Posts Tagged ‘this’

The hospital “thinking” had made this deal!: An article from: Hospital Law Regan Report

Thursday, August 12th, 2010

Product DescriptionThis digital document is an article of the Law Regan Report of a Hospital Medical Law Publishing Published in December 2009. The length of the article is 831 words. The length of the page above on a 300-word page type. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser. Citation Details Title: The Hospital of “thought” it was decided that the case! (Jurisprudence Hospital of the month) Author: UnavailablePublication: Hospital Law Regan Report (Newsletter) Date: December 1 2009Publisher: Medical Law Publishing Volume: 50 Issue: 7 Page: 2 (1) Distributed by Gale, a part of Cengage Learning

The hospital “thinking” had made this deal!: An article from: Hospital Law Regan Report

60 minutes – Is this the price is right?

Thursday, August 12th, 2010

Amazon. Comare paying fair prices for medical care? Hospitals in the United States will not always assured of support more patients than those who are insured – for the same procedure. For those without insurance face large bills is a recipe for disaster. Dan Rather reports. This product is available with a DVD-R Recordable Media manufactured. Amazon. com standard return policy applies.

60 minutes – Is this the price is right?

2009 Multi-family: Legal Perspective: In this year of the dispute had withdrawn the funding for development projects designed to focus coverage. . . Compliance. : An article from: Units

Wednesday, July 28th, 2010

Product DescriptionThis digital document is an article from units of the National Association Published first apartment in December 2008. The length of the article is 2773 words. The length of the page above on a typical 300-word side. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser. Citation Details Title: 2009′s apartment buildings: Legal: This year will focus on the dispute which has created withdrew funds for development projects, insurance needs and accessibility compliance. Author: A. Morgan StewartPublication: Units (Magazine / Journal) Date: December 1 2008Publisher: National Apartment AssociationVolume: 32 Number: 12 Page: 32 (6) Distributed by Gale, a part of Cengage Learning

2009 Multi-family: Legal Perspective: In this year of the dispute had withdrawn the funding for development projects designed to focus coverage. . . Compliance. : An article from: Units

Blues Oregon to impose this system of fixed fee. : An article from: National Underwriter Property & Casualty-Risk & Benefits Management

Friday, July 23rd, 2010

Product DescriptionThis digital document is an article from National Underwriter Property & Casualty-Risk & Benefits Management, adopted by the National Underwriter Company Published 27th March 1989. The length of the article is 5987 words. The length of the page above on a 300-word page type. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon. com Digital Locker immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser. Citation Details Title: Blues Oregon impose this system of fixed fee. Author: Michael ParksPublication: National Property & Casualty Insurer-Risk & Benefits Management (Magazine / Journal) Date: 27 March 1989Publisher: Broadcast Company National Underwriter N13 Page: p21 (1) Distributed by Thomson Gale

Blues Oregon to impose this system of fixed fee. : An article from: National Underwriter Property & Casualty-Risk & Benefits Management

This Could Be Your Grandpa: Indirect Euthanasia Via Health Insurance?

