Federal antikickback laws are meant to prevent suppliers from rewarding doctors who use their products if those physicians participate in Medicare, Medicaid or other federal programs (this is also why seniors cannot use copay cards for Medicare Part D drugs).
Category: Doctors & Hospitals
The History of Ventilators, Intensive Care and the Ethical Dilemma They Helped Create
During the initial outbreaks of Covid there was a shortage of ventilators, used to help patients breathe:
FTC Wants to Ban Noncompete Employment Agreements
I know a doctor who relocated to a small town after being recruited to join a new practice. He sold his house, bought a new one and uprooted his family for a move 150 miles away. It turned out that it was not a lucrative move. His schedule was quickly filled with Medicare patients, most of whom required 30-minute visits due to multiple chronic conditions. He remarked that his pediatrician colleague could see two or three privately insured patients during the time it took him to see one (lower paying) Medicare patient. His income fell far below expectations and he decided to get out.
Thursday Links
- Bill Gates: AI will revolutionize health care in the third world.
- Why do physicians “care” about their patients, any more than scientists care about a lab rat? Should they?
- HHS: surprise billing arbitrators are being swamped with claims. That’s because the law was poorly implemented.
- California’s highest concentrations of electric cars — between 10.9% and 14.2% of all vehicles — are in ZIP codes where residents are at least 75% white and Asian.