Mismanaged Money in American Healthcare


Book Description

Warren Buffett famously invoked the metaphor of a tapeworm when describing what healthcare is to the American economy. The United States spends approximately 20% of its gross national product on healthcare, but it is unclear where the money goes or who is minding the store. This healthcare crisis is mostly about money--not lack of money, but rather misspending of money. From the perspective of a healthcare auditor and provider, this work describes the problems of American healthcare finance and proposes solutions. Extensive charts and graphs are used to trace where money goes in the American healthcare system, while other topics such as ethics in healthcare billing, un-auditable hospital costs and scams are discussed. There is evidence that clearly identifies where the money goes, and its destination may surprise the reader.




Mismanaged Money in American Healthcare


Book Description

Warren Buffett famously invoked the metaphor of a tapeworm when describing what healthcare is to the American economy. The United States spends approximately 20% of its gross national product on healthcare, but it is unclear where the money goes or who is minding the store. This healthcare crisis is mostly about money--not lack of money, but rather misspending of money. From the perspective of a healthcare auditor and provider, this work describes the problems of American healthcare finance and proposes solutions. Extensive charts and graphs are used to trace where money goes in the American healthcare system, while other topics such as ethics in healthcare billing, un-auditable hospital costs and scams are discussed. There is evidence that clearly identifies where the money goes, and its destination may surprise the reader.




Trapped in America's Healthcare Scam


Book Description

The government shuts down, you are trapped in America's Healthcare Scam and Obamacare won't fix anything! Politicians argue over who should pay for a broken Healthcare system while Americans get sicker every day. We do not have a Healthcare System in America we have a for profit symptom care system controlled by the pharmaceutical companies. The Healthcare System in America is little more than a government back legalized network of drug dealers and pushers, pimping prescription drugs for the pharmaceutical companies. Do you think it's a problem that in 2014 around 50% of the FDA's operating budget will come directly from the pharmaceutical companies, the very industry they are regulating? Should we continue to allow these drug pushers to prescribe 6 million prescriptions per year for a drug more potent than cocaine to 5 million American children for a disease that there is no scientific proof even exist? Should the American Healthcare System be based on profits not cures, treat symptoms of a disease not the actual disease itself? Are you trapped with nowhere else to go...? This short book reveals the real reasons why America's Healthcare system is making Americans sicker not better, and what you can do to protect your family from this scam starting today.




Trillion Dollar Scam


Book Description

Fraud is the result of government and insurance company control of health care. The growth of bureaucracy is a precursor to incompetence and soaring costs of medical care. A lack of clinical diagnosis and a dependence on expensive testing has increased costs while decreasing the doctor's competence. The FBI and the attorneys general of all states are dealing with exploding health care fraud. The result is a trillion dollars in waste and deception. Trillion Dollar Scam details the origin of this fraud and waste, and offers solutions to fixing the broken U.S. health care system.




American Medicine Mismanaged Care


Book Description

This book explains why American Medicine is an administrative monstrosity and tells how simple changes can provide coverage for all Americans, add pharmacy and leave $200 Billion left over.




The American Healthcare Paradox


Book Description

The United States has what is arguably the most complex healthcare system in the world. As a result, changes within the industry are slow. Understanding what may come, helps to have a deeper understanding of healthcare's complexity. The unimaginable paths he followed started in Bangkok but quickly led to the discovery that there were two groups of killers: doctors at Bumrungrad and a vast and cover corrupt system in the United States consisting of both the medical industry and the government whose interests are tied together by money! Both groups contributed to the death of her son. Even worse, driven by self-interested greed and unbridled power, the greatest healthcare system on earth, the US, has been brought to its knees and the prospects for the future of medical care in America and indeed, the world, promise a disaster of global scale.




