Talk of The Villages Florida - Rentals, Entertainment & More
Talk of The Villages Florida - Rentals, Entertainment & More
#16
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Doctors (and other medical providers) can "opt out" of Medicare altogether and be free to charge whatever they want for their services. But, it is interesting to me, that less than one percent of doctors have decided to do so.
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#17
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__________________
The further a society drifts from truth the more it will hate those who speak it. George Orwell. “Only truth and transparency can guarantee freedom”, John McCain |
#18
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Hence the premise is flawed. |
#19
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Same place I found them. Google.
From THE VILLAGES REGIONAL HOSPITAL COMMUNITY HEALTH STATUS ASSESSMENT - https://wellflorida.org/wp-content/u...5-2016-pdf.pdf Quote:
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#20
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#21
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#22
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I agree. I don't even think that it is legal to sell private health insurance to someone over 65. So, if the geriatric specialist doesn't accept Medicare, their patients would need to pay the entire fees out of pocket.
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#23
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I just spent some time going thru Golfing Eagles & dbussones old posts and see how their explanation about any issue was handled much easier than any of us could ever hope to do. With all their years in the Medical Business, their explanations were beautiful and very soothing. To have people like that who gave so much time to help people like Barney Rubble & Wilma Flintstone understand the inner workings and the thought process of the messed up Medical world and to put it into terms that everyone could understand was priceless. Unfortunately, our Dear friend GE had to face the biggest loss a person could go thru with the death of his spouse. We kept in touch for a while and he is Golfing all over the place and just trying to get his head back on. He was married to his beloved wife for a long time. Who knows maybe one day we will be lucky enough to get him back. I truly cherish his counseling and time he and others put in on the Forum and behind the scenes to get us to Florida. I'm going to take a guess that our other Dear friend dbussone was just fed up of the abuse that he received from some of the tough Beer Muscled Posters that criticized every post and I believe he thinks he got an unfair shake from one of the people (no actual proof) who policed the forum back then. That person has obviously been relieved of his or her duties. Please accept that as constructive criticism because I think it was the reason he took a powder. What a loss that was also. We pretty much had the answer to all medical questions at our fingertips and life and the old ways of this Forum cost us two extra valuable and giving fantastic human lima beings and loving people who did a whole lot for people that was without any praise of fanfare. They had contacts at the top of the food chain at our Hospital and made many Constructive Suggestions based on things they read here when regular people were struggling to digest information that they think they have read properly. These two men would operate on any post or link or report marked 2015 and would tell us what it really meant. The way I called them when we were Goofing around on The Three Word Sentence Thread may work so I'll give it a shot and let's see if it works! Car 54'S Would You Please Report for duty we Flintstoner's need a real interpretation of some things we've read. Go back and scan both of these guys posts from 2017 and you'll see what I mean about their way of explaining different medical situations with total goodwill. Bless them both I hope life is treating them well. Last edited by Nucky; 03-17-2019 at 08:27 PM. |
#24
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Medicare is an important payer to hospitals. Note these statistics—that While dated, are relevant as these number are usually lagging. “The majority of patients treated by hospitals are covered by Medicare (40.9 percent of patients treated in U.S. hospitals). The average payer mix of a U.S. hospital is as follows: Medicare: 40.9 percent. Medicaid: 17.2 percent. (Becker;s, 2013). Medicare revenue is key to hospital revenues. Payment formulas and contractual agreements are complex, and thus what might look like hospital costs are not necessarily related to revenue. My point is, Medicare patient population does not mean less revenue and poor care.
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#25
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This is a fact. It is a known fact, it's been a fact for years and years and years. Anyone who has ever worked in hospital finance, accounts receivable, accounts payable, billing, insurance claim, or anything similar in a medical setting, can tell you this. Hospitals typically receive medicare payments from around 40% of its patient base, as you said. But while these payments are guaranteed, they are also LESS than the actual cost of the services they're supposed to be covering. |
#26
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It is the opinion of my daughter, who has worked in collecting claims for certain hospitals from health insurers for the past 19 years, that without Medicare as a payer many hospitals would have to close their doors. Medicare pays on time. The worst payer she has dealt with is Aetna.
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#27
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Based on my cousins recent stay one star was too many. No response to call button, missed medication, missed meals, ...
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#28
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Believe me the CEO is the problem and he will never prepare going to a meeting alone. He'll always take his VP'S and related management with him and throw them under the bus. For the money this guy makes it's amazing that the organization has not looked into his overall performance.
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#29
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I am reading recently about proposed cuts to Medicare and to Social Security and also Medicaid. Of course, the fraud needs to be cleaned up but this would go beyond that.
Please pay attention. Read and listen — widely and wisely — to stay informed on these proposed cuts that could affect you and yours directly. I hope this does not get pulled because somebody thinks I am being partisan. I am just saying to be aware. This is about us. Cassandra Boomer |
#30
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__________________
It is better to laugh than to cry. |
Closed Thread |
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