Not a Prayer

In religious organizations which are what Churches are, they are businesses that earn money and under the belief they are not for profit do not pay taxes, yet they own land, buildings and run numerous secondary operations, including schools and hospitals to serve the community and in turn charge those who use said businesses or services fees for enrollment or admittance. They are often exempt from standards set by States with regards to Education or often turned a blind eye with regards to enforcement and compliance. And this includes when a situation arises over discipline, employment equality issues or those of the students and/or when it comes to those who may not have the same resources, faith or abilities to mange and navigate their system. Ah being a Religious org gives a lot of leeway when it comes to playing on a level playing field and with that the Supremes have ensured that prayer on the football field is just the beginning when it comes to the concept of “religious freedom.”

Today this blog is not about Education as that subject needs a rest for a while, but about how Catholic hospitals are refusing care for many kinds of patients and in turn forcing many poverty level patients to pay for services despite laws and regulations that prohibit that and failing to offer charity service to those who qualify. Shocking! I know, not really.

The New York Times did an extensive report on the Providence Medical System that is located largely on the West Coast and is a Catholic Hospital that I am well familiar as they have a large presence in Seattle where I am from. The issues were less about care and providing necessary care but about the obsession with ensuring Patients made some effort to pay, regardless of the type of insurance they had or did not have and their own economic ability to do so as they qualified under State regulations regarding income and the offer of charity care that is available when a Patient cannot pay said bill. And again as mentioned, some Catholic hospitals do not offer specific types of care if it is against their beliefs or dogma of their faith. And yet that does not stop them offering care that is not needed, tests and diagnosis often wrong and in turn padding the billing particularly to Medicare Advantage patients or in this case eliminating entire departments that offer a specific kind of care, such as medical care and pediatric units designated for Children. Now while one of the facilities is no longer Catholic and was purchased by a larger for profit entity the reality is that we have a major problem across the country for finding affordable care, particularly in rural areas.

As the article states:

St. John Medical Center in Tulsa had been a community treasure for almost a century when Ascension acquired it in 2013. The closure of the pediatric unit triggered opposition from both families and referring pediatricians.

Dr. Michael Stratton, a pediatrician in Muskogee, Okla., said Ascension St. John had been “the number one place to send a child,” and its pediatric unit closure had been “such a huge disservice to all of eastern Oklahoma.”

A spokeswoman for Ascension St. John, where Lachlan had been admitted to the I.C.U. three times before the closure, declined to be interviewed but said in an email that the closure was driven by a demand for more adult beds. She also pointed to past statements that said the Children’s Hospital at Saint Francis was “more than capable of picking up the slack.”

A spokeswoman for the Children’s Hospital at Saint Francis said that it had occasionally reached full capacity and that the staff transferred about 23 patients to other facilities, including in Arkansas, so far this year.

Now to the financial analysts out there the issue over this seems to be about earnings and profit, in the same way one measures industries such as Energy or Hospitality. Medical care should not be for profit nor should it have excessive reserves for investment and if they do they should pay the same taxes on pays on such income generating funds. I can understand tax exemptions for property and in turn standard ones across the board for charity services but the idea of them exempt from taxes fully? NO! Emphatically no.

Below is an article from a medical journal regarding Providence and their current financial status, it says nothing about having to close doors or facilities and with that note they are currently being sued regarding wages from Nurses the foot soldiers in providing the front line for care. Again this is about profit and their margins, patients not so much

While COVID-19 volumes have fallen from their peak in January, Providence noted that it didn’t see the return in surgical volumes that followed prior pandemic waves. As a result, the quarter’s inpatient surgery volumes—often a source of profit for hospitals—was 4% lower than the same time in 2021 and 16% lower than in 2019 (after excluding volumes from now-disaffiliated facilities).

Not to be lost in the shuffle was $920 million in investment losses during the quarter, bringing Providence’s total unrestricted cash and investments to $10.1 billion. The system had already seen its investments dip by $359 million during the first quarter of 2022.

“Providence has lived through other economic downturns, past pandemics, and periods of political and social unrest,” President and CEO Rod Hochman, M.D., said in a statement. “With the steps we are taking to respond to the times, we will continue supporting caregivers and serving our communities throughout these challenging times, with the mission of Providence enduring for generations to come.”

Providence’s most recent financial challenges are shared across the industry’s major nonprofit systems. In recent weeks, Kaiser Permanente logged a nearly $1.3 billion net loss for the quarter, Sutter Health posted a $457 million net loss and Mass General Brigham reported a $949 million net loss.

Outside of earnings, Providence has also recently drawn the ire of more than 200 Oregon nurses who reportedly have joined a class-action lawsuit alleging wage theft after the organization switched over to a “faulty” payroll system. Providence responded that it has worked to manually address pay issues resulting from the switch and that it is working to resolve the issue for less than 2% of its caregivers who still have incorrect pay.

And with that we have story after story of another hospital and their push to inflate billings, admit patients and perform procedures that make money all while cutting staff and budgets in which to provide adequate care makes one wonder why anyone unless at deaths door, which will be insured (pun intended). As once you do walk through those doors that chance increases rapidly. And why? Well aside from a lack of staff, there is the issues that surround their exceedingly high use of drugs which also affects decision making and again putting you at risk. As well as employing preventable protocols and procedures not put in place to minimize the risk.

There is of course the added bonus of Big Pharma and their role in much of the way Patient’s are treated and mistreated. Then add to it Gender, Race, Age and SES as poverty and a lack of insurance all contribute to the death or further damage toll racked up by the Medical Industrial Complex. In other words Bias Diagnosis.

When the industry of health is one based on profit the cuts and margins of loss will come out of the end of care for Patients. First do no harm but for whatever the fuck don’t cut the Physicians paycheck. They got six figure student loan bills to pay. That too might be the problem. But the myth of the not for profit medical care hospital is bullshit and take a look at the CEO paychecks to confirm they are paid with profits found on the backs of taxpayers.

1O year old documentary still salient today

Take 2 Call Me in the Morning

The pandemic has been very very good to the Medical Industrial Complex. This is contrary to the public messaging that had Governor’s daily scolds as a way of reminding us Covid is killing the world and that once you get Covid, hospitals will be overrun and you will not get care because they cannot help you. The news put story after story showing crowded waiting rooms, hallways filled with patients and the daily count rising as if at any moment Covid will come through the door and kill you like a home invader.

Meanwhile smaller hospitals on the brink of closing for lack of funding did just that, close. Hospitals outside major cities were overrun while others were not. Tents were erected, special boats sailed in, larger public arenas were commissioned to be overflow sites and then within weeks they packed their tents, sailed away and the arenas closed awaiting a new use as a massive injection site. The Javitz Center was open and closed in a week for such use, much like a badly reviewed Broadway play as there were simply not enough vaccines available in which to run such a massive scale operation that was to run 24/7. They should have tried slot machines.

Much of the political jockeying and manipulation was based in truth as Hospitals that are run by major corporations were ill prepared for this virus. They had insufficient PPE and of course space and equipment needed to handle a major uptick in admissions. The lack of information, consistent data and of course actual understanding of Covid and how to treat it led to many Medical Personnel overworked, utterly confused and abandoned as they tried to piece together everything from their own PPE to how to treat a virus that seemed to manifest itself as a different disease with each admitted case. Sounds like AIDS in the nascent days but then again media and news on that plague was centered slightly differently.

But to put it in perspective this was Hudson County the largest densest county in NJ where I live. And this was the info at the worst at three hospitals:

These CarePoint Health hospitals have admitted one of the highest rates of COVID-19 cases, approximately one out of every 82 positive cases in the country, according to CarePoint Health. Out of the more than 95,000 positive cases in New Jersey, the three hospitals had nearly 1,200 admissions through April 18.*** this works out to .12 of cases.. not 12.. 0.12. That is not as overwhelming as one was led to believe during the height of pandemonium.

And the same said for staff related Covid illness. As they found in one with 1,100 staff only 14-15 tested positive. Meaning again 0.1 percent. And yes the health care workforce were unprepared and lost workers and some to suicide which also crossed into the other fields of care. But this mental health issue is not one they faced alone. And the total of Covid deaths by healthcare workers was 3,000 in 2020. By December 26, 2020 the total deaths recorded by the CDC from Covid was 22,574. Total deaths 81,394. So that was 0.27 percent of deaths from Covid. And we can agree that the secondary totals that included death from Covid related causes increases that count and we will never have fully accurate numbers. That again parallels AIDS as many died from the secondary illnesses that were the result of contracting HIV. Again putting this in perspective: The Institute of Medicine report estimated 98,000 Americans were dying annually due to medical errors. Estimates of annual patient deaths due to medical errors have since risen steadily to 440,000 lives, which make medical errors the country’s third-leading cause of death.

So we applauded these workers as heroes. As many went out nightly to honk horns, bang pots and clap for the front line workers, the back of the house was cutting staff, closing doors and cashing checks. The bailout was a money maker and many wealthy hospitals found themselves cashing in on that as if the slots had finally pulled a winner.

This from The Washington Post discusses how many facilities turned this nightmare into gold thanks to the Cares Act bailout. The idea was intended to offset all costs of treating infected patients, including purchasing ventilators, masks, gowns and other personal protective equipment. Congress further authorized hospitals to use the money to compensate for a drop in revenue when they shut down elective surgeries and non-emergency treatments to prepare for the anticipated deluge of covid-19 patients. The money, referred to as the Provider Relief Fund, helped many poorer hospitals avert cash crunches, layoffs and bond rating downgrades. And many hospitals did close as they had already received negative ratings by Moody’s prior to Covid; however, the idea was that in fact, this lifeline was to prevent it. And what resulted was even with the targeted aid, recipients included well-endowed academic medical centers and major urban hospitals. Only $14 billion took profitability into consideration, HHS documents show. HHS restricted those payments to hospitals with 3 percent or lower profit margins.

