Another upsetting Monday. This time compounded by yet another mad gunman on the loose, this time it was the D.C. Naval Yard. The Senate boogied out right quick, bunch of spineless cowards. The narrative had been shifting, from PTSD vet to mentally ill/schizophrenic dumped by his girlfriend and distraught. My only question is, how is it that these military installations take so long to shoot down a gunman? Don't they have folks in there all armed? Oh wait, I forgot. We can thank Clinton for barring weapons from military locales (WTF?).
And how come he kept his security clearance after all those police calls, where he shot thru his own apartments' ceiling to quiet down the upstairs noisy neighbor? How come this keeps happening?
What's with all the NSA data just sitting around? Nobody is looking at it with game theorems, nobody is analyzing, nobody is extrapolating. They just want you to think that they are.
AND then we have Putin grandstanding and making the US president looking like a spoiled teenager. He's right, he is. AND Time magazine won't publish the same cover in the US with Putin on it, instead the mealy argument of the bread-and-circuses crowd on how college athletes should be paid.
Read more here. Hey, they're getting a free ride, inflated grades, room and board, and a college degree that they otherwise wouldn't get--let's face it, it would be either lay down some bricks/get a Welfare check/jail if it weren't for college football scholarships and programs. Because this argument is strictly about college football, nobody will pay pro wages to the college lacrosse team.
In other news, I learned the magic of making a roux as a base for home-made mac 'n'cheese. Who knew that 2 tbl melted butter plus 2tbl flour stirring quickly makes this putty-like thing to which milk whisked in will attach and allow more fatty goodness--cheese--to be incorporated into a smooth sauce. I'm hooked and it's a fine thing. :-)
Views from the deep trench of medicine in the US as experienced by a dermatology doctor with a private practice, and various other musings on whatever tangential subjects I feel like talking about.
Clear Stream
Tuesday, September 17, 2013
Thursday, July 18, 2013
it's come to this
Lots of difficult thorny issues everywhere. I'm totally exhausted and I want to retire. No joke.
Another altercation with an elderly don't-take-away-my-Medicare cohort. This patient actually put white tape over his Medicare Card ID number, photocopied it, and presented this copy to my front desk staff. Sotto voce, he states he will verbally tell us his Medicare ID number because he's been told by the feds to never carry it around because it can be fraudulently used.
***my eyes are rolling into my skull****
Yessirree, BUT YOU NEED TO PRESENT IT WHEN YOU ARE GETTING HEALTH CARE FROM A DOCTOR OR HOSPITAL.
I CAN'T TAKE THE WILES OR THE GAMES FROM THEM ANYMORE!!!!!!
My personal brick wall has gone up. No card, no service. Go home. Go see another doctor. I'm not playing your game.
Another altercation with an elderly don't-take-away-my-Medicare cohort. This patient actually put white tape over his Medicare Card ID number, photocopied it, and presented this copy to my front desk staff. Sotto voce, he states he will verbally tell us his Medicare ID number because he's been told by the feds to never carry it around because it can be fraudulently used.
***my eyes are rolling into my skull****
Yessirree, BUT YOU NEED TO PRESENT IT WHEN YOU ARE GETTING HEALTH CARE FROM A DOCTOR OR HOSPITAL.
I CAN'T TAKE THE WILES OR THE GAMES FROM THEM ANYMORE!!!!!!
My personal brick wall has gone up. No card, no service. Go home. Go see another doctor. I'm not playing your game.
Wednesday, June 5, 2013
When the doctor cares TOO much
I've had an interesting scenario develop. A few months ago, a local doctor referred several patients to me for dermatological care, and I was grateful. The patients were happy. Everything was nice. However, a little thing called "snowbird season" happened. In southwest Florida, hordes of retirees from the northern half of the country descend to flee the cold weather from December-May. Often, these patients are in a tizzy to return home in the spring and put off their health issues.
We tried like heck to get a certain lady from Boston with a skin cancer on her nose, referred by this cardiologist. Many faxes and phone calls ensued. She was scheduled. Then she didn't show up. When we called, she said she had to "go back home to Boston".
Today the cardiologists' wife, his office nurse, came in to find out what happened. I told her plainly, you cared more than the patient. The patient didn't care that she had a skin cancer, a colon cancer, a defibrillator, whatever. The patient ultimately is the arbiter of what happens and why. Nobody can force the patient into the medical realm. The nurse looked at me and blinked hard. She is 20 years older than me and she still has a paternalistic view of "we know what's best for the patient". Yes, this is true oftentimes. But people have complicated lives and dramas and if their health isn't their priority, how can it be for us? How can it be for any doctor? We need to step back and accept that people won't do what they need to do. As doctors, we need to accept that maxim, and move on.
Moral of the story, and this is something I stand by 100%: I only want to treat patients who want treatment. Sounds simple, but it's not. I will not treat a husband dragged by his wife who declares there's nothing wrong with him. I will not go to a patient's home and drag them to my office to get a biopsy.
We tried like heck to get a certain lady from Boston with a skin cancer on her nose, referred by this cardiologist. Many faxes and phone calls ensued. She was scheduled. Then she didn't show up. When we called, she said she had to "go back home to Boston".
Today the cardiologists' wife, his office nurse, came in to find out what happened. I told her plainly, you cared more than the patient. The patient didn't care that she had a skin cancer, a colon cancer, a defibrillator, whatever. The patient ultimately is the arbiter of what happens and why. Nobody can force the patient into the medical realm. The nurse looked at me and blinked hard. She is 20 years older than me and she still has a paternalistic view of "we know what's best for the patient". Yes, this is true oftentimes. But people have complicated lives and dramas and if their health isn't their priority, how can it be for us? How can it be for any doctor? We need to step back and accept that people won't do what they need to do. As doctors, we need to accept that maxim, and move on.
