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Wednesday, August 16, 2023
UnitedHealth cutting back on prior authorizations
Sunday, August 6, 2023
FREE E-BOOK -all you (never) wanted TO HAVE TO KNOW about the C19 mRNA injections - 156 pages of text and 20 pages of citations
Free e-book by some very smart people who actually give a crap about the quality of life and avoidance of needless death of people – as opposed to the Cult, that cares only about death – and causing billions of deaths along a “pathway” of suffering, poverty and disease.
mRNA Vaccine Toxicity – Doctors for COVID Ethics (doctors4covidethics.org)
It is split into these chapters and sections: (each section is clickable in the document - not from the below - from the main document contents page).
1 Introduction
1.1 Are mRNA vaccines dangerous in principle, or is the observed harm accidental?
1.2 COVID-19 vaccines were never about your health
1.3 The misuse of emergency use authorizations, and the breakdown of regulatory safeguards
1.4 Why this book was written
2 Some elements of virology and immunology
2.1 The life cycle of a virus
2.2 Immunity to viruses
2.3 How do the highly diverse T-cell and B-cell reservoirs originate?
2.4 Immunological memory
2.5 Cross-immunity
2.6 Who really controls viral infections: antibodies, or cytotoxic T-cells?
2.7 Immunity to respiratory viruses: systemic versus mucosal
2.8 Vaccination strategies
2.9 Appendix: some evidence of fraud in Pfizer’s clinical trials .
3 Immunological mechanisms of harm by mRNA vaccines
3.1 mRNA vaccines are distributed throughout the body and prominently affect the blood
3.2 The expression of spike protein in the body is widespread and long-lasting
3.3 The mRNA vaccine LNPs fly under the radar of the immune system
3.4 Induction of autoimmune disease
3.5 Vaccine-induced immunosuppression
3.6 The fundamental mechanism of damage by mRNA vaccines is completely general
4 Pathological evidence of immunological harm due to mRNA vaccines
4.1 Key techniques used in histopathology
4.2 Sources of evidence
4.3 Vasculitis induced by mRNA vaccination
4.4 Immune attack on organ-specific cells and tissues
5 Pharmacokinetics and lipid toxicity of mRNA vaccines
5.1 Structure and function of lipid nanoparticles
5.2 Pharmacokinetics of mRNA vaccines
5.3 Lipid nanoparticle toxicity
5.4 Appendix: Evidence of substandard manufacturing Quality of COVID-19 mRNA
6 Genotoxicity of mRNA vaccines
6.1 Genotoxicity of synthetic cationic lipids
6.2 Reverse transcription of vaccine mRNA sequences into DNA
6.3 Contaminating plasmid DNA in Pfizer’s and Moderna’s mRNA vaccines
6.4 Known and plausible risks posed by DNA copies of non-self
7 Epidemiology of COVID-19 mRNA Vaccine Adverse Events Margot DesBois, B.A. and Brian S. Hooker, Ph.D.
7.1 Introduction
7.2 General Adverse Events, Serious Adverse Events, Death, Hospitalization, Life-Threatening Events
7.3 Cardiac Events
7.4 Thrombotic Events
7.5 Neurological Events
7.6 Immunological Events
7.7 Reproductive Events
7.8 Conclusion
8 AIDS & HIV: The Blueprint for the Perversion of Medical Science David Rasnick, Ph.D.
8.1 AIDS does not behave like a novel contagious disease
8.2 AIDS and drug abuse
8.3 Peter Duesberg’s scientific critique of the HIV/AIDS
8.4 HIV is not sexually transmitted
8.5 Kary Mullis’ quest for evidence that HIV causes AIDS
8.6 The crucifixion of a dissident
8.7 AIDS in Africa
8.8 Thabo Mbeki’s ill-fated attempt to get at the truth about AIDS
8.9 Some evidence to challenge the AIDS orthodoxy
9 Summary and conclusions
9.1 The key mechanism of mRNA vaccine toxicity
9.2 The immunological mechanism of harm is completely general
9.3 Could a return to good manufacturing practices abolish the toxicity of the mRNA vaccines?
9.4 If mRNA vaccines are inherently dangerous, why are they urged and even forced on us?
9.5 What can we do?
Afterword by Catherine Austin Fitts
Thursday, July 27, 2023
New lawsuit accuses health insurer Cigna of denying claims in bulk
An algorithm, not a doctor, predicted a rapid recovery for Frances Walter, an 85-year-old Wisconsin woman with a shattered left shoulder and an allergy to pain medicine. In 16.6 days, it is estimated, she would be ready to leave her nursing home.