Wealthy hospitals also benefited because HHS used a broad definition of lost revenue. If a hospital earned less than in the year before, or simply less revenue than it had budgeted for, it could chalk up that difference to the pandemic and apply the relief funds to it. The implications garnered little attention at the time as they were overshadowed by the concerns about how HHS was doling out the money rather than how it could be used.

And then we have today and testing issues that still have to be addressed as with contact tracing. Those two issues are again in the new stimulus package but it has not prevented hospitals for well doing what they do best – overcharging. And this article from The New York Times found that many hospitals are charging excessive fees for the basic Covid test even within themselves. Say you are getting one from your Physician or their own Urgent Care within the building but the ER facility will process said test and the costs then double down. Or in this case in New York, Lenox Hill, one of the city’s oldest and best known hospitals, repeatedly billed patients more than $3,000 for the routine nasal swab test, about 30 times the test’s typical cost.

And this is not uncommon as the Times has found out. They has been asking readers to submit bills so that we can understand the costs of coronavirus testing and treatment. So far, more than 600 patients have participated. Their bills have revealed high charges and illegal fees, as well as patients who face substantial medical debt for coronavirus treatment. State-run testing sites in New York do not charge patients or collect health insurance information for the coronavirus nasal swab tests. A study published last year found that a swab test at a hospital can run from $20 to $850. Some independent laboratories have charged more, billing $2,315.

And while it appears that may be the case across the country, it is not one consistently applied across the country. Emergency room fees are common in the American system but rare in the world of coronavirus testing. At The Times’s request, the data firm Castlight Health analyzed insurance claims for 1.5 million coronavirus tests.

It found that less than 4 percent of coronavirus tests are billed through emergency departments. The vast majority of those tests are associated with large claims that have many charges, suggesting the nasal swab was incidental to a more complex visit.

And this brings me to of course my favorite target of this the biggest hero of the time, Andrew Cuomo. As more comes out about this asshole I cannot say enough about how America drank that down like a milkshake from Shake Shack. Sorry he was no better than Trump and with that, we have a crisis that transcended just the White House. Some Governor’s really stepped up and the numbers and losses prove that by just doing the work, the work gets done. We have a crisis right now, Covid is with us. There are variants in place and the sheer lack of vaccines along with testing and tracing will mean this will continue. Yesterday I watched several drunk morons board the PATH, they were unmasked and they gradually found one and then a young girl had lost hers so the idiot boy with her removed his shirt. That is when I departed the car for another one. A woman followed me as another man also was naked faced. These people are assholes and idiots. Again ignorance is not bliss it’s ignorance. I have already shared my thoughts on the non-vaxxers as my exchange with Barista Brian on Friday seemingly played out in a skit on Saturday Night Live. I found it funny, but then why should I?

Hospital Pricing

One thing the Trump Admin did (no, not just fuck up everything it laid its’ grubby hands on) was to require Hospitals to provide on their website pricing for all services administered at their facility. So, you are looking for Gall Bladder surgery and want to comparison shop, you know like you do with car purchases, you ostensibly go to the main site and click the link for prices. Then you go to Gall Bladder surgery, look at the type and kind your Physician/Surgeon is recommending and viola! the price to have a tumor removed, a cyst or some other type of service one has done to one’s gall bladder is there for you to look at. Right, sure that easy. No, not really.

When I heard of this I laughed my ass of as who in the flying fuck comparison shops medical procedures. Maybe elective ones, such as breast implants, minor corrective surgery and other non-essential ones that can lend to one’s overall wellness and health. But if you are facing serious procedures that require medical attention that needs you to be admitted into a hospital be that willingly or dragged in via an emergency situation, when are you doing this kind of research? You crash your car, you are barely conscious and the EMT goes, “Sir you appear to have broken your femur and may have other serious injuries, where would you like us to take you?” And then you quickly whip out your smart phone where you have this app to immediately generate the price comparisons, make sure your insurance is compatible with said facility and that all the Doctors needed to treat said injury are also providers on your policy with admit permission to the same hospital. Yeah okay, sure.

The Wall Street Journal last week decided to well do that for you and they found that it was not that easy. Shocking, I know! Not, really. What they found was that buried with the sites were prices but often they were in embedded with a code that made such pages unavailable for viewing. To see said prices one had to click through numerous links, through multiple pages and layers of data in which to find the pricing info required by law. A UW Professor found that it was optimized to be near impossible for a standard generic user to find information and it appeared it was deliberate in which to be tagged almost impossible, indicating that was in fact intentional.

And of course the cities with the largest care providers, such as New York, Philadelphia, run by the largest corporate health care companies – HCA, Langone, Universal Health – as well as large regional providers – Beaumont and Novant – were some of the more egregious ones in having such blocking codes/tags with the idea that it was to require consumers to acknowledge a disclosure statement before viewing prices. The idea of the shield was not to prevent information but to ensure that consumers understood what they were viewing. Of course some claimed this was simply a lack of updating the sites to comply with the new law and in fact was just an “old legacy” code that needed to be removed. But again these are prices that have been available for years; however, they are simply sticker prices that again vary once insurers have negotiated their price points and that again are different dependent upon that which is not required to be available (so in other words what Blue Cross vs Cigna are not shared as that is proprietary information) and the pricing again for those non-insured which are often higher than what is disclosed.

To access just these basic prices the Wall Street Journal wrote a program that read all 3,190 pages of disclosure from the a company, Turquoise Health, that is in fact documenting this issue of making pricing more transparent and in compliance. What they found is that many are failing to do so. 45% of the small children/rural hospitals have not meeting the standard in either/or neither/nor only providing base rates versus those negotiated with insurers, And many of them simply make it like click bait requiring numerous clicks to find the info. Navigation is often predicated on the location of the facility, distinguished between patient and visitor information and the hospital name itself.

What we know is that nothing comes easy. And again that is just base price as we know in buying a car there is a sticker list price, then there are extras and of course all of it is negotiable. What I find fascinating is that we are equating health care with an auto purchase. I am not sure when car manufacturers will start requiring brakes, brake fluid as an extra item as that is where we are with regards to medical care. There are base fees for service, that include what? Is that again all inclusive like a resort – three meals a day, 24 hour nurse service, a single room vs a double and is wifi extra. Do you see how crazy this is? Anyone who has tried to navigate and translate a hospital bill will see everything from gauze pads to basic meds, such as aspirin are added costs and they will continue to make it challenging by have ways to pad the bill and obfuscate costs to make this a negotiation issue with insurers as well as competitors. As this is what medical care has become, and advertised and marketed item that we are to “shop” for. Wow, just wow. I would love a Mercedes but I can’t afford that so I will get a Volvo. You really think your health is equated with that concept? Apparently so.

What about Cash?

Your Money Baby

I have already written about the pandemic and its costs to the economy, to families, to individuals, to cites and the world and of course to the most important piece in the puzzle – Medical Insurance and their twin – Medical care.  These are FOR PROFIT entities and they have now shown how fucked up we really are.  And we will pay literally for this if we do not rethink what it means to have Medicare for All.

Yes racists this means you. Yes elitists this means you. Yes poor conservative religious folks this means you.  Yes liberals this means you.  Yes conservatives and not religious this means you.  This means that everyone is fucked as this virus doesn’t give one flying fuck about you, your money, your race, your religion, your gender, your sexuality or any other hyphenated bullshit that you use to self identify.  It doesn’t give a shit.

Millions of Americans are about to lose their health insurance in a pandemic

Americans are about to learn something horrifying: how irrational it is for health insurance to be linked to your employment status

Fri 27 Mar 2020
The Guardian
Wendell Potter

The tragic effects of our battle with the novel coronavirus are seemingly endless. But arguably the most mind-blowing is this: the very pandemic that threatens to infect and kill millions is simultaneously causing many to also lose their health coverage at their gravest time of need.

Here’s how: the virus has caused a public health crisis so severe that people have been forced to stay home, causing businesses to shutter and lay off workers. And with roughly half of Americans getting their health insurance from their employer, these layoffs mean not only losing their income but also their medical coverage. In other words, just as our need for medical care skyrockets in the face of a global pandemic, fewer will have health insurance or be able to afford it. According to one recent report, the cost of treatment for Covid-19 can run around $35,000. As the patient in the report exclaimed: “I was pretty sticker-shocked. I personally don’t know anybody who has that kind of money.”

So, how did we get to such a dire place? Many will sadly lose their jobs over the coming weeks – with one estimate projecting as many as 30%. And as they do, Americans are about to learn something horrifying: how irrational and irresponsible it is for so many to be dependent on employers for health insurance. Take it from me. I’m a former health insurance executive who once profited from this system. It’s time for it to stop.

America needs to finally get out of the business of linking health coverage to job status. Even in better times, this arrangement was a bad idea from a health perspective. Most Americans whose families depend on their employers for coverage are just a layoff away from being uninsured. And now, when many businesses are shutting down and considering layoffs, it’s a public health disaster. Across the country we’re seeing reports of layoffs in almost all industries. As we approach a global recession, some analysts suggest that a million or more US workers will lose their jobs in April alone. Consider what this means for health care in this country.

We’ve seen this before. During the last big recession, researchers at Cornell University found that 9.3 million Americans lost their health insurance between 2007 and 2009. Why? As people lost work, their employer-provided insurance went away. During this time, roughly six in 10 Americans who lost their jobs became uninsured. And this problem compounds itself. If the reason you lost your health insurance is that you no longer have steady employment, how are you now going to be able to afford monthly premiums for some other private health care plan? This problem becomes particularly acute when you consider that premiums for health plans sold on exchanges are projected to soar, as well, due to “unexpected Covid-19 costs”.

It’s worth noting that even in good times, the employer-based model fails to cover enough of us, with the number of Americans covered through an employer steadily dropping in general. Since 1999, the percentage of those with job-based coverage has declined by nine points. And it most certainly will drop like a rock in the coming weeks and months.