Wednesday, June 9th, 2010

A sad story in Miami, Florida regarding health insurance was recently brought to my attention. It highlights the flaws inherent in both public and private health insurance plans, and is an example of why healthcare reform is so important. A friend of mine has an ailing grandfather, named Benito Jimenez. Benito’s daughter, Maria Conroy cares for him 24/7, and has taken charge of navigating the complexities of his insurance coverage. Her 85-year-old father has Medicare, but also has a Medicare Advantage administered by Humana. This would seem like an ideal compromise of the government and corporations, which would allow them to provide the best healthcare possible. Instead, it’s only brought Maria and her family one frustration after another. Benito suffers from various conditions, but his health recently took a turn for the worse. He has developed anemia, which decreases the amount of healthy red blood cells. Severe anemia prevents your body from pumping oxygen everywhere it’s needed, so it’s obviously an urgent concern, especially for senior citizens. His doctors aren’t sure where his internal bleeding is coming from, though Maria suspects that it’s related to a previous stomach ulcer that was caused due to Benito taking a large combination of medications daily. The recommended test is an endoscopy, generally considered a simple and safe procedure (as opposed to a colonoscopy, which is more invasive). Unfortunately, possibly due to Benito’s age, his gastroenterologist–part of his primary care doctor’s “team”–refuses to perform it himself, despite being able and certified to do so–Maria feels that he is most likely scared of a malpractice lawsuit. Maria begged him to allow her to sign a waiver removing his liability, but he refused to take the risk of doing it on an outpatient basis. That gastroenterologist further explained that he would be obligated to do any and all tests necessary to save Benito’s life if he was in a hospital setting. After the gastroenterologist told them to go to the hospital (where the procedure would be performed at a higher cost to them, as well as their health insurance), Maria and Benito were kicked back to their primary care physician. Despite Benito’s hemoglobin level being a very low 8.5, they were told that he wouldn’t be referred to a hospital until his hemoglobin level was 7. She is unclear as to whether the doctor or the insurance company establishes this arbitrary rule. If they had investigated his medical history, a hemoglobin level of 8 had previously sent Benito to the hospital in need of a blood transfusion. In the infinite wisdom of Medicare and Humana’s reimbursement rules, they would not offer preventative treatment until he was in critical condition and needed even more medical care. This runaround was costly for Maria, both financially and emotionally. Benito was prescribed an increasing number of medications to mask his symptoms, but they produced other side effects and exacerbated his main problem (while also resulting in higher co-pays). She felt that the doctors were condescending and were more focused on preventing health insurance fraud than providing care. While Medicare fraud is relatively common, the preventative measures may have backfired. Honest, ethical patients and their loved ones don’t receive the care they need, because they are unaware of the loopholes. For example, a previous cardiologist of Benito’s once referred him to Baptist Hospital in Miami, in order for another specialist to examine him; however, his insurance company wouldn’t pay for a visit to that particular hospital. The cardiologist suggested that he pretend to faint somewhere in close physical proximity to the hospital or in the hospital lobby, so they would be forced to admit him and later discover what he actually needed. This suggestion shocked and dismayed Maria. For too many doctors, the health insurance bureaucracy has changed their caring vocation into an impersonal business. Ideally, healthcare reform would change this, eventhough this story shows an negative example of government involvement in health insurance. The saddest part of Maria’s story is that Benito was present when a cardiologist, that his primary care doctor urged him to consult with, shockingly informed Maria, as if he wasn’t capable of understanding or wasn’t listening, that further investigation would be pointless due to his frail condition–or at least, not enough of a sure thing to avoid the risk of lawsuits. They indirectly, but essentially told her, in front of him, that he should go home, medicate the symptoms and wait to die. Again, their fear of malpractice judgments and desire to bill Humana and the federal government (thereby making up for decreased funding that cut reimbursement rates) for as many procedures as possible overtook their oath to “do no harm”. It seems as though they prefer to wait until someone is in critical condition to provide preventative care, which results in their needing even more medical care. Meanwhile, Benito’s condition was far from terminal. A previous gastroenterologist agreed to perform an outpatient procedure, but his insurance was only willing to cover the specialist recommended by his primary care doctor. As opposed to working together for the benefit of the patient, that doctor steered them to the uncooperative gastroenterologist described above. Since the outcome was unsuccessful, Maria eventually managed to get her father’s initial gastroenterologist covered under his health insurance plan; however, the delay was detrimental to his care. Benito’s anemia is now critical: this lessens the chances of success of an outpatient endoscopy and might mean that he’ll need a hospital stay, after all. In Maria’s own words, the health insurance industry has enacted its own “cash for clunkers” program. Only in this case, the so-called “clunkers” are older Americans being sent to the junkyard. There’s a lot of fault to go around: Medicare stretches its budget to the limit and has bureaucrats making coverage decisions, while for-profit insurers like Humana have CEOs and shareholders that also demand a reduction in costs. The patients themselves–our parents, grandparents, siblings, children, partners, and friends–are lost in the midst this battle, even though they should be the most important factor of all. Some opponents of the public option claim that it will lead to the forced euthanasia of seniors, while others believe those claims are overblown. Nevertheless, indirect euthanasia is already happening right now; this is a case in point. Healthcare reform is a complicated issue, and it’s deeper than greater availability of affordable health insurance. That won’t matter if, after paying premiums and/or taxes for decades, your insurance won’t give you the care you need most. I don’t claim to know what proposal will work best, but Maria says that the current system is broken and that we urgently need healthcare reform of some kind. “Everybody doesn’t have a family member to be an advocate,” she adds. “I worry about how many elderly people fall through the cracks without someone to find the loopholes to work the system for them.”

Girl vs. rat, can she defeat this nasty EECS?

Saturday, April 3rd, 2010


EECS the Rat returns to try to subvert the Kaiser Permanente customer service culture, but EECS is destroyed, once again, in this training video featuring animation by ARG! Cartoon Animation Studio, Don Mangan and Artie Romero: www.artie.com Michael Spencer was the Art Director.

The hospital ‘thought’ it had settled this case!: An article from: Hospital Law’s Regan Report

Saturday, April 3rd, 2010

Product Description
This digital document is an article from Hospital Law’s Regan Report, published by Medical Law Publishing on December 1, 2009. The length of the article is 831 words. The page length shown above is based on a typical 300-word page. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.

