Monday, October 5, 2009

Remember This The Next Time You Vote

From Fox News, 10/6/09:

From wheelchairs and walkers to orthopedic shoes and needles, Medicare buys tens of thousands of products every day for elderly Americans. And as the single largest buyer of medical products, you'd think it would at leastget a volume discount. But it doesn't. In fact, Medicare doesn't even get the best price. According to their own auditors, Medicare knowingly overpays for almost everything it buys. Examples include:

-- $7,215 to rent an oxygen concentrator, when the purchase price is $600.
-- $4,018 for a standard wheelchair, while the private sector pays $1,048.
-- $1,825 for a hospital bed, compared to an Internet price of $1,071.
-- $3,335 for a respiratory pump, versus an advertised price of $1,987.
-- $82 for a diabetic supply kit, instead of a $47 price on the Web.

Last year, the Health and Human Services Department tried to replace its archaic fixed-price fee schedule for 10 commonly purchased products with a competitive bidding program in 10 cities. The department said the program could save Medicare $125 million in a single year, or $1 billion if adopted nationwide. But Congress stepped in to stop it.

"There were products that we had as much as 75 percent savings. The average was 29 percent," said Mike Leavitt, the former HHS secretary who oversaw the program. "It would have saved billions if we could've actually implemented it, but Congress deferred it. In Washington speak, that means we put it off forever," he said. Leavitt blames Congressmen Pete Stark (D-Calif.) and Dave Camp (R-Mich.) for introducing legislation that terminated the contracts and postponed the program for 18 months. Leavitt says the congressional intervention helps explain why many are suspicious of claims that Washington can cut enough waste to actually pay for health care reform, as President Obama told a joint session of Congress last month.

"Reducing the waste and inefficiency in Medicare and Medicaid will pay for most of this plan," Leavitt said.

"The problem here is one man's waste is another man's living, and whenever there is an effort put forward to actually make an efficiency, someone goes on the offensive and hires lobbyists and does what they can to constrain Congress from doing it," Leavitt said.

According to the Center for Responsive Politics, the health care industry is currently spending $2 million a day lobbying Congress. Leavitt's pilot program died after small business suppliers claimed it would have put them out of business. Eventually, industry agreed to help pay the cost of terminated contracts that Medicare had already negotiated.

Industry officials argued the new system would unfairly disqualify some suppliers, and others with little experience would get the business, causing a decline in quality and service.

10 comments:

Schteveo said...

I am reminded of the scene in "Independence Day" when Bill Pullman as the President is inquiring about where the money came from to build and keep Area 51 running, and Judd Hirsch, as Jeff Goldblum's father has a BEAUTIFUL answer,

Pullman: I don't understand, where does all this come from? How do you get funding for something like this?

Hirsch: You don't actually think they spend $20,000.00 on a hammer, $30,000.00 on a toilet seat do you?

I've often wondered if anyone has ever "balanced" the accounts against each other of these kinds of operations between gub'ment and overpaid businesses. Do the companies collect $30,000 for the toilet seat and THEN really deposit that much. Or is there a secret kickback to "Project X" or "Committee X"?

I tend to think conspiratorially. Especially with respect to people already proved to be untrustworthy, like ANY elected officials in D.C. Or worse still, the nameless, faceless, life long, career bureaucrats, who run the gub'ment for the elected goofballs.

"Grammie" or whatever name he wants to call me!! said...

I just sent a letter to BHO last night telling/asking him why doesn't he start by FIRST reducing Medicare fraud and waste, then he might have more support from the public. I received a form letter back this morning from him. "I appreciate your perspective." Yeah right.... Like he actually read it! And it looked like to me that the doctors in his staged press conference yesterday were all issued their matching coats by his staff!

Spider said...

Steve, i don't see how things like that could happen, now that we have a total transparent govt.

Spider said...

Great Lady-Bug, now you're on "the WH list".

CTjayhawker said...

And it looked like to me that the doctors in his staged press conference yesterday were all issued their matching coats by his staff!

They were.

http://www.nypost.com/p/news/national/tricky_doctored_photo_kTVWHZ3vEeRQbxCC0TNZHN

CTjayhawker said...

OK, let's try again.
Click my name.

"Grammie" or whatever name he wants to call me!! said...

Yeah... The WHBS list.

Anonymous said...

Is anyone really surprised that HIS doctors press conference was staged, just like everything else he does?

"Grammie" or whatever name he wants to call me!! said...

This from the
NY Post

Schteveo said...

I saw the whole Lab Coat Give Away on TV this AM. Does that mean when he meets with Disabled Veterans they'll give out crutches or wheelchairs?

He's STILL running for the office.