Category: Healthcare

The corporatisation of General Practice – Pearls and Irritations

GP doctor taking senior man's blood pressure in surgery room having a check up.

The very nature and history of Corporatisation suggests the maximising of profit over and above individual care. Take banking and law as case studies.

Proposals to reform how Medicare supports primary care also need to take account of the changed ownership structure of general practice.

Much of the information cited in the article came from the grey literature, as there are few formal studies of the issue. In brief the material identified suggested that:

  • continuity of care diminishes as practice size increases, while pathology ordering is positively associated with practice size;
  • patient satisfaction is lower in corporatised practices compared with traditional ones;
  • non-traditional providers performed worse than traditional ones on a range of performance indicators related to cost and efficiency, access, and clinical effectiveness.

However, one Australian study showed no difference between types of practice in the management of patients with diabetes.

The authors concluded that “while there is little Australian evidence that worse clinical care is delivered in corporate-owned general practice, there is no evidence that care is better… more Australian research and potentially regulation are needed to track and control what [changing patterns of ownership] means for patient care in terms… of patient experience [and] health outcomes”.

 

Source: The corporatisation of General Practice – Pearls and Irritations

The US Spends Almost as Much on Healthcare as the Rest of the World Combined and Has One of the Worst Outcomes – scheerpost.com

Esteemed physician Dr. Stephen Bezruchka explains why spending the most in the midst of inequality and flawed politics produces an unhealthy prognosis.

Source: The US Spends Almost as Much on Healthcare as the Rest of the World Combined and Has One of the Worst Outcomes – scheerpost.com

Sugar shovellers are making us sick, fat and poor (and check out what they pay in tax!)

Type 2 diabetes

We need to beat the lobbyists at their own game