It’s now clear that this system cannot handle our current reality. With so many Americans sadly on the verge of unemployment, the number that will lose health coverage will be crushing. As we rebuild our country’s economic base and reimagine the roles various industries play in our new future, we must also begin a difficult conversation about health care. If we’re dependent on jobs in order to have it, a lot of us will be left out in the cold. And at a time in our nation’s history where more will need quality care than ever before, the human cost will simply be too much to bear

Jersey Strong

After reading this my head imploded. I found this buried at Pro Publica and this is one of the many reasons why it is expensive to live in New Jersey and why the schools are highly rated given that if I was a Teacher full time here, why quit?

Again during this time of deep seated universal health care that includes everything from mental health to alternative options, such as Acupuncture and the like, I am not sure what to make of this and why no one gives a shit as we have shut down schools and in the middle of a pandemic.

What Happens When a Health Plan Has No Limits? An Acupuncturist Earns $677 a Session.

New Jersey’s health plan for school employees pays out-of-network providers virtually whatever they want. Dozens of acupuncturists and physical therapists earned more than $200,000 in 2018 from school staff alone. One brought in $1 million.

by Marshall Allen Dec. 19, 2019, 5 a.m. EST

Series: Health Insurance Hustle
The Confounding Way We Pay for Care

Judging by the marketing, it would seem that the teachers of New Jersey have collectively thrown out their backs, pulled a muscle or pinched a nerve while engaged in rigorous educating.

Last fall, when teachers at about a dozen New Jersey schools returned from break, employees from Thompson Healthcare & Sports Medicine welcomed them with bagels and orange juice. The clinic’s owner also created an empathetic YouTube video titled “We Understand Painful Conditions Suffered By Teachers.”

NJ Spine and Wellness offered catered lunches, chairside massages and prizes at “Teacher Wellness Days.” “Want us to come to your school?” the chiropractic business asks educators in an online ad.

Other acupuncturists, chiropractors and physical therapists have donated cash, supplies and even wheelchairs to local schools and districts. On social media, some dangle the promise of a stress-relieving rubdown. “Contact our office about medical massage included as part of our chiropractic services,” says one post.

But this competitive wooing is not fueled by a dawning recognition of the back pain associated with teaching algebra. Unbeknownst to most of the 158,000 active and retired New Jersey school employees covered by the state’s School Employees’ Health Benefits Program — about a third of the state’s districts — their benefit plan has a lucrative carveout for out-of-network providers.

And it’s a big one: The teachers’ plan will cover virtually anything they charge.

This bonanza has not gone unnoticed by the providers of services like physical therapy that generally require repeat visits. Last year, the teachers’ plan paid some acupuncturists and physical therapists an average of more than $600 per visit, according to payment data obtained by ProPublica — dwarfing the out-of-network fees of even psychiatrists and gynecologists. More than 70 acupuncturists and physical therapists earned more than $200,000 in 2018 from their teacher clients alone, the data shows. The services of one acupuncturist brought in more than $1 million.

The state paid Thompson Healthcare & Sports Medicine, with 10 clinics along the Jersey Shore, about $11.2 million in 2018 for providing chiropractic services, acupuncture and physical therapy to teachers.

In interviews, the owners of several of these businesses acknowledged pursuing teachers because they know their plan will pay their fees. And some conceded that they receive significantly less reimbursement when providing the same services to other public employees. But, they said, that’s just smart business.

“We strategically target schools and municipalities where there are self-funded plans, where we as a company can continue to grow,” said Harris Hafeez, a co-owner of Advanced Physical Medicine & Rehabilitation, which is based in Red Bank and has seven offices in central New Jersey.

At Advanced, each acupuncture patient enjoys an hourlong, one-on-one session in a “state of the art” soundproof treatment room with a high-end sound system, said co-owner Daniel Reizis, who is a physical therapist. The practice even had an acupuncturist flown in from Japan, he said. “That’s why we have five stars across the board.”

But even Reizis hesitated when questioned about the fees for one of his acupuncturists, whose single sessions in 2018 averaged almost $700. Those fees, he agreed, could be considered “excessive.” But, he said, “at the same time, there’s nothing I do that’s wrong.”

Over the past two years, ProPublica has been detailing the hidden forces — side deals, unchecked fraud, lazy regulators and greedy providers and insurers — that make Americans’ health benefits so expensive. One constant has almost always proven true: Just because a health plan covers something doesn’t mean that the employees in the plan won’t eventually pay the cost.

In recent months, teachers across New Jersey have been protesting, even striking, for higher wages and more affordable benefits. Meanwhile, a state analysis shows, the glut of out-of-network payments has consumed hundreds of millions of dollars in the past four years. That’s money that experts say could have helped fund the teachers’ demands. And New Jersey residents are also pitching in to pay the bills: Homeowners in the towns where the schools are located are chipping in through higher property taxes.

The state panel overseeing the benefit plan, made up of six people, half of whom are union members, has done nothing to stop the runaway costs, although meeting transcripts show they’ve been discussed since at least 2014. The panel members declined to comment on their oversight of the plan.

State treasury officials, who have watched the money pouring out to practices like Advanced, said in interviews that they’ve repeatedly pushed the panel to cap the out-of-network fees.

The payments made by benefits plans typically remain private. But ProPublica filed public records requests with the New Jersey Department of the Treasury for the amount paid to the highest earning out-of-network providers, as well as the internal memos and meeting transcripts describing the problem. The data and documents, along with interviews with state officials, reveal what happens when savvy practitioners discover the lucrative loopholes in a loosely designed employee health plan.

Across the country, health care providers are targeting similar plans with what insiders call “rich benefits,” said Dr. Eric Bricker, a general internist who founded a company to aid people in navigating their health benefits.

“Sharks are gonna eat, that’s just what they do,” Bricker said. The ongoing over-the-top payments in New Jersey, he said, “point to poor management or negligence on the part of the people administering the plan.”

The New Jersey school employees covered by the plan, and their districts, have been paying the price. Their premiums have spiked by 8% and 13% in recent years, in part due to the out-of-network spending, according to data from the state. They now cost more than $36,000 a year for the most popular family plan, nearly twice the typical cost in other parts of the country.

Health insurance reformers said if the teachers fully understood the exploitation of their benefit plan, they’d demand change.

In New Jersey, such a change happened in 2015 with separate state-funded benefits for firefighters, police officers and local and state government workers, called the State Health Benefits Program.

At the time, that program also had no caps on billing for out-of-network practitioners. But that year its plan design committee, alarmed by runaway costs, capped the payments to bring them in line with what in-network providers make for the same services.

Today, according to state data, the differences between that plan and the teacher’s plan are stark.

An out-of-network physical therapist treating a teacher would have been paid an average of $351 per visit by the state in 2018. The state would have paid the same therapist treating a police officer an average of $119, nearly a third as much, according to state data.

Out-of-network acupuncturists were paid an average of $377 per visit from the teachers’ plan while the state workers’ plan paid $144. For chiropractor visits, it was $121 compared with $25.

The state data does not include the 20% to 30% coinsurance amount that the patients are supposed to pay for each out-of-network visit. State officials suspect some providers are waiving this coinsurance to draw in patients and said they are investigating.

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The teachers’ plan pays out-of-network practitioners at the 90th percentile of what other clinicians in their area bill for the same services — so if everyone is charging a lot, everyone gets paid more. The program also allows clinicians to unbundle services, allowing providers to bill for many treatments per visit.

The generous out-of-network benefits apply to all medical providers. But state officials, internal memos and meeting transcripts show that the teachers are being targeted primarily by acupuncturists, chiropractors and physical therapists, who can draw them in for multiple appointments.

ProPublica contacted scores of New Jersey teachers and school employees to find out if they’d seen such providers, and if so, if they understood the costs. Few responded, and those who did, declined to speak on the record.

State officials say capping the payments to such providers on the state workers’ plan has drastically reduced the costs. And they say they haven’t received any complaints from employees about not getting the care they need.

In August, consultants for the state estimated that if the teachers’ plan similarly capped payments to out-of-network providers of chiropractic services, acupuncture and physical therapy, the plan could save about $130 million a year. That could reduce medical premiums by about 8%, according to other estimates. The consultants have been making similar reports for years. Officials in the state’s division of pension and benefits say that they are frustrated by the overspending in the teachers’ plan, but that they don’t have the authority to make the changes to the plan themselves.

But tightening up the state workers’ plan has had a perhaps predictable effect: It focused the marketing of some New Jersey practitioners on the remaining lucrative customers: teachers.

The Thompson Healthcare & Sports Medicine clinic in Forked River looks like an upscale spa, with flat-screen televisions, wide-plank wood floors, soft lighting and exposed brick and ductwork. The site serves as the headquarters for chiropractor Robert Thompson’s chain of clinics.

Thompson said he wants to achieve the “wow” factor with his patients, so they keep coming back and refer others. The facility’s acupuncture suites are tranquil and scented with essential oils. And it’s loaded with devices: compression sleeves that slide over the limbs, machines for shock wave therapy and spinal decompression, a handheld device that vibrates to break up adhesions in joint capsules and more. Thompson called some of the tools his “secret weapons.”

Thompson said teachers are some of his best patients and make up about a third of his practice. His wife is a former teacher, and he readily concedes that his clinic markets to them. But he doesn’t consider the fees he charges excessive. The wow factor and the cutting-edge devices cost money, he said, driving up the per-visit fee. But patients heal faster and don’t have to come in as often, he said. And while the $11.2 million the teachers’ plan paid to Thompson Healthcare & Sports Medicine in 2018 makes it the plan’s biggest earner, Thompson said his business collected less because checks for out-of-network treatment often go to patients, who may keep the fees. In addition, Horizon Blue Cross Blue Shield of New Jersey, which administers the plan, sometimes reverses payments, he said, because of billing disputes or other issues.