On the 17th day, her Medicare Advantage insurer, Security Health Plan, followed the algorithm and cut off payment for her care, concluding she was ready to return to the apartment where she lived alone. Meanwhile, medical notes in June 2019 showed Walter’s pain was maxing out the scales and that she could not dress, go to the bathroom, or even push a walker without help.
It would take more than a year for a federal judge to conclude the insurer’s decision was “at best, speculative” and that Walter was owed thousands of dollars for more than three weeks of treatment. While she fought the denial, she had to spend her life savings and enroll in Medicaid just to progress to the point of putting on her shoes, her arm still in a sling.
Behind the scenes, insurers are using unregulated predictive algorithms, under the guise of scientific rigor, to pinpoint the precise moment when they can plausibly cut off payment for an older patient’s treatment. The denials that follow are setting off heated disputes between doctors and insurers, often delaying the treatment of seriously ill patients who are neither aware of the algorithms nor able to question their calculations.
Older people who spent their lives paying into Medicare, and are now facing amputation, fast-spreading cancers, and other devastating diagnoses, are left to either pay for their care themselves or get by without it. If they disagree, they can file an appeal, and spend months trying to recover their costs, even if they don’t recover from their illnesses.
“We take patients who are going to die of their diseases within a three-month period of time, and we force them into a denial and appeals process that lasts up to 2.5 years,” Chris Comfort, chief operating officer of Calvary Hospital, a palliative and hospice facility in the Bronx, N.Y., said of Medicare Advantage. “So what happens is the appeal outlasts the beneficiary.”
In other words, "Deny until dead". Or don't diagnose or treat patients with less than six months to live.
The algorithms sit at the beginning of the process, promising to deliver personalized care and better outcomes. But patient advocates said in many cases they do the exact opposite — spitting out recommendations that fail to adjust for a patient’s individual circumstances and conflict with basic rules on what Medicare plans must cover.
“While the firms say [the algorithm] is suggestive, it ends up being a hard-and-fast rule that the plan or the care management firms really try to follow,” said David Lipschutz, associate director of the Center for Medicare Advocacy, a nonprofit group that has reviewed such denials for more than two years in its work with Medicare patients. “There’s no deviation from it, no accounting for changes in condition, no accounting for situations in which a person could use more care.”
Medicare has its own set of guidance (rules) for benefit determination as set forth in the Code of Federal Regulations.
As the influence of these predictive tools has spread, a recent examination by federal inspectors of denials made in 2019 found that private insurers repeatedly strayed beyond Medicare’s detailed set of rules. Instead, they were using internally developed criteria to delay or deny care. Although some insurers follow Medicare's guidelines private insurers often set their own guideline. Since MA plans are private plans they are free to do so unless Medicare restricts it.
In interviews, doctors, medical directors, and hospital administrators described increasingly frequent Medicare Advantage payment denials for care routinely covered in traditional Medicare. UnitedHealthcare and other insurers said they offer to discuss a patient’s care with providers before a denial is made. But many providers said their attempts to get explanations are met with blank stares and refusals to share more information. The black box of AI has become a blanket excuse for denials.
New lawsuit accuses health insurer Cigna of denying claims in bulk
Wednesday, July 26, 2023
'Misleading': Alarm raised about Medicare Advantage 'scam' -
Congressional Dems, Activists 'Raise the Alarm' About Medicare Advantage 'Scam'
"It is time to call out so-called Medicare Advantage for what it is," said Rep. Rosa DeLauro. "It's private insurance that profits by denying coverage and using the name of Medicare to trick our seniors."
"We are here to raise the alarm about Medicare Advantage. We are here to protect our Medicare," Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) said to robust applause.
The Evolution of Private Plans in Medicare
Issue: Since the 1980s, private plans have played an increasingly important role in the Medicare program. While initially created with the goals of reducing costs, improving choice, and enhancing quality, risk-based plans — now known as Medicare Advantage plans — have undergone significant policy changes since their inception; these changes have not always aligned with the original policy objectives.
"This year, for the very first time, more than half of all beneficiaries are enrolled in Medicare Advantage instead of traditional Medicare," she continued. "But Medicare Advantage substitutes private insurance companies for traditional Medicare coverage, and that private coverage is failing both Medicare beneficiaries and taxpayers."
"It's all about the money," Warren said. "Private insurers are in Medicare Advantage to play games to extract more money from the government."
"Experts estimate that Medicare Advantage insurers will receive more than $75 billion in overpayments this year alone, and that's the real punch to the gut," she continued. "Not only do Medicare Advantage insurers rip off the government, they routinely deny care to patients who need it."