Citation Details
Title: The hospital ‘thought’ it had settled this case!(Hospital Law Case of the Month)
Author: Unavailable
Publication: Hospital Law’s Regan Report (Newsletter)
Date: December 1, 2009
Publisher: Medical Law Publishing
Volume: 50 Issue: 7 Page: 2(1)

Distributed by Gale, a part of Cengage Learning

The hospital ‘thought’ it had settled this case!: An article from: Hospital Law’s Regan Report

Health Insurance Coverage – Why Opt For This?

Tuesday, March 2nd, 2010

As most developed countries continue to move from a manufacturing-based economy to a service economy, and employee working patterns continue to evolve, health insurance coverage has become less stable. The service sector offers less access to health insurance than its manufacturing counterparts. Further, an increasing reliance on part-time and contract workers who are not eligible for coverage means fewer workers have access to employer-sponsored health insurance.
With health insurance premiums on the rise, many small employers cannot afford to offer health benefits to their employees. Companies that do offer health insurance, often require employees to contribute a larger share toward their coverage. As a result, an increasing number of people have opted not to take advantage of job-based health insurance because they cannot afford it.
How does being uninsured harm individuals and families?
*Lack of health insurance coverage compromises the health of the uninsured because they receive less preventive care, are diagnosed at more advanced disease stages, and once diagnosed, tend to receive less therapeutic care and have higher mortality rates than insured individuals.
*Regardless of age, race, ethnicity, income or health status, uninsured children were much less likely to have received a well-child checkup within the past year. Research shows that almost 50 percent of children without health insurance coverage did not receive a checkup in 2003, almost twice the rate (26 percent) for children with health insurance coverage.
*People without health insurance coverage end paying “up front” — before services will be rendered. When they are unable to pay the full medical bill in cash at the time of service, they can be turned away except in life-threatening circumstances.
*About 20 percent of the uninsured (vs. 3 percent of those with coverage) say their usual source of care is the emergency room.
*Studies estimate that the number of excess deaths among uninsured adults aged 25-64 is in the range of 18,000 a year. This mortality figure is more than the number of deaths from diabetes (17,500) within the same age group (10).
*According to one another study, over a third of people without health insurance coverage have problems paying medical bills. The unpaid bills were substantial enough that many had been turned over to collection agencies – and nearly a quarter of the uninsured adults said they had changed their way of life significantly to pay medical bills.
What additional costs are created by people without health insurance coverage?
*Its estimated that America spends nearly $120 billion per year to provide uninsured residents with health services, often for preventable diseases or diseases that physicians could treat more efficiently with earlier diagnosis.
*Hospitals provide about $35 billion worth of uncompensated care a year.
*Another $38 billion is paid by private and public payers for health services for the uninsured and $26 billion is paid out-of-pocket by those who lack health insurance coverage.
*People without health insurance coverage are 30 to 50 percent more likely to be hospitalized for an avoidable condition, with the average cost of an avoidable hospital stayed estimated to be about $3,300.
*The increasing reliance of the uninsured on the emergency department has serious economic implications, since the cost of treating patients is higher in the emergency department than in other outpatient clinics and medical practices.
Getting Everyone Health Insurance Coverage Will Save A lot of Money.
The impacts of living without health insurance coverage are severe. Many uninsured individuals postpone needed medical care which results in increased mortality and billions of dollars lost in productivity and increased expenses to the health care system.
There also exists a significant sense of vulnerability to the potential loss of health insurance which is shared by tens of millions of other people who have managed to retain health insurance coverage.
Every person should have health insurance coverage, participation should be mandatory, and everyone should have basic benefits because like we have seen above it’s benefits are awesome.

Multifamily housing’s 2009: legal outlook: this year will focus on litigation created by withdrawn funding for development projects, insurance coverage … compliance.: An article from: Units

Sunday, September 16th, 2007

Product Description
This digital document is an article from Units, published by National Apartment Association on December 1, 2008. The length of the article is 2773 words. The page length shown above is based on a typical 300-word page. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.

Citation Details
Title: Multifamily housing’s 2009: legal outlook: this year will focus on litigation created by withdrawn funding for development projects, insurance coverage provisions and accessibility compliance.
Author: Morgan A. Stewart
Publication: Units (Magazine/Journal)
Date: December 1, 2008
Publisher: National Apartment Association
Volume: 32 Issue: 12 Page: 32(6)

Distributed by Gale, a part of Cengage Learning

Multifamily housing’s 2009: legal outlook: this year will focus on litigation created by withdrawn funding for development projects, insurance coverage … compliance.: An article from: Units