A Clinic Woos Teachers

An April 2017 Instagram post shows a provider from Thompson Healthcare & Sports Medicine giving chair massages during a visit to an elementary school.
Via Instagram

The state’s data shows marked differences between what Thompson’s clinics made from the teachers’ plan in 2018 and from the state workers’ plan. Thompson was reimbursed an average of $465 per acupuncture appointment from the teachers’ plan compared with $44 from the state workers’. For physical therapy, it was about $321 versus $33; for chiropractic, an average of $161 and $25.

Thompson said he doesn’t market to other state employees because their reimbursement is too low. He treats those who come in, but he said he suffers a loss when he does.

A more equitable solution for all state employees, including teachers, he said, would be for the state and clinicians to agree on a flat fee per service that would reduce the administrative hassle and be fair to everyone.

Some providers contacted by ProPublica, including NJ Spine and Wellness, declined to answer questions about their practices or their payments from the state.

Acupuncturist Jason Sargis, president of the New Jersey Association of Acupuncture & Oriental Medicine, said he knows some providers “take advantage of the system.” He said his out-of-network price is the same as his cash price, which remains $125 per 15 minutes of acupuncture, with a maximum of $250 per visit.

According to the state data, almost 50 acupuncturists were paid at least $400 on average per session from the teachers’ plan in 2018. To put such fees in context, many medical doctors in New Jersey charge much less, according to Fair Health, the nonprofit the state uses to set its out-of-network payments. A psychiatrist performing a diagnostic evaluation typically charges about $250 out-of-network. A gynecologist charges about $285 out-of-network for an annual exam.

The payments attributed to one acupuncturist at Advanced Physical Medicine & Rehabilitation averaged $677 per visit in 2018, the state data shows. In response to questions about those fees, co-owner Reizis said, “We are all familiar that out-of-network pays very well.” Hafeez, his partner, said that the provider’s patients suffered from complex medical conditions.

Advanced is getting paid top dollar from both the teachers’ plan and the one for state workers — despite that plan’s reforms. For acupuncture, for instance, the teachers’ plan paid an average of $609 per visit in 2018, the data shows, while the state workers’ plan paid an average of $569 per visit — far more than should be allowed under the limits that went into effect in 2016.

Hafeez and Reizis said the limits may not apply to them because the treatments may also have involved medical doctors. But after questions from ProPublica, Christin Deacon, who leads the health benefits operation for the state, said the caps should apply and that she sent their claims to Horizon’s fraud unit to investigate.

Some of the payments ProPublica found in the state data were so extreme they raised bigger questions about oversight by the state and Horizon. Horizon declined to answer questions for this story.

In 2018, the teachers’ plan paid more than $1 million for 3,308 patient visits to a single acupuncturist at Palluzzi Health Center in Old Bridge, the data shows. That would require the acupuncturist to have treated about 13 school employees every day for the entire year, given a five-day workweek. Through his attorney, Dr. Edward Palluzzi, the chiropractor who founded the clinic, declined to be interviewed. His attorney said the practice is high volume and stands behind the care it provides and how it interacts with payers, including the teachers’ plan.

Some providers had been disciplined in the past for insurance fraud.

Read More
What Can Be Done Right Now to Stop a Basic Source of Health Care Fraud

Fraud is one reason we all pay so much for health care. But there are simple fixes that would make it more difficult for scammers to operate.

In 2017, the teachers’ plan paid Dr. Charles Boas, a chiropractor in Bayonne, $311,633 for 7,288 patient visits, according to the data. Boas would have had to treat an average of 29 school employees a day for the entire year, assuming a five-day workweek. The next year he was paid $141,881 for 3,446 visits. Boas did not respond to ProPublica’s requests for comment. In 2014, he pleaded guilty to insurance fraud and had his license suspended for a year, according to an order by the New Jersey State Board of Chiropractic Examiners.

ProPublica asked state officials about the implausible number of visits that led to the Boas payments. They said Horizon, the plan administrator, stopped payments to the chiropractor in June 2018. The case is still being investigated by the New Jersey Office of the Attorney General, and so far, there’s been no public findings or recovery of funds, officials said.

Another chiropractor, Dr. Frank Bello of North Bergen, was paid $208,265 for 2,042 chiropractic patient visits in 2018 under the teachers’ plan. That same year, the data shows he was also paid $266,071 for the same number of physical therapy visits. State officials declined to discuss his case but said chiropractors may bill for both chiropractic and physical therapy treatment during the same visit.

Bello pleaded guilty to insurance fraud in 2006 and had his license suspended for six months by the New Jersey chiropractic board. He did not respond to requests for comment.

State officials said they had forwarded the names of several practitioners flagged by ProPublica to Horizon for further scrutiny. The officials said that Horizon actively monitors out-of-network payments and that the state is in the process of hiring an additional vendor to screen claims for accuracy, appropriateness and potential fraud. ProPublica has previously reported about the lax fraud oversight by the big insurance carriers who administer self-funded plans.

Deacon, the state official, said it wouldn’t be hard to stop to over-the-top payments. With the state workers’ plan, “they changed the payment structure so that we couldn’t be exploited in this way,” Deacon said. “The solution is at our fingertips.”

Since at least 2014, the six-member committee charged with overseeing the teachers’ plan has publicly lamented the millions rolling out the door — and has done nothing to stop it.

During a meeting in August 2018, committee members wondered if acupuncturists and physical therapists were raising rates on teachers to make up for the lower payments from the state workers’ plan.

“I think the teachers become the prey, because these guys aren’t going to make less money,” said member David Ridolfino, director of the state’s office of management and budget, according to a meeting transcript.

“Right,” said a consultant who had been hired to study the issue, “and I like your term. They are becoming the prey.”

“Until we make changes here, this is just going to keep getting worse and worse,” Ridolfino said.

At a meeting in April, Kevin Kelleher, the committee chairman, noted the cost of the out-of-network visits had increased by 20% to 30%. Kelleher is the director of the research and economic services division of the New Jersey Education Association, a teachers union.

“Right now, we are paying somewhere between 10 and 12 times what an out of network provider is paid” in the state workers’ plan, he said, according to a meeting transcript. “Clearly, we see there is a problem, and we need to do something about it.”

Yet to date, no action has been taken because the committee requires a majority vote to make changes. Three members represent teachers unions. And three work for the Treasury Department, which runs the health plan. Two of those members also serve on the plan design committee for the state workers’ plan, which voted unanimously to cap the out-of-network payments.

Kelleher refused to discuss the committee’s lack of action with ProPublica.

But Dini Ajmani, New Jersey’s assistant treasurer, said if only one of the union members on the panel agrees to vote for caps, the huge payments could be stopped. ProPublica asked state officials how much the teacher’s plan could have saved — just on out-of-network payouts to chiropractors, physical therapists and acupuncturists — if it had followed the state workers’ plan’s changes in 2016.

“You’re looking at half a billion dollars,” Deacon said.

Robbed by White Coats

We have an image of the bad Guy wearing a black hat with a menacing mien.  Well that is for story telling of fantasy but in reality we all know that most highway robbers wear Bespoke Suits and smile while cashing the check; However, we neglect the biggest thieves wear white coats.

I have zero respect for the Medical Industrial Complex as my current go around with Vanderbilt confirms that its bad regardless and you have to work around it, be aggressive and demanding and in turn be hated for it.  I am good with that.

When I was nearly killed by my date in 2012 and left for dead I was taken to the public trauma facility, Harborview Medical Hospital in Seattle where they attempted to finish off what my date had not.  Clearly there was a reason I stayed alive and I will never forget nor discontinue telling the story as a word of warning to those who need to know that it is all  not wine and roses when you enter a system as shattered as our medical one.

We live in myopia in this world. We seem to think if we came out unscathed, unharmed and nothing happened to anyone we love or know anything to the contrary is of course wrong, a lie or somehow the fault of that individual who is relaying the story.   We see this of course in the other end of the spectrum with victim mentality that once harmed that individual, that corporation, that situation must be punished and in turn not forgotten. As Confucius said:  To be wronged is nothing unless you continue to remember it.  And we never stop remembering.   And at times there is nothing wrong with it as we can use this as a teaching tool, to correct it for the common good and in turn change how we see ourselves or others with the idea of resolution and growth.  We should never be defined by our worst – that which we have done or have had done.

But the medical industrial complex thrives on negativity as does its brethren in arms – the legal complex.  They are complexes for a reason as they prefer to keep the operational aspect a secret, even from themselves as a way to maintain control, assert expertise and insure their place in society.  White men are good with that.  From the Bible to the law books to the medical books they do a great job of suppressing truths and oppressing others.

After I realized what happened to me at the hands of Harborview the night of February 12th they became the target of my ire as they prevented me from ever finding truth or seeking resolution for what happened to me that night in the hands of my date.  So I picked the bigger of two evils to target and while I may have “failed” in my attempt to sue them I won as I did not pay one single dollar in medical debt despite their efforts to turn me over to collections and I walked out and on with life as now seven years of passed and they can no longer track me like an animal in which to pay it.  I was very keen on that and I kept moving on to ensure that my trail was a complicated one in which to try to do so.  Not everyone has that skill set nor ability so in turn you are their victim again as more and more medical hospitals are doing the reverse and suing their patients for unpaid debt.  Ah the legal system still wins regardless.  Its why I had zero problem doing it per se and again had the skills set, willingness and ability to do so.  It was worth it all. And yes I continue to remember it; Every.waking.day.

So this weekend I read this editorial about legal fraud by the medical industrial complex. Again nothing shocked me and to those who have had similar experiences this is not new but to those unwilling, unable or simply in denial about how bad it is and refuse to hear the truth I have four words: GROW THE FUCK UP.  I should not have to wish that evil on you or yours to realize how serious it is.  But as the saying goes: Until it happens to you… there by the Grace of God.    Well guess what God is not real so get real.