History of Changes in Payment and Quality in Medicare Private Plans
History of Changes in Payment and Quality in Medicare Private Plans
Act Payment Quality Improvement and Measurement TEFRA (1982) • 95% of per capita traditional Medicare costs
• Risk adjustment based on demographics • Evidence of increased preventive care
• HEDIS created in 1991 BBA (1997) • Traditional Medicare spending controlled and capitation rate updates reduced by 2.8%
• Rates fixed at 1997 level and adjusted to pay highest of floor rate, annual update of 2%, and blended rate
• Risk adjustment based on health status and demographics • No change in quality or quality measurement BBRA (1999) • Bonus for first risk plan entering market
• Increase in traditional Medicare spending, on which plan payment was based • No change in quality or quality measurement BIPA (2000) • Minimum update temporarily raised to 3%
• Floors in rural and urban counties raised
• Risk adjustment based on demographics and diagnostic categories • No change in quality or quality measurement MMA (2003) • Highest of urban or rural floor, 100% of average county-level traditional Medicare costs, higher of 2% or national traditional Medicare cost growth update over 2003 rate, and blended rate update
• Bidding system with rebate at 75% of difference between benchmark and bid • Star rating for plan quality instituted in 2008 MIPPA (2008) • No change in payment • Quality reporting and provider network reporting mandated for PFFS by 2011 ACA (2010) • Counties ranked from lowest to highest traditional Medicare costs and divided into four assemblages: county benchmarks at 115%, 107.5%, 100%, and 95% of county traditional Medicare costs
• Rebates at 50% but higher at 65% and 70% for plans with 3.5–4 and 4+ stars, respectively
• 5% bonus to benchmarks of plans with 4+ stars
• Risk adjustment updated to correct for coding intensity • Nearly 50% of plans had 4+ stars in 2017
• Enrollment in plans with 4+ stars
Reclaim Medicare (video)
"We can strengthen traditional Medicare, and by doing that, we can save money and we can use some of those savings to expand benefits, like hearing, dental, and vision... and add an out-of-pocket cap for all beneficiaries... and lower the eligibility age for Medicare."
"Medicare money should be spent to deliver services for people," Warren added, "not to boost profits for insurance."
Rep. Rosa DeLauro (D-Conn.) said that "it is time to call out so-called Medicare Advantage for what it is. It's private insurance that profits by denying coverage and using the name of Medicare to trick our seniors.
Like the lawmakers, Alex Lawson, executive director of the advocacy group Social Security Works, blasted "bad actors in Medicare Advantage" who he said "are delaying and denying the care seniors and people with disabilities need."
"Corporate insurance is designed to generate profits by delaying and denying care, harming and killing patients instead of providing care,"
Wendell Potter, who heads the Center for Health and Democracy, repeated the common refrain that "so-called Medicare Advantage is neither Medicare nor an advantage. It is simply another scheme by the insurance companies to line their pockets at the expense of consumers by denying and delaying care."
"The healthcare market is confusing for consumers and the misleading branding of calling private insurance Medicare only makes this worse," Potter stressed.
Progressive lawmakers have also criticized President Joe Biden for delaying promised curbs on Medicare Advantage plans amid heavy insurance industry lobbying.
Act | Payment | Quality Improvement and Measurement |
---|---|---|
TEFRA (1982) | • 95% of per capita traditional Medicare costs • Risk adjustment based on demographics | • Evidence of increased preventive care • HEDIS created in 1991 |
BBA (1997) | • Traditional Medicare spending controlled and capitation rate updates reduced by 2.8% • Rates fixed at 1997 level and adjusted to pay highest of floor rate, annual update of 2%, and blended rate • Risk adjustment based on health status and demographics | • No change in quality or quality measurement |
BBRA (1999) | • Bonus for first risk plan entering market • Increase in traditional Medicare spending, on which plan payment was based | • No change in quality or quality measurement |
BIPA (2000) | • Minimum update temporarily raised to 3% • Floors in rural and urban counties raised • Risk adjustment based on demographics and diagnostic categories | • No change in quality or quality measurement |
MMA (2003) | • Highest of urban or rural floor, 100% of average county-level traditional Medicare costs, higher of 2% or national traditional Medicare cost growth update over 2003 rate, and blended rate update • Bidding system with rebate at 75% of difference between benchmark and bid | • Star rating for plan quality instituted in 2008 |
MIPPA (2008) | • No change in payment | • Quality reporting and provider network reporting mandated for PFFS by 2011 |
ACA (2010) | • Counties ranked from lowest to highest traditional Medicare costs and divided into four assemblages: county benchmarks at 115%, 107.5%, 100%, and 95% of county traditional Medicare costs • Rebates at 50% but higher at 65% and 70% for plans with 3.5–4 and 4+ stars, respectively • 5% bonus to benchmarks of plans with 4+ stars • Risk adjustment updated to correct for coding intensity | • Nearly 50% of plans had 4+ stars in 2017 • Enrollment in plans with 4+ stars |
Reclaim Medicare (video)
"We can strengthen traditional Medicare, and by doing that, we can save money and we can use some of those savings to expand benefits, like hearing, dental, and vision... and add an out-of-pocket cap for all beneficiaries... and lower the eligibility age for Medicare."
