Eat What You Kill: A hospital helped a doctor’s practice flourish even as it suspected he was hurting patients
Eat What You Kill: A hospital helped a doctor’s practice flourish even as it suspected he was hurting patients

A Hospital Helped a Beloved Doctor’s Practice Flourish Even as It Suspected He Was Hurting Patients

Jesus Christ.
I learned this a few years ago. Because my condition is lifelong and degenerative, my RVH is quite high, and so my value to insurers and doctors/hospitals has a very low ROI. My care has degraded quite obviously as my condition has deteriorated, to the point I’ve decided I’d rather die at home than bother with healthcare at this point. And I can’t afford it anyhow. That sucks, but I’ve got medical PTSD now, and I don’t want to put myself through the indignity anymore. (eta: I don’t think I deserve the indignity anymore.)
I’m by far not alone in this. I used to be a very productive member of society, and I still could be if I could get even passable healthcare, but I can’t because the system has broken me. I have very in-demand skills that I can’t use, and instead , I’m staring down homelessness now. I cannot afford food.
This system is wasting people’s potential and lives. I will not survive this administration. I likely won’t make it another year.
The US medical system wants me to die, and I feel my compatriots have now voted to accelerate that. I honestly don’t know why I’m still fighting. I feel like I shouldn’t.
I get why the shooter did this. Our lives mean less than nothing. These executives can’t even imagine what it’s like to be using washcloths because you can’t even afford toilet paper.
Eat what you kill indeed. I have a nice recipe for a pork sauce. Humans have been called ‘long pork’.
That's... horrifying. I'm in and out of hospitals, but when my disease kills me, if it kills me, it'll be a quick, "Your body fucked up extra hard for a few days out of the year, and we couldn't get to you in time" rather than a progressive degeneration. I'm at risk, but I also have an okay chance of surviving the fuckery of the next few years, even if not as okay a chance as I'd like. Or as I'd've had if my countrymen weren't a bunch of cretins.
Don't rightly know what to say, other than that you - and I suppose, all of us - deserve better. Our shitty for-profit healthcare benefits neither the sick nor society as a whole. It's a parasitic malady in its own right to make a few ticks fat on our blood. And the death toll just keeps increasing.
I'm probably stating the obvious, but is it not possible to immigrate and get healthcare in a decent country?
What an article.
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Yeah, this dude is the worst kind of scum.
RVUs are supposed to measure how much work something takes, so it's literally just paying someone based on how much work they do. If you're not actually doing the work, or are doing work that shouldn't be done, that's certainly a problem, but I don't think RVUs existing is a problem in and of itself.
Generally the hospital has checks and balances to prevent fraudulent billing (well not in this case, apparently).
My bigger issue with the RVU system is how it promotes sub sub specialization into procedure based specialties which are the antithesis of preventative medicine. The system valuee family medicine doctors the least despite the massive shortage in their services (especially in rural communities).
So, the surgeon that fixes the broken hip gets paid more than the doctor that gets the bone density scan done and starts meds that support bone health. The cardiologist that opens up the blocked vessel gets more than the PCP who takes the time to counsel on athersclerotic cardiovascular disease and controls risk factors medically and with lifestyle.
I'm not saying the surgeon / proceduralist shouldn't get paid more. I'm just saying that when your system incentivizes 'wait for the problem to happen and then fix it' you're going to have some bad health outcomes.