I've
heard that hospitals only receive about 40% of actual cost when they admit a
patient but receive 100% reimbursement for 'emergency care' or 'observational
care.' If this is true, do the math, it adds up to 'cost versus care.' Death
Panels they might not be but the long term results may be the same. --
rfh
From: drude Sent:
Tuesday, May 20, 2014 Subject: Senior, beware, Obama is out to get us.
It's long but worth the read.
by Betsy
McCaughey, New York Post,
18May14
article source: http://nypost.com/2014/05/18/obamacare-risks-for-the-elderly/
On May 7, the Obama
administration boasted that ObamaCare was improving health-care quality for
seniors, and it pulled out a bag of statistical tricks to prove it. But a
closer look shows that it's not improving care. It's skimping on it, socking
seniors with unexpected bills for "observation care" and likely shortening their
lives.
President Obama's Department of Health and Human Services announced that fewer
seniors discharged from the hospital are returning for additional care within a
month's time. HHS claims that this drop in "readmissions," from 18.5 percent in
2012 to 17.5 percent in 2013, signals quality
improvement.
Nonsense. The 50 best hospitals according to US News & World Report's Best
Hospitals annual rankings have above-average readmission
rates.
Nationwide, readmissions are dropping because Section 3025 of ObamaCare punishes
hospitals if a senior returns within 30 days.
What happens to the senior treated for a heart attack who rushes to the hospital
a week later feeling faint, possibly because of
arrhythmia?
To
dodge the penalty, hospitals put the patient under "observation." It's just a
word on the chart. The patient may get the same tests and be put in the same
room as if he had been admitted.
But unless he stays at least two nights, the
hospital won't bill Medicare for a stay, and the patient gets clobbered with the
cost. Many seniors don't even know they were under observation until they get
the bill.
So much for HHS boasting about the drop in
readmissions. HHS officials fail to mention that this coincides with a rise in
elderly patients placed under "observation status." It's a hospital billing
trick, and a dirty one for seniors.
Penalizing readmissions, which started in 2013,
is one of the law's tricks to reduce Medicare spending, never mind the impact on
seniors. Cuts in future Medicare spending pay for more than half the law's
cost - robbing Grandma to fund health-care coverage for other
groups.
It's true that some readmissions are
unnecessary and can be avoided if patients follow up with their doctors and take
their meds after leaving the hospital. Low-income patients are less likely to
do that, and hospitals caring for the poor are getting whacked hardest by
ObamaCare's readmission penalty.
The Obama administration plans to expand the
readmissions penalties in 2015 to apply to many more conditions. It's no wonder
medical experts are protesting.
Dr.
Ashish Jha, a professor at the Harvard School of Public Health, says it's bogus
to equate declining readmissions with quality. Many top academic hospitals have
high readmission rates because their patients have serious illnesses and
complications needing repeated stays.
JHA says the gold standard for measuring a hospital's quality is how many
patients survive a specific disease, such as pneumonia or congestive heart
failure. Dr. Bruce Lytie, chairman of the Cleveland Clinic's heart and vascular
programs, also warns not to trust claims that lowering readmissions improves
quality.
Don't trust ObamaCare's definition of "value" either. Everyone wants value, but
ObamaCare defines it in a way that produces the opposite: dangerously skimpy
care for seniors.
Section 3001 sets up a bonus system to reward
hospitals for "value." Bravo for rewarding hospitals that prevent infections.
But the lion's share of bonus points go to hospitals that spend the least per
senior.
That cost-cutting will shorten lives. Evidence
from 208 California hospitals shows that Medicare patients treated in the
lowest-spending hospitals had a worse chance of surviving their illness and
going home than patients with the same diagnosis treated at higher-spending
hospitals.
The research, sponsored by the National
Institute on Aging and RAND , found that heart-attack patients were 19 percent
more likely to die at low-spending hospitals.
Over
a four-year period, 13,613 seniors who died from pneumonia, stroke, heart
attacks and other common conditions at California's low-spending hospitals might
have recovered and gone home had they been treated elsewhere. And that's just
in one state.
Ignoring this evidence, ObamaCare incentivizes hospitals in all 50 states to
imitate low-spending hospitals that are deadly for seniors. That's some
definition of value.
Question everything. Accept
nothing as fact until proven. No one or nothing is above suspicion.
Ambivalence and complacency
is a crime against humanity and will not be tolerated. --
Jess
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