Anonymous ID: ccc674 July 18, 2020, 12:04 p.m. No.10001707   🗄️.is 🔗kun

Are people more fearful of catching Muh Corona due to failures of Obamacare?

Catastrophic health plans at best with many failures back in the news

 

https://spectator.org/coronaviris-exposes-obamacare-failures/

[R]esearchers found that patients who were admitted to facilities located in the vicinity of an emergency department (ED) that had recently closed experienced 5 percent higher odds of dying than patients admitted to hospitals that were not near a recently closed ED. The odds of dying were even higher for patients with certain time-sensitive conditions, especially heart attack (15 percent higher odds), stroke (10 percent) and sepsis (8 percent).

 

Informed by the findings of this analysis, our regression model assessed the impact of 16 variables of which nine were shown to be statistically significant. The model identified 453 open rural facilities which can be considered ‘vulnerable’ to closure based on performance levels. Within this group, two distinct cohorts emerged; a group of 216 which can be considered “most vulnerable” and a second group of 237 which are defined as “at risk.”

 

The few legacy media outlets that have bothered to cover this ongoing disaster have blamed it on the states that declined to expand Medicaid under the auspices of Obamacare, but that claim fails to explain closures in expansion states like Arizona, Arkansas, California, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maine, Michigan, Minnesota, Nevada, Ohio, New York, and more. The actual cause of these closures involves a bait-and-switch perpetrated on the hospital industry by the Obama administration. In 2009, the industry agreed to support “reform” by accepting $155 billion in Medicaid and Medicare cuts in exchange for the promise that it would flood hospitals with newly insured patients whose coverage would offset the concession.

 

As it happens, however, well over 90 percent of Obamacare’s applicants were dumped into Medicaid. Consequently, all those new patients who showed up at hospitals were “covered” by a second-rate government program that pays less than the cost (that’s cost, not charges) of treating them. Just how poorly does Medicaid pay hospitals? Because the program is managed differently in each state and financed by a nearly impenetrable formula including state and federal funds, the answer tends to vary depending on where the hospital is located. On average, as the American Hospital Association (AHA) reports, “[H]ospitals received payment of 89 cents for every dollar spent by hospitals caring for Medicaid patients in 2018.”

 

The average case mix for rural hospitals includes a very high percentage of patients covered by Medicaid. Therefore, the underpayments associated with the program guarantees that these facilities will be required to absorb major hits to their bottom lines. And it gets worse. Rural facilities also treat a large number of patients covered by Medicare, from which Obamacare looted $716 billion — including a $260 billion cut for hospital services. This means rural hospitals also lose money on their Medicare patients. How much more? According to the AHA report noted above, “For Medicare, hospitals received payment of only 87 cents for every dollar spent by hospitals caring for Medicare patients in 2018.”

 

Combined, Medicare and Medicaid patients account for more than 60 percent of all care provided by hospitals in general. For rural facilities, the percentage is usually much higher, which all but assures that many will lose money. This is why these hospitals are rapidly becoming extinct. If you are one of the 60 million Americans who make their homes outside the major metropolitan centers, this is bad for your health in the midst of a global pandemic. Even in normal times, it’s dangerous. If, for example, your ambulance must be driven past a hospital forced out of business by Obamacare to some other facility, your chances of dying are significantly increased, according to a UC San Francisco study:

 

According to the Wall Street Journal, the Trump administration is considering the launch of a special enrollment period for people to sign up for Obamacare. This would presumably be useful as a symbolic gesture and it would perhaps even be helpful to a tiny percentage of the population.It will, however, have no effect on the damage the misbegotten“reform” law has already done to our rural health-care safety net, and it won’t increase our ability to deal with COVID-19.After 10 years, Obamacare will have achieved an almost perfect record of failure, yet it remains as dangerous to the health of the republic as coronavirus is to the health of our bodies.It’s time for SCOTUS to cure us of this debilitating infection.

 

https://spectator.org/coronaviris-exposes-obamacare-failures/

Anonymous ID: ccc674 July 18, 2020, 12:20 p.m. No.10001829   🗄️.is 🔗kun

People who fall for the mandate for masks have been told this …… that you need to wear them outside even when walking yourself or your dog…. if you MIGHT come within 6 ft of someone else….. stupid people might deserve a heat stroke lesson…