Where the Frauds Are All Legal

Welcome to the weird world of medical billing.

By Elisabeth Rosenthal
The New York Times
Dec. 7, 2019

Much of what we accept as legal in medical billing would be regarded as fraud in any other sector.

I have been circling around this conclusion for this past five years, as I’ve listened to patients’ stories while covering health care as a journalist and author. Now, after a summer of firsthand experience — my husband was in a bike crash in July — it’s time to call out this fact head-on. Many of the Democratic candidates are talking about practical fixes for our high-priced health care system, and some legislated or regulated solutions to the maddening world of medical billing would be welcome.

My husband, Andrej, flew over his bicycle’s handlebars when he hit a pothole at high speed on a Sunday ride in Washington. He was unconscious and lying on the pavement when I caught up with him minutes later. The result: six broken ribs, a collapsed lung, a broken finger, a broken collarbone and a broken shoulder blade.

The treatment he got via paramedics and in the emergency room and intensive care unit were great. The troubles began, as I knew they would, when the bills started arriving.

I will not even complain here about some of the crazy high charges: $182 for a basic blood test, $9,289 for two days in a room in intensive care, $20 for a pill that costs pennies at a pharmacy. We have great insurance, which negotiates these rates down. And at least Andrej got and benefited from those services.

What I’m talking about here were the bills for things that simply didn’t happen, or only kind-of, sort-of happened, or were mislabeled as things they were not, or were so nebulously defined that I couldn’t figure out what we might be paying for.

To be clear, many of the charges that I would call fraudulent — maybe all of them — are technically legal (thanks sometimes to lobbying by providers), but that doesn’t make them right. And no one would accept them if they appeared on bills delivered by a contractor, or a lawyer or an auto mechanic. There were so many of these charges that I came up with categories to keep track of them:

1. Medical Swag

In the trauma bay, someone slapped a hard brace around Andrej’s neck until scans confirmed that he had not suffered a grievous spinal injury. It was removed within an hour.

The medical equipment company that provided that piece of plastic billed $319. Our insurer paid $215 (90 percent of its discounted rate of $239). We were billed $24, our “patient responsibility.”

Companies are permitted by insurers to bill for “durable medical equipment,” stuff you receive for home use when you’re in the hospital or doctors’ office. That yields some familiar marked-up charges, like the sling you can buy at Walgreens for $15 but for which you or your insurer get a bill for $120 after it is given to you at urgent care. The policy has also led to widespread abuse, with patients sent home with equipment they don’t need: My mom’s apartment, for example, holds an unused wheelchair, a walker and a commode paid for by Medicare, by which I mean our tax dollars. It’s as if you were given a swag bag at a conference and then sent a bill for hundreds or thousands of dollars.

At least with swag, you get to keep it. My husband’s hardly worn neck brace didn’t even come home with us as a souvenir.

2. The Cover Charge

The biggest single item on Andrej’s E.R. bill was a $7,143.99 trauma activation fee. What was that for, since every component of his care had been billed and billed handsomely?

Among the line items: $3,400 for a high-level E.R. visit. $1,030 for the trauma surgeon. Between $1,400 and $3,300 for five purported CT scans. And I say “purported” because one trip into a scanner examined the head, upper spine and maxillofacial bones, but was billed as three separate things. There was also an administration fee of more than $350 each for four injections.

Trauma activation fees have been allowed since 2002, after 9/11, when the Trauma Center Association of America, an industry group, convinced regulators that they needed to be compensated for maintaining a state of “readiness.”

Wait. Isn’t the purpose of an E.R. to be “ready”? Isn’t that why the doctors’ services and scans are billed at higher rates when they are performed in an emergency department?

Despite scrutiny from researchers about whether trauma fees are deserved, trauma activation fees have only grown in size, 15 percent annually in recent years, and can reach into the tens of thousands of dollars. (On average, Medicare pays a fee of about $1,000.) Some have likened trauma activation fees to a cover charge for being wheeled into an E.R. with major trauma. But does a cover charge typically cost more than the meal?

3. Impostor Billing

We received bills from doctors my husband never met. Some of these bills were understandable, like for the radiologist who read the scans. But others were for bedside treatment from people who never came anywhere near the bed to deliver the care.

Andrej had a small finger fracture with a cut that needed some stitches, which a resident, a surgeon-in-training, sutured. But the $1,512 billed came in the name of a senior surgeon, as if he had done the work.

Physicians and many other health professionals are allowed to bill for the work of “extenders” — stand-ins with less training who see patients and work under the supervising doctor. These might be residents, physician assistants or nurse anesthetists, for example. For billing purposes, this allows the senior providers to be in two, three, sometimes more than half a dozen places at once, often even when they are physically miles away.

The resident did a fine job on my husband. But if an assistant did the work, shouldn’t it be billed for less? At law firms, the hourly rates for paralegals and junior attorneys are lower than those for partners.

On a website called Clinical Advisor, a reimbursement expert himself seemed to wonder at the profession’s luck that such billing is tolerated: “I hear people ask, ‘How can I do that? The doctor never saw the patient, never had any interaction with the patient and yet I can still bill this service under the physician?’”

4. The Drive-By

The day before Andrej left the hospital, a physical therapist visited and asked a few questions. From that brief encounter, the therapist noted “ambulation deficits, balance deficits, endurance deficits, pain-limiting function, transfer deficits.” That translated into a bill of $646.15 for what was recorded as a P.T. evaluation “1st session only (billable).” He said he was there for 30 minutes, but he was not. He said he walked Andrej up 10 steps with a stabilizing belt for assistance. He did not. There was no significant health service given. Just an appearance and some boxes checked on a form. It’s a phenomenon called drive-by doctoring.

More shockingly, the drive-bys continued at our home, presaged by a call on Andrej’s cellphone a day after he was discharged. A physical therapist from a private company wanted to visit him for at-home therapy. In his discharge instructions, no one had mentioned this service, and his injury was clearly too fresh to benefit. She came. She didn’t know which body part had been injured and concluded he was in too much pain to participate.

The same company called twice more the following week to schedule visits. By the third time, I told Andrej not to open the front door. Nonetheless, our insurer was billed — and paid — for three visits.

It’s as if Alexa noticed that my dishwasher makes too much noise (it does) and took it upon herself to send over a repair guy. But if I turned him away at the front door, saying I’m O.K. with the racket (I am), would I still be billed for the visit?

5. The Enforced Upgrade

One Monday when Andrej was in pain and out of pills, the trauma doctor suggested we meet in the emergency room, because the trauma clinic was open only from 8 to 10:45 a.m. on Wednesdays and Thursdays.

So we met the trauma doctors in the E.R., and they talked to Andrej, who remained in his street clothes. They gave him a prescription. Because the interaction — which could have happened in the lobby — happened in the E.R., it resulted in an E.R. visit charge of $1,330. But when the trauma clinic is open less than six hours a week, billing for an E.R. visit that doesn’t tap into any of the emergency room resources feels like a scam. Is an E.R. visit determined by the content of the services rendered, or merely by the location?

Andrej had a similar experience when his broken finger was treated with a plastic splint that folded over his fingertip. He complained because the upper layer pressed on the fracture. At a follow-up visit, someone took a pair of scissors and cut off the upper half of the splint and taped the lower half back in place. That translated into a $481 charge for “surgery,” in addition to the $375 charge for the office visit and a $103 facility fee. Doesn’t surgery, by definition, involve cutting into flesh or an animate object — not a piece of plastic?

Sure, it sounds fancy to upgrade a meeting to an E.R. visit, or to call the tweaking of a splint “surgery,” but if an airline overbooks my flight and puts me on another flight where the only seat available is in first class, it does not charge me for the more expensive ticket.

My insurer paid for most of these questionable charges, though at discounted rates. But even a discounted payment for something that never really happened or didn’t need to happen or that we didn’t agree to have happen is still, according to common sense, a fraud.

Why do insurers pay? Partly because insurers have no way to know whether you got a particular item or service. But also because it’s not worth their time to investigate the millions of medical interactions they write checks for each day. Despite the advertised concern about your well-being, as one benefits manager enlightened me: They’re “too big to care about you.” Electronic records, which auto-fill billing boxes, have probably made things worse. For example, the birth of a baby boy may automatically prompt a bill for a circumcision; having day surgery may prompt a check for sedation.

So what is the appropriate payment for swag I didn’t ask for, outrageous cover charges, stand-in doctors, drive-by visits and faux surgery? In some cases, zero; in others, far less than was paid. And yet, these are all everyday, normal experiences in today’s health care system, and they may be perfectly legal. If we want to tame the costs in our $3 trillion health system, we’ve got to rein in this behavior, which is fraud by any other name.

A Debtor’s Prison

That is the state of medical care and the bills associated with the debt accumulated when an individual enters the medical industrial complex, emphasis on complex.

The story below is one of many about the problems individuals in America face daily when it comes to finding care, paying for care and the reality behind what it is like to become ill and need treatment be you insured or not.

The real issue in the election of 2020 is not the Ukraine nor Trump’s crazy it is the issue surrounding medical care and insurance followed by taxes and the rising tide of inequality that has enabled this division in the tide that allows some access to care and to stability once that care is provided.  For the rich it is an easy fix for those not it is not.

I debated whether to sign up for medical insurance this year and with premiums topping 700 bucks a month for services I have never used other than a joke of a flu shot and some meds associated with my dental needs I decided I would be better off putting that money into an emergency fund that I could use in an emergency be it medical or otherwise.  And of course I get this whole concept of negotiation – or quid pro quo as the word of the week has taught us.  Yes you can negotiate medical care. 