"Medicare money should be spent to deliver services for people," Warren added, "not to boost profits for insurance."
Rep. Rosa DeLauro (D-Conn.) said that "it is time to call out so-called Medicare Advantage for what it is. It's private insurance that profits by denying coverage and using the name of Medicare to trick our seniors.
Like the lawmakers, Alex Lawson, executive director of the advocacy group Social Security Works, blasted "bad actors in Medicare Advantage" who he said "are delaying and denying the care seniors and people with disabilities need."
"Corporate insurance is designed to generate profits by delaying and denying care, harming and killing patients instead of providing care,"
Wendell Potter, who heads the Center for Health and Democracy, repeated the common refrain that "so-called Medicare Advantage is neither Medicare nor an advantage. It is simply another scheme by the insurance companies to line their pockets at the expense of consumers by denying and delaying care."
"The healthcare market is confusing for consumers and the misleading branding of calling private insurance Medicare only makes this worse," Potter stressed.
Progressive lawmakers have also criticized President Joe Biden for delaying promised curbs on Medicare Advantage plans amid heavy insurance industry lobbying.
Monday, July 24, 2023
ERIC TOPOL AND A.I.
The amazing power of "machine eyes"
PART I
https://erictopol.substack.com/i/134587450/your-chest-x-ray-indicates-you-may-have-diabetes
https://erictopol.substack.com/i/134587450/ai-outshines-in-health-care-at-paperwork
PART II
https://erictopol.substack.com/i/134767572/a-randomized-trial-of-generative-ai
https://erictopol.substack.com/i/134767572/ai-and-bias-in-healthcare
https://erictopol.substack.com/i/134767572/ai-and-infectious-disease
https://erictopol.substack.com/i/134767572/robots-for-rehab-and-promoting-empathy
https://erictopol.substack.com/i/134767572/chatbots-instead-of-research-participants
https://erictopol.substack.com/i/134767572/summary
Monday, July 17, 2023
Medicare physician pay fell 26% since 2001. How did we get here? ] Things you do not know
Wednesday, July 12, 2023
A paradigm shift away from condoms: Focusing STI prevention... : JAAPA
Over the past few decades, evolving and diverse sexually transmitted infection (STI) prevention methods—methods significantly more effective than barrier protection—have caused a paradigm shift away from the traditional, limited, blanket recommendation to use condoms. Although condoms provide a barrier to body fluid-based STIs such as gonorrhea, chlamydia, and HIV, condom use is limited and often misunderstood, and counseling patients to use barriers may be ineffective.1
Condoms do not protect against many diseases.
Barrier protection has limited efficacy. Consistent condom use among patients identified as heterosexual and men who have sex with men (MSM) is 80% and 70% effective, respectively, for preventing HIV transmission. Among MSM, inconsistent condom use is no more protective than no condoms at all for the prevention of HIV.Herpes simplex virus (HSV), human papillomavirus (HPV), Molluscum contagiosum, primary syphilis, and infestations (scabies and lice) are spread by skin-to-skin contact, limiting barrier effectiveness. Consistent condom use is about 70% effective at reducing HPV transmission and is of limited effectiveness against other STI transmission.
CONCLUSION
Rather than focusing on condom use, clinicians can improve patient sexual health by following CDC guidelines to perform routine, opt-out HIV testing for all people in all healthcare settings. discuss PrEP with all sexually active patients regardless of age, relationship status or structure, number of sexual partners, or barrier protection use screen for gonorrhea and chlamydia infections of the pharynx, genitals, and rectum at the site(s) of exposure, regardless of signs or symptoms13strictly follow guidelines for bacterial STI treatment, especially oral gonorrhea. Vaccinate all patients for HPV and provide vaccination against hepatitis A, B, and C when indicated.
Educating patients on safer sexual practices including limiting the number of partners, mutual monogamy, and using condoms is also important in order to reduce the risk of STI transmission. Additionally, clinicians should be aware that e-cigarettes are not an effective method of contraception.
Additional resources are available from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) to help with STI prevention, screening, and treatment. Clinicians should also consider partnering with community organizations that can provide additional support and education for their patients. It is important to remember that safe sex practices include more than just using condoms; they encompass behavior changes such as abstaining