know exactly how to explain how they obtain non profit status and how they misuse that concept.
When I worked as a QA nurse in home health, I saw widespread abuse of Medicare. This never happened when I worked for a government owned agency. I could give many more examples, but I'm trying to keep the post from becoming too long.
Medicare copays and premiums have been rising quite a bit. My guess is that part of the reason is due to over billing for services. My copay was only 5 dollars for the visit, because I have switched to an Advantage Plan. If you don't know what that is, it's a Medicare program provided by private insurance companies but heavily subsidized by the government. These usually offer additional services like dental, vision and hearing. None of that is covered by traditional Medicare.
Anyone have a solution? I sure don't. Please don't say Medicare for all is the answer unless you can explain exactly how that would work, how it could be done with affordable premiums and copays, what could be done to eliminate fraud and abuse and how hospitals that depend on the much higher rates they currently receive from private insurance companies can manage on the much lower Medicare reimbursement rates. It's complicated.
I read the following linked article and even I was shocked at how these hospitals misused the funds.
https://www.nytimes.com/2020/06/08/business/hospitals-bailouts-ceo-pay.html
HCA Healthcare is one of the world’s wealthiest hospital chains. It earned more than $7 billion in profits over the past two years. It is worth $36 billion. It paid its chief executive $26 million in 2019.
But as the coronavirus swept the country, employees at HCA repeatedly complained that the company was not providing adequate protective gear to nurses, medical technicians and cleaning staff. Last month, HCA executives warned that they would lay off thousands of nurses if they didn’t agree to wage freezes and other concessions.
A few weeks earlier, HCA had received about $1 billion in bailout funds from the federal government, part of an effort to stabilize hospitals during the pandemic.
HCA is among a long list of deep-pocketed health care companies that have received billions of dollars in taxpayer funds but are laying off or cutting the pay of tens of thousands of doctors, nurses and lower-paid workers. Many have continued to pay their top executives millions, although some executives have taken modest pay cuts.
HCA’s $1 billion in federal grants appears to make it the largest beneficiary of health care bailout funds. But its medical workers have a long list of complaints about what they see as penny-pinching practices.
Since the pandemic began, medical workers at 19 HCA hospitals have filed complaints with the Occupational Safety and Health Administration about the lack of respirator masks and being forced to reuse medical gowns, according to copies of the complaints reviewed by The Times.
Ed Fishbough, an HCA spokesman, said that despite a global shortage of masks and other protective gear, the company had “provided appropriate P.P.E., including a universal masking policy implemented in March requiring all staff in all areas to wear masks, including N95s, in line with C.D.C. guidance.”
The article contains a lot more information and this didn't happen only at profit making hospitals. It also happened at so called non profits like the Mayo Clinic, for example. These large non profits are a bit of a scam imo. I'm not saying that their care is inferior and to be honest, I don't know exactly how to explain how they obtain non profit status and how they misuse that concept.
When I worked as a QA nurse in home health, I saw widespread abuse of Medicare. This never happened when I worked for a government owned agency. I could give many more examples, but I'm trying to keep the post from becoming too long.
Medicare copays and premiums have been rising quite a bit. My guess is that part of the reason is due to over billing for services. My copay was only 5 dollars for the visit, because I have switched to an Advantage Plan. If you don't know what that is, it's a Medicare program provided by private insurance companies but heavily subsidized by the government. These usually offer additional services like dental, vision and hearing. None of that is covered by traditional Medicare.
Anyone have a solution? I sure don't. Please don't say Medicare for all is the answer unless you can explain exactly how that would work, how it could be done with affordable premiums and copays, what could be done to eliminate fraud and abuse and how hospitals that depend on the much higher rates they currently receive from private insurance companies can manage on the much lower Medicare reimbursement rates. It's complicated.