To put it mildly we have a fucked up system of care.  The dental insurance industry is largely unregulated and covers very little and is a disaster when it comes to finding qualified capable individuals who can offer consistent appropriate care and treatment. Then we have vision care which runs the gamut from mall specialty sight providers to actual Doctors and licensed professionals who at least have some training and education to offer service. Add the absurd costs for frames and lenses it again puts basic care at the equivalent of a Jenga game where you are hoping  your pull will not crash the entire set up.

Add to the current state of affairs is now Google acquiring Ascension medical records giving them troves of personal data to mine like a coal miner in Kentucky back in the day and of course the move by Amazon and others to provide a quasi medical service from prescriptions to diagnosis all which again puts the consumer at risk to what kind of care and the legitimacy of the drugs being received. It is one thing to get a bogus pair of Air Jordan’s another to get a drug that has the incorrect dosage or diagnosis.

Then we have the rise of the medical lawsuits for unpaid bills.  From low to high more and more hospitals are taking their patients to court and winning, garnishing wages, freezing accounts and placing liens on property to garner payment for the debt owed.

For the record I pay in Cashier’s check when I pay medical bills so they don’t have access to my account information, I have a post office box and no phone listed so that all bills and no calls come to my home while I finish my treatment at Vanderbilt.  I prepaid on my dental bill 5K when the estimate came and I was told it was a slush fund that is used to pay any and all debt in whatever department I used in the facility. No, no its not.  Even their own Doctors don’t get medical billing.   I will not pay one more dime until they can provide a detailed accounting of the money, where it is, how it is being used and to where it is going.  They can in a well used phrase: Go fuck themselves.

This is the issue for 2020 MEDICARE FOR ALL.  However you want to express it, define it or understand it.  We need a Government run health care insurance provider whom you can opt in or not and for the rich they can still buy private insurance and all the accoutrements that it entitles them to have but basic care is a human right and frankly the access and availability of said care is non existent as it stands now.   No one should find themselves homeless to get needed care.  Yes sure you are an idiot and you do drugs and don’t take care of yourself but ultimately let’s find a way to get these people the help they need to ultimately care for themselves in a manner that is less reliant of other public services such as disability and welfare.  Imagine if that one case mentioned in the article was allowed to keep his job, to work and provide that his only debt was in basic needs he would be not a burden on society but on himself and those around him who could help him learn ways to live with less risk, have a healthy happy lifestyle that has the medications that he can use and need to survive without the risk of further decline – physically or financially.   Independence matters but right now we are all living in debtor’s prisons just waiting for parole.

‘I live on the street now’: how the insured fall into medical bankruptcy

Having health insurance is often not enough to save Americans from massive debts when serious illness strikes

Michael Sainato
The Guardian
Thu 14 Nov 2019

It’s been over a dozen years since Susanne LeClair of West Palm Beach, Florida, was first diagnosed with cancer, she’s been fighting ever since. Now she, like many other Americans facing life-threatening illness, is bankrupt despite having health insurance.

Before her first cancer-related surgery, LeClair was told by the hospital they accepted her employer-based health insurance.

“I paid my $300 copay. After the surgery, I started receiving all these invoices and came to find out the only thing covered was my bed because the hospital was out of network,” said LeClair. “My bills were hundreds of thousands of dollars, so I had no choice but to file bankruptcy.”

LeClair is on the verge of having to file for bankruptcy a second time due to the mounting medical debt she has accrued for additional cancer-related surgeries, regular appointments, medications and supplies related to her recovery, despite having health insurance and paying as much as she can out of pocket for copays, deductibles and premiums to maintain insurance.

“My medical bills are at $52,000. I’ve done everything from credit cards to consolidation loans, I just keep simply paying one credit card with another interest-free one until I can pay the next one,” LeClair added. “It’s the side of cancer most people don’t understand or know about and it’s never-ending. It just keeps adding up and adding up and before you know it you’re back in debt that you can’t believe again.”

Bankruptcy can also make it difficult to find employment given that many employers will disqualify a candidate with a bankruptcy filing found from a background check.

According to a study published in February 2019, about 530,000 bankruptcies filed annually are because of debt accrued due to a medical illness. The study found that even the Obama administration’s landmark Affordable Care Act (known as Obamacare) has failed to change the proportion of bankruptcies caused by medical debts, with poor health insurance cited as one of the main culprits.

Republicans and Democrats are currently at loggerheads over Trump administration plans to further weaken Obamacare by making it easier for states to opt out of certain requirements and offer cheaper plans that could further exacerbate the situation. And health insurance has emerged as one of the signature issues of the 2020 election, and the fight for the Democratic presidential nomination with senators Bernie Sanders and Elizabeth Warren promising a total overhaul and Joe Biden and others pledging milder reforms. What all sides admit is that the current system is broken.

“Health insurance that we have today is a defective product,” said Dr David Himmelstein, distinguished professor of public health at City University of New York’s Hunter College and a lecturer in medicine at Harvard Medical School.

“A lot of people, a little over 60%, are filing bankruptcy at least in part because of medical bills. Most of them are insured. It’s clear that despite health insurance, there are many, many people incurring costs not being covered by their insurance,” said Himmelstein. “Medical debt is incredibly common, it’s the main cause of calls from collection agencies, and the vast majority of people with it have insurance,” said Himmelstein, lead author of the study Medical Bankruptcy: Still Common Despite the Affordable Care Act.

One out of every six Americans has an unpaid medical bill on their credit report, amounting to $81bn in debt nationwide, while about one in 12 Americans went without any medical insurance throughout 2018. Even as many Americans struggle to afford health insurance coverage in the first place, those that have it are not insulated from facing massive debt due to medical bills.

“I have insurance through my job but it has a high premium and high deductible. I have to pay $450 a month. When you think about living paycheck to paycheck, $450 is a lot of money. I’m barely making it. Some bills don’t get paid every month,” said Mary Cross of Detroit, Michigan, who has filed for bankruptcy twice since early 2013 when she was admitted to the hospital for pneumonia, required lung surgery and was diagnosed with sarcoidosis, an inflammatory disease.

“I’m currently struggling to stay afloat now due to having surgery this past January,” added Cross, 51. “I’ve been getting constant calls from the billing department at the hospital where I had surgery.”

In Savannah, Georgia, a 35-year-old man who requested to remain anonymous to avoid being associated with a bankruptcy, recently found himself homeless and jobless due to prolonged hospital stays and hundreds of thousands of dollars in medical debt.

A type 1 diabetic for years, he had to reduce his work hours for a cellular retail store when trouble regulating his blood sugar resulted in a toe amputation in April 2019.

“I had to cut my work hours so bills were harder to pay. But in July 2019 I was admitted to the hospital again and I was fired from my job because I was in the hospital. I lost my insurance. They amputated my leg, which means I still can’t work,” he said.

When he lost his job due to the prolonged hospital stay and leg amputation, his employer offered Cobra, a health insurance program for employees who lose their job or have a reduction in work hours, but he couldn’t afford it. He is currently working on trying to file bankruptcy to release the medical debt he’s accrued from amputations this year and he lost his house in October 2019 as a result.

“I have amassed over $400,000 in medical bills I need to pay, and still have at least six months before I get a disability hearing. So I owe over $400,000 in medical bills, have lost my house and I live on the street now, with no end in sight,” he said.

Just outside of Chicago, Illinois, Jessica Hillman filed for bankruptcy in 2016 due to medical debt accrued from battling a seizure disorder, despite having health insurance coverage for the majority of her treatment.

“I had thousands of dollars in various medical debt which made the majority of my claim. The last bill I got that really pushed me toward the bankruptcy was for a routine lab test that my insurance refused to approve because of a billing mistake. That bill was about a thousand dollars,” Hillman said. “I couldn’t work and had no way to pay these.”

At the time, Hillman was receiving several collection notices in the mail for past hospital stays and tests amounting to several thousand dollars, often having no knowledge of the bills that health insurance didn’t cover until receiving the collection notices.

“One of the biggest hurdles you face as a patient is just the sheer confusion of the process. You think you just show up and present your card, sometimes pay a copay, and that’s it. You don’t expect all these plan limitations and authorizations,” Hillman added. “What are you going to do if your authorization gets denied? You don’t really have a choice to not go get care. All these processes that are in the finest of fine print. And sometimes it feels like you are literally paying for nothing.”

CAN U $RD

That is the new way hospitals are listing comparative pricing to meet the new law that the Trump team devised to reduce medical/insurance costs.  Much like his mind this new system is full of bullshit.

I can add little to this but as one who walks into the Dental and Hospital Clinic of Vanderbilt on a regular basis I can assure that pricing, billing and insurance coverage varies day to day.  I rarely get a bill in advance with the treatment plan, the pricing and the insurance coverage clearly spelled out in which to budget.   So when I get a bill I wait for a long time to pay it as half the time the payments made are not deducted from the balance so in turn that figure is often incorrect.   I still cannot forget that when I walked in for surgery last year and was asked three times by three different people had I paid the outstanding bill.  Yes I had to another person a week before as requested and required by the bill I had received for the procedure the week before.  It was wrong but I paid it as I instead had more treatments and changes to that bill that my surgeon elected to do upon opening up my gums and seeing the tissue and jaw damage.  But too late, I paid so thanks!  For what its worth I felt I deserved it and made no effort to contact them nor they me regarding this and in turn I still wrote a complaint about the process as they had put me under anesthesia too long and had overbooked the surgical rooms leaving me to dress in the hall with people walking by.  And the day after I came home to a Washington Post article describing what I had just experienced and my Nurse that I hired heard as she waited for me to complete the procedure.  So again, I paid. Thanks!

And these prices are not accurate and in turn are based on numerous factors so as you are getting wheeled in after being picked up by an Ambulance on the way to ER I doubt this information will help you.  So again the point is what exactly?

Hospitals Must Now Post Prices. But It May Take a Brain Surgeon to Decipher Them.