Overcharged


Book Description

Why is America's health care system so expensive? Why do hospitalized patients receive bills laden with inflated charges that com out of the blue from out-of-network providers or demands for services that weren't delivered? Why do we pay $600 for EpiPens that contain a dollar's worth of medicine? Why is more than $1 trillion - one out of every three dollars that passes through the system - lost to fraud, wasted on services that don't help patients, or otherwise misspent? Overcharged answers these questions. It shows that America's health care system, which replaces consumer choice with government control and third-party payment, is effectively designed to make health care as expensive as possible. Prices will fall, quality will improve, and medicine will become more patient-friendly only when consumers take charge and exert pressure from below. For this to happen, consumers must control the money. As Overcharged explains, when health care providers are subjected to the same competitive forces that shape other industries, they will either deliver better services more cheaply or risk being replaced by someone who will.




Your Money Or Your Health


Book Description

The shocking facts about the cost of medical care in America--and why national health care is our best and only hope. American health care is the most expensive in the world. Americans live in fear of going bankrupt from the cost of treatment. Onetime Democratic U.S. Senate candidate Rolde debunks myths propounded by the AMA, insurance firms, and drug companies, and describes how the system has succeeded in other countries.




Money-Driven Medicine


Book Description

Why is medical care in the United States so expensive? For decades, Americans have taken it as a matter of faith that we spend more because we have the best health care system in the world. But as costs levitate, that argument becomes more difficult to make. Today, we spend twice as much as Japan on health care—yet few would argue that our health care system is twice as good. Instead, startling new evidence suggests that one out of every three of our health care dollars is squandered on unnecessary or redundant tests; unproven, sometimes unwanted procedures; and overpriced drugs and devices that, too often, are no better than the less expensive products they have replaced. How did this happen? In Money-Driven Medicine, Maggie Mahar takes the reader behind the scenes of a $2 trillion industry to witness how billions of dollars are wasted in a Hobbesian marketplace that pits the industry's players against each other. In remarkably candid interviews, doctors, hospital administrators, patients, health care economists, corporate executives, and Wall Street analysts describe a war of "all against all" that can turn physicians, hospitals, insurers, drugmakers, and device makers into blood rivals. Rather than collaborating, doctors and hospitals compete. Rather than sharing knowledge, drugmakers and device makers divide value. Rather than thinking about long-term collective goals, the imperatives of an impatient marketplace force health care providers to focus on short-term fiscal imperatives. And so investments in untested bleeding-edge medical technologies crowd out investments in information technology that might, in the long run, not only reduce errors but contain costs. In theory, free market competition should tame health care inflation. In fact, Mahar demonstrates, when it comes to medicine, the traditional laws of supply and demand do not apply. Normally, when supply expands, prices fall. But in the health care industry, as the number and variety of drugs, devices, and treatments multiplies, demand rises to absorb the excess, and prices climb. Meanwhile, the perverse incentives of a fee-for-service system reward health care providers for doing more, not less. In this superbly written book, Mahar shows why doctors must take responsibility for the future of our health care industry. Today, she observes, "physicians have been stripped of their standing as professionals: Insurers address them as vendors ('Dear Health Care Provider'), drugmakers and device makers see them as customers (someone you might take to lunch or a strip club), while . . . consumers (aka patients) are encouraged to see their doctors as overpaid retailers. . . . Before patients can reclaim their rightful place as the center—and indeed as the raison d'être—of our health care system," Mahar suggests, "we must once again empower doctors . . . to practice patient-centered medicine—based not on corporate imperatives, doctors' druthers, or even patients' demands," but on the best scientific research available.




The American Medical Money Machine


Book Description

Health care today sits at the center of a perfect storm whose effects are inescapable for every living person of every age from infancy to death. The tangled world of healthcare seems like an undecipherable riddle. What?s wrong? Who?s responsible? The suspects are everywhere. Following the death of my only child, who died under mysterious circumstances at a U.S. - Accredited hospital in Bangkok, I began a three-and-a-half year intensive investigation to discover WHY ? The unimaginable paths I followed started in Bangkok but quickly led to discoveries of how vast and secreted corruption in the American medical industry have contributed to destroy, with self interested greed and unbridled power, the greatest healthcare system the world has ever known.