Moral of the story, and this is something I stand by 100%: I only want to treat patients who want treatment. Sounds simple, but it's not. I will not treat a husband dragged by his wife who declares there's nothing wrong with him. I will not go to a patient's home and drag them to my office to get a biopsy.
Friday, May 10, 2013
Harsh
These are dark times. Boston terror attacks with innocents killed and maimed, schoolchildren shot up in classrooms in Connecticut, missing and kidnapped women screaming for escape from a run down Cleveland snake pit...it's constant awfulness. I don't have an answer but it makes me want to carry a concealed weapon. I feel scared and vulnerable in crowds and I know law enforcement cannot do what they're supposed to do. Increasingly, ordinary people save the day.
This may sound harsh and brutal but the heinous crimes are demanding this--public bloody executions. Any f***tard thinking about it, doing it, or having done it, will have to take pause.
I cannot imagine the families of these victims, or how the survivors feel, my heart goes out to them.
I'm always astounded when there's invariably an interview with a mother/father/sister and they just seem so grateful and they say,"no, we do not want to wish harm on the criminals". I put myself in their shoes and I'd seriously have a problem being so forgiving. I think I'd volunteer to administer the death penalty myself to these evil criminals if a family member is victimized like this.
This may sound harsh and brutal but the heinous crimes are demanding this--public bloody executions. Any f***tard thinking about it, doing it, or having done it, will have to take pause.
I cannot imagine the families of these victims, or how the survivors feel, my heart goes out to them.
I'm always astounded when there's invariably an interview with a mother/father/sister and they just seem so grateful and they say,"no, we do not want to wish harm on the criminals". I put myself in their shoes and I'd seriously have a problem being so forgiving. I think I'd volunteer to administer the death penalty myself to these evil criminals if a family member is victimized like this.
Wednesday, March 13, 2013
stick a fork in me, I'm done
Believe me, I hate having to ask people to fill out 10 forms and get all sorts of data from birthdate to social security number when registering patients in my practice. In particular the social security number is necessary because a) insurance companies identify patients via that number along with other data to make sure the patient is the correct one b) there are people that present fictitious data thus I must protect my business from fraud.
If a patient pays cash then we don't need ID's or anything, of course. But with third party payors, we need a lot of info to file claims and to get paid. I don't make the rules, I follow them.
Here's where it gets sticky and complicated. Patients are urged at every turn to never give out their social security number. But their Medicare is their social security number plus a letter, or if through a private payor then there's that info registered with the home plan. I need that info to get paid. In particular, if people are delinquent in payment and collections have to be retained, a social security number is needed, it's like a loan done by a financial institution. You go anywhere, get a fishing license, get a car or insurance, get labs drawn by a phlebotomist, you must give your SS#. If you don't give it, you may be refused service.
If a patient refuses to give this info then I have the right to refuse service. Period.
I also love it when retired octogenarian FBI agents threaten me for not calling them back within an hour. Yeah, because you're important. Sorry but the cynical side springs to life with these situations. Don't pull rank. Be nice.
If a patient pays cash then we don't need ID's or anything, of course. But with third party payors, we need a lot of info to file claims and to get paid. I don't make the rules, I follow them.
Here's where it gets sticky and complicated. Patients are urged at every turn to never give out their social security number. But their Medicare is their social security number plus a letter, or if through a private payor then there's that info registered with the home plan. I need that info to get paid. In particular, if people are delinquent in payment and collections have to be retained, a social security number is needed, it's like a loan done by a financial institution. You go anywhere, get a fishing license, get a car or insurance, get labs drawn by a phlebotomist, you must give your SS#. If you don't give it, you may be refused service.
If a patient refuses to give this info then I have the right to refuse service. Period.
I also love it when retired octogenarian FBI agents threaten me for not calling them back within an hour. Yeah, because you're important. Sorry but the cynical side springs to life with these situations. Don't pull rank. Be nice.
Monday, March 4, 2013
Sequester=sesquestrar, to take hostage
The sequester, a last minute harikari device employed a few years by Mr. Obama to get the debt ceiling raised, will drop Medicare payments to physicians for some reason on April 1st. I can't find anything on the CMS website about this, au naturel.
The hilarious thing is the guy says the Repubs invented it. Some of us have excellent memory and refuse the obfuscation now thrown at us.
Govt will kill the goose and then what? It's an Orwellian world, we are in it. It's not coming, it's here.
The hilarious thing is the guy says the Repubs invented it. Some of us have excellent memory and refuse the obfuscation now thrown at us.
Govt will kill the goose and then what? It's an Orwellian world, we are in it. It's not coming, it's here.
Wednesday, December 5, 2012
Jr must be included
A whole slew of Medicare claims are rejecting if the last name does not include the "Jr" that the patient may or may not have on his Medicare ID card. Really? This level of nitpicking is unprecedented.
I really will laugh the loudest when they start denying procedures and hospitalizations left and right. It's coming. I, for one, am glad. The abuses that people inflict on Medicare, "I paid into it so I have a right to have this". Dude, it's not your personal account. It's not your personal property. It's an entitlement conferred onto you by the largesse of the US govt.
I really will laugh the loudest when they start denying procedures and hospitalizations left and right. It's coming. I, for one, am glad. The abuses that people inflict on Medicare, "I paid into it so I have a right to have this". Dude, it's not your personal account. It's not your personal property. It's an entitlement conferred onto you by the largesse of the US govt.
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