By Robert Pear
The New York Times
Jan. 13, 2019

WASHINGTON — Vanderbilt University Medical Center, responding to a new Trump administration order to begin posting all hospital prices, listed a charge of $42,569 for a cardiology procedure described as “HC PTC CLOS PAT DUCT ART.”

Baptist Health in Miami helpfully told consumers that an “Embolza Protect 5.5” would cost them $9,818 while a “Visceral selective angio rad” runs a mere $5,538.

On Jan. 1, hospitals began complying with a Trump administration order to post list prices for all their services, theoretically offering consumers transparency and choice and forcing health care providers into price competition.

It’s turning into a fiasco.

“This policy is a tiny step forward, but falls far short of what’s needed,” said Jeanne Pinder, the founder and chief executive of Clear Health Costs, a consumer health research organization. “The posted prices are fanciful, inflated, difficult to decode and inconsistent, so it’s hard to see how an average person would find them useful.”

The data, posted online in spreadsheets for thousands of procedures, is incomprehensible and unusable by patients — a hodgepodge of numbers and technical medical terms, displayed in formats that vary from hospital to hospital. It is nearly impossible for consumers to compare prices for the same service at different hospitals because no two hospitals seem to describe services in the same way. Nor can consumers divine how much they will have to pay out of pocket.

“To 99 percent of the consuming public, these data will be of limited utility — meaningless,” said Kenneth E. Raske, the president of the Greater New York Hospital Association.

The list price for a hospital service is like the sticker price for a car. But as it is playing out, it is as if the car dealers were disclosing the price for each auto part, without revealing the charge for the vehicle as a whole.

The result has baffled consumers.

“This is gibberish, totally meaningless, a foreign language to me,” said Sara Stovall, 41, of Charlottesville, Va., after looking at price lists for hospitals in her area.

She reviewed the price lists for Sentara Martha Jefferson Hospital and for University Hospital, each of which has more than 16,000 items.

“I can’t imagine how I would go about making this useful,” Ms. Stovall said on Sunday. “I wouldn’t know how to find my procedure. I wouldn’t know what services might be rolled up with my procedure. And I would not know the price to me after health insurance.”

By most accounts, the Trump administration is pursuing a worthy goal, but the execution of its plans leaves much to be desired.

After the administration proposed the price-disclosure requirement in April 2018, many hospitals warned of the shortcomings that are now evident.

But federal health officials, accustomed to debating issues inside the Washington policy bubble, have still been surprised at the reaction around the country as consumers and local news media try to decipher the data. The administration says it is open to suggestions for 2020 and beyond.

The price-disclosure requirement, issued by the Department of Health and Human Services, grows out of one sentence in the Affordable Care Act, which says, “Each hospital operating within the United States shall for each year establish (and update) and make public (in accordance with guidelines developed by the secretary) a list of the hospital’s standard charges for items and services provided by the hospital.”

The idea languished for eight years. Under prior guidance from the government, hospitals could meet their obligations by providing charges to patients on request. But the Trump administration wanted to go further.

“We’ve updated our guidelines to specifically require hospitals to post price information on the internet in a machine-readable format,” Seema Verma, the administrator of the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, said last week. “This is a historic change from what’s been required in the past.”

“This is about empowering patients,” Ms. Verma said.

It has not worked out that way, at least so far. Martin Gaynor, a professor of economics and health policy at Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh, described list prices as “somewhat fictitious.”

“If this is an initial step leading to real transparency with actionable, usable information, that would be fantastic,” Mr. Gaynor said.

But in its current form, he added, the price information is “not very useful and could even be misleading” because a hospital with high list prices could be the cheaper alternative for some consumers, depending on their insurance.

“For patients to know up front how much their care will cost, that’s incredibly valuable,” said Brenda L. Reetz, the chief executive of Greene County General Hospital in rural southwest Indiana. “We’ve posted our prices, as required. But I really don’t think the information is what the consumer is actually wanting to see.”

Spending on hospital care last year totaled $1.1 trillion, or nearly one-third of all health spending, according to the Department of Health and Human Services. So even small improvements in the market could yield big savings.

The Trump administration adopted the new requirement as part of its agenda to promote “transparency” in health care, in the belief that health markets would work better if consumers had more information. In another example, federal officials want to require pharmaceutical companies to disclose the list price of prescription drugs in television advertisements.

“Providers and insurers have to become more transparent about their pricing,” Alex M. Azar II, the secretary of health and human services, said last year. “There is no more powerful force than an informed consumer.”

The Trump administration told hospitals that they had to post their standard charges for all services and items, including drugs, by Jan. 1, but did not define “standard charges.” In later guidance, it said the format was “the hospital’s choice.”

“Without a standard definition, patients cannot make accurate comparisons between hospitals,” said Herb B. Kuhn, the president of the Missouri Hospital Association.

No hospitals operating in the United States are exempt from the new requirement, but the Trump administration has not said how it plans to enforce it. Federal officials have asked the public to suggest “enforcement mechanisms.”

Each hospital has a list — known as a “chargemaster” — of prices for thousands of goods and services, including medical procedures, laboratory tests, supplies and medications. But the price information is often difficult and sometimes impossible to find on hospital websites.

List prices may be relevant for some consumers. People with high-deductible plans may have to pay some or all of the list price until they meet the deductible, and people with insurance who go outside their health plan’s network may also have to pay a substantial share of the list price.

But to others, the prices listed on the “chargemaster” may have no bearing on the cost of their care. Health plans and insurance companies usually negotiate much lower prices, and uninsured patients often qualify for substantial discounts.

“Many hospitals still see the chargemaster price as an important way to enhance revenue,” said Ge Bai, an expert on health care finance and accounting at Johns Hopkins University. “Having a high list price means they have more leverage in negotiating prices for people covered by private insurance.”

Where did the love go?

The midterm elections are ongoing and the avoidance of the issue surrounding the tax cuts seems to be a nonentity with regards to a platform issue; however, health care and education dominate the discussion.   Well here in Tennessee we are the exception they are busy advertising for the electorate to call Marsha Blackburn and Lamar Alexander to let them know we want the tax cuts permanent.  Good plan as they will increase the nation’s debt further, risk economic collapse and make wages frozen for decades to come.  As for the 1% no worries there as there is more to follow.  And it has already began with the freezing of public service sector workers wages.   Where did all the love go for that one? 

The reason wages are not rising despite low unemployment rates is the never ending costs to health care.  While some companies are going out of their way to reinvent health care coverage – this story about Comcast is an example  but there are also the attempts by Amazon and company to develop their own insurance, Christian faith based organizations to form collectives and health share and of course startups that are trying to change how we find care and in turn pay for it.  Irony that it is health care that may be killing us.

But in all honesty we are fucked in this country without federal regulation and in turn a switch to single payer programs like Medicare or Medicaid policies that enable us to maintain care regardless of employment or need.  That will not be happening anytime soon.  So vote for the candidate who has not just your best interests but those of the larger picture.  It is not always about you as you are everyone too.   The number one movie this summer was not a blockbuster in the conventional sense but the documentary, Won’t You Be My Neighbor, about Mr. Rogers.  He had a message in there about community and love for you fellow man.  Try it you might like it.

Where did our raises go? To health care.

By Robert J. Samuelson
Columnist The Washington Post
September 2 at 5:03 PM

It’s wages vs. health benefits. On this Labor Day, just about everything seems to be going right for typical American workers, with the glaring and puzzling exception of wage stagnation. The unemployment rate is 3.9 percent, near its lowest since 2000. The number of new jobs exceeds the peak in 2008 by about 11 million. Then there’s wage stagnation.

Corrected for inflation, wages are up a scant 2 percent since January 2015, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. The gain is roughly one-half of 1 percent annually. Little wonder that many workers feel they’re not getting ahead. They aren’t.

A strong and growing economy is, by the textbook, supposed to put upward pressure on wages as companies bid for more workers and employees shop around for higher pay. All sorts of plausible theories have been advanced to explain why this doesn’t seem to be happening.

Demographics are cited. Well-paid baby boom workers are retiring and being replaced by lower-paid millennials; this drags down average wages. Or the Great Recession left workers and employers with psychological scars. Workers are more concerned with job security. They are leery of pressing for big wage increases, just as companies are leery of providing them. Mismeasurement of wages is another theory.

All these explanations may matter, but a major contributor — perhaps the major contributor — may lie elsewhere: health costs. Money once reserved for wage increases is now diverted to pay for employer-provided health insurance. A new study provides stunning estimates: For the bottom 60 percent of U.S. workers, wage gains have been completely wiped out by contributions for employer-provided health insurance.

“For many workers, rising health insurance premiums were eating up every last cent of their pay increases and more,” the study said. This affects how “people buy houses, save for retirement, launch their children into adulthood and otherwise try to get ahead in life.”

The study focused on full-time, year-round workers from 1980 to 2015. It did not cover people who were unemployed or had government insurance (Medicare, Medicaid and the Affordable Care Act).

Using government data and a private survey from Willis Towers Watson, a consulting firm, the study compared wage and salary income to the cost of fringe benefits (mainly retirement and health benefits).

For the bottom 50 percent of workers, employers’ health insurance contributions averaged 30 to 35 percent of companies’ total compensation packages. Companies also increased the premiums that workers themselves must pay to get coverage. From 1999 to 2015, worker premiums for a family plan more than doubled in inflation-adjusted dollars, from about $2,000 annually to almost $5,000.

As this shows, higher health-care costs fall heaviest on lower-paid workers. The reason: Insurance coverage is a bigger part of their total compensation. (In the example, the $5,000 is 10 percent of income for a worker making $50,000 but only 5 percent for a worker making $100,000.)

It has long been known that rapidly rising health-care costs put downward pressure on workers’ wages. But “no one has put the numbers quite like we have . . . [showing] how it affects stagnant pay and the distribution of pay,” said Sylvester Schieber, a retired economist with Willis Towers Watson and the study’s co-author, along with Steven Nyce, the firm’s research director. The study was also co-sponsored by the Council for Affordable Health Coverage, a business group.

