You can also thank the government for the policies that started employer paid health insurance…You can think the government and the existence of health insurance for that.
You can also thank the government for the policies that started employer paid health insurance…You can think the government and the existence of health insurance for that.
Insurance should also not dictate what treatments should happen and in what order.Doctors/hospitals also should not be told by insurance companies and government regulators what they will be paid. They HAVE to mark up some consumables and labor to make up for ridiculous insurance payments, low .gov mandated rates, and all of the non-payment and write-offs.
The system is a **** show, from all sides. Government meddling doesn't help, and our so-called "insurance" Ponzi schemes started the mess.
Why? They are paying for them.Insurance should also not dictate what treatments should happen and in what order.
Doctors have almost as little control over treatments as the patients do. Insurance is out of control.Why? They are paying for them.
The point being one can have total control or someone else pay for it, pick one, can’t have both.Doctors have almost as little control over treatments as the patients do. Insurance is out of control.
Yup. I can vouch from personal experience, good luck making providers in general and hospitals in particular do anything.Well, Hospitals are slow at almost everything has been my experience.
Why? They are paying for them.
Emergency medicine is falling apart. Nurses don't want to do it. They're going to surgery centers and other 9-5 M-F jobs or just quitting nursing altogether. A local hospital has 35% of it's positions filled by employed ER nurses, the rest are travelers. It will not improve for years, if it ever does.
Waiting room times have sucked lately. Two weeks ago our main campus was holding 35 inpatients in the ER, taking over half our beds. So we were supposed to see as many ER patients in a day with half as many beds. MV usually isn't as bad but times do stack up if beds are full. We will get anyone back immediately if the triage nurse feels you need immediate treatment. We'll code you in the hallway (it happens).
No, I am paying them to pay for me.Why? They are paying for them.
Yep, I walked in with a printout of my blood work. She asked when it was from, told her about 2hrs ago. She came around with a wheelchair, I said I can walk, she said sit down and shut up. In ICU hooked up to machines in short orderI got a drop of sodium hydroxide 50% aka lye in my eye one time at work. Worst pain I've ever felt. Needless to say it took them 20 minutes to get someone to drive me. Looked in the mirror and there was just a white piece of flesh hanging over my eye. But when I got to the ER I went to check in, the nurse didn't even look at me really and just handed me a clipboard. I start to fill it out and she asks me why I'm there, and I tell her I got caustic in my eye. She asks "plastic"? I say no caustic sodium hydroxide. She looks up at me, looks at my eye, snatches the clipboard and says come on. I was in a bed in about 30 seconds, nurse there in about 30 seconds rinsing my eye, and maybe a minute after that the Dr was in the room. Yeah if they think it's necessary you go right in. There was maybe 30-40 people in the waiting room. And I'm talking people waiting to go in, not with someone there.
One question, what is MV?
Yeah, let's completely ignore the fact that it's a business service you paid for. Not only that, it's one you are forced to have.No, I am paying them to pay.
When every insurance employee is a qualified physician, then they can make health decisions.Why? They are paying for them.
Even reviewing itemized bills for too long. Makes me ill to my stomachOf course the hospitals don’t want to reveal pricing! It is because they are so far leveraged due to all the new hospitals and buildings they are constructing all over the place. Something has to pay the monthly “nut” on all these facilities and that something is you and me? Talk about price gouging. Hospitals lead the way. Don’t believe me? Next time you are in a hospital for a serious medical incident obtain and review a itemized bill from the hospital. Your head will spin out of control! Good luck.
No, because they will still do it the cheapest way instead of the best way.When every insurance employee is a qualified physician, then they can make health decisions.
I think it will dry up. Federal and state emergency dollars i think are gone and hospitals can't afford it.Do you think the traveling nurse ratio is going to flip any time soon? My mother was a nurse for 30 years, and she thinks things are ridiculous. I have a close family friend whose daughter is a traveler, and she is living large right now. She will also be the first to scream about student loan forgiveness, too.
I walked in with a good bit of blood running down my arm from a hole in my hand, I got in there pretty quick when she said why are you here and I held my arm up and said I seem to have sprung a leak…Yep, I walked in with a printout of my blood work. She asked when it was from, told her about 2hrs ago. She came around with a wheelchair, I said I can walk, she said sit down and shut up. In ICU hooked up to machines in short order
No, because they will still do it the cheapest way instead of the best way.
They new the risk they were taking when they got into the insurance game, screwing people to save more profits should be illegal.
I can't even take this serious, this may be your weakest yet.
It is really simple, pay for your own healthcare. Then no one can tell you what to do. Until then, others are going to tell you what you get…When every insurance employee is a qualified physician, then they can make health decisions.