The problem is plain: We’d all like both cheaper health insurance and higher wages, but the way the health-care system is operating today, we might get neither. As insurance premiums get more expensive, inflation-adjusted (“real”) wages will continue to stagnate or decline.

This might be acceptable if the medical system were delivering better care for all the extra spending. But, as Nyce and Schieber note, the opposite may be the case. They compare the United States with other advanced societies:

“There is considerable evidence we are receiving less in the way of good health care. . . . We have fewer doctors and fewer doctor visits per capita. We have fewer hospital beds and lower hospital occupancy rates. We undergo more MRI and CT exams, and spend more than twice as much on drugs per capita, on average, than residents of other highly developed countries.”

This is obviously a problem that transcends health care. Let’s grant much excellence in today’s system. Still, its chief flaw is that it is silently determining the nation’s priorities without anyone assigning it that role. Medicare and Medicaid spending is squeezing most other government activities — certainly not what we intend. High private insurance premiums condemn millions of workers to stagnant or falling incomes. We recoil at disciplining health-care spending, because that seems inhumane.

By accident, health care has become labor policy and economic policy. We may all be among the injured.

Death Us Do Part

Once again a week was full of Police Violence, Gun Violence, Medical Malpractice and all that falls into the larger picture of how our society runs.  And it was a week of funerals and memorials and recollections of lives lived.  It was a long but busy week.  And I returned to work to see that while some things change some things never do.

The never ending debate over medical care continues as ways to reduce costs and raise efficiency and in turn find insurance coverage for the great unwashed.  We have gone through Medical Concierge services (do they still exist), threats to end supplements on the ACA that has enabled many to attain coverage, while simultaneously shutting out those who do not qualify and pay exorbitant coverage costs from either high deductibles, high premiums or a combo thereof.  It takes only one medical bill to send one to the hospital.   And this is just one of many stories about the same. And as we enter the renewal ACA phase in a couple of months this issue will not be abated.  Then we have the never ending Medicare/Medicaid feud about coverage and expansion of benefits.  Or just the bizarre laws and rules that have enabled hospitals to fund themselves will doing little or nothing to reduce costs and serve patients.  You know like the President who does little to serve the country but plenty to serve his interests.

We have Police shooting innocent people and again the story buried was an actress who ironically was in ER the series that brought us the great furrowed brow acting of George Clooney shot and killed in her own home during a “wellness check.”  And here in Nashville a suicidal man was shot and killed by the police in his own home. Having been subject to one of those myself I did not touch anything in my home stood in pajamas and was scared shitless out my mind as two cops diagnosed me as depressed and having anxiety.  Ya think?    Death be not welcome on this mat.

Then another story of a Police seizure of property without due course or charges filed.  Civil Assets Forfeiture is the biggest boondoggle and boon to local Police forces across the country. That and the act that enables them to attain military grade equipment at low prices with no training, need or even how to maintain and upkeep everything from tanks to grenade launchers. Sure what.ever.

I have written extensively on the subjects of Judicial Reform, the problems with the Medical Industrial Complex and the issues surrounding the ACA/Obamacare before and after Trump and over these past years I have seen little to no movement on any of the subjects.  Some promise and some rhetoric directed to them but in reality the system in entrenched in the status quo.  Perhaps a new broom will sweep  it clean and maybe the women running for office around the country will bring that with them when they enter their halls of justice and disorder.  Women are good at multitasking and house cleaning and working is something we are very familiar.

And speaking of great women the four days of funeral processions and services dedicated to the Queen of Soul, Aretha Franklin, was topped not by its seven hour ceremony but her amazing fashion choices that were from head to toe.  Even at the end Ms. Franklin shined and her music that was the soundtrack to all of our lives will live on our radios as we drive down the highway in our Pink Cadillacs.  Death as in life always glamorous and always in style.

Which brings me to John McCain.  I might have been in hiding with Trump on this one. I have never liked the man from his politics to his personal life he was never one I identified with regardless of the moniker “Maverick.”  His daughter has to be the most humorless dullard ever to comment on a TV Screen and frankly I am already burned out on his procession and canonization of this man who brought us Sarah Palin, only bucked the party to my knowledge that infamous ACA thumbs down vote that came on the heels of his diagnosis of brain cancer where he knew the end was near. Then we have his own sordid personal life where he ironically left his first wife when she was disfigured from an car accident.  Thankfully Cindy kept up her youthful looks there and  I guess Cindy thought hey we are rarely together and he has his work wife, Lindsey Graham, to keep him warm those long nights in Washington doing nothing but talking to media so in death they do finally part.

I respect that he served his country and spent many years in a prison camp to come home and continue to serve but then at what point do you say I have done enough bullshit and go and actually go do something. .   Maverick my ass and this profile in the Rolling Stone from 2008 has another tone that was no present in the endless eulogies repeated for days on end.    The only job that in America you can do literally until you die is serve in Congress, so much for swamp draining.

 I have spent the better part of the last few months discussing the problems in the “it” city that surround crime, violence and education and those three are conjoined in a way that few discuss here as most of it is by faces of color and many who are barely out of their teens.   Since this was reported in June, there have been dozens of more fatality or near fatalities thanks to gun violence here.   Before I left for vacation there was a shooting rampage that terrorized East Nashville for days.  Every day is another shooting, a home invasion, a car jacking and assorted other stories of violence and crime that is rarely discussed as a major problem in a city that relies largely on tourism.  And to blame just faces of color would mean that two cities that I just visited, Cleveland and Pittsburgh, would have greater crime as they are similar in composition and demographics when it comes to income and race.  Well no.  Irony that Chicago a much larger metro area which is constantly decried as a city wracked with violence gets the media attention while Nashville is ignored.  Why is that?

The schools and the endless problems in the schools here has become a daily update much like the crime reports.   I again have been to schools that last year were under a different outsourcing agency last year due to the problems getting subs so it was interesting to return.  One I was given a bag of popcorn and thanked which shocked me and the afternoon was fine considering what I used to experience when I went there; however, I want to point out it was a SPED class and that I witnessed much oddness in the hall by the mainstreamed class and a Teacher verbally berate a student to the point of excess where in another school in an outlying district led this Teacher to be placed on leave. Go figure as here in Nashville rape, sexual abuse and other incidents rarely are reported.  Shocking, I know.  Not really.

The other school I went to had been in the news last year due to excessive violence and once again it was as horrid as I recalled and this was two hours for an Art Teacher.  It was bizarre when the SPED Teacher pushed in late into the class with her McDonald’s lunch which she ate while reprimanding and talking to the students. My favorite was correcting the grammar.  Try not eating in front of kids or speaking with your mouth full first before reprimanding others.  The bragging that she had moved to an outlying county to a place with a pool and bought an expensive car, a Lexus, to commute was also unnecessary and well again oddly in place for this school. Again all of the above situations were with Teachers who were black and with students who were also black.  It has been repeated over and over again throughout my visits to the schools in Nashville and what led me to examine my own views about race and poverty.  It was this school when I first arrived that I witnessed the most distressing behaviors, fights and where a Teacher was found with a gun in his backpack.  I found out that the reason for this was he was afraid as Parents had been threatening him so he carried it in his car and forgot to take it out to leave in his car that day.  He left the backpack in the Library where it was found and then reported.  Where he is and what happened to that is one of many stories I have heard since relocating here.  Including a Teacher who slammed a door on a child’s hand, Teachers who are having sexual encounters with students and of course the endless sordid tales that have made it to the media regarding varying Administrators and their sexual misconduct.  Little to no gets reported to the Police or the State.  Shocking, no not really.  Again this is a district headed by an African American man, with largely African American staff and a student population that is the same.  Poverty is the only distinction between the front of the house and the back of the house.  So yes race is a factor it is just what role in this equation has yet to be explained or understood by me a white woman of means. And when anyone white questions the decisions made the race card is tossed and then then hand folds.  Only one reporter,  Phil Williams of Channel 5 has made it his business to investigate the district from hiding lead in the water to the endless other controversy’s from budget to sexual misconduct. Again there is no “union” here to protect workers and tenure is not that big of an issue when it comes to termination so really what is the issue here?

Aside from race I do see the role of the secular community from both church to education and its influence.  I feel leads to much of what I see and hear. It should not be shocking given the Catholic Church which has both Pedophile Priests and abusive Nuns in their flock.  Religion is power and absolute power corrupts absolutely.  And other than Congress it is the only occupation you can serve until death. Talk about tenure!

So tomorrow is labor day of which is to honor those in labor.  Irony that again much has been done to destroy the power of organized labor and yet the phrase “hard work” dominates the lexicon next to In God We Trust as the American concept of meritocracy is tied to those two beliefs – work for the almighty dollar.    I have to laugh as that latter phrase is to be visible in all schools in Tennessee by law.  I have yet to see it but I try to just keep my head down, answer the questions asked and no more, try to ignore the children to the point where unless I am observed or their behavior is so egregious I need to intervene I am pushing through this year with the idea that my end date is nearer than I think.  As for my relationship with Nashville is not until death we do part.

So as labor day soldiers on who are those in labor?  Well we have Police for if was not for their unions we might have some way to communicate and establish expectations for what defines police work.   There are Teachers Unions that are struggling to resolve the problem in Education that means funding and overcoming the endless demands on time that cannot be fixed by a 6 hour school day. The Medical field that refuses to change despite the reality that America is not great when it comes to care and outcome and their primary care obligation seems to be profits and wages for Doctors. And lastly our communities that are wracked with violence and poverty that warehousing them in public housing projects or prisons are failing to both protect and serve anyone.  Welcome to Nashville, home of the honky tonks, low wages and high violence.  Leave your gun in the car and your wallet in your pocket.   The land of bridal showers and promises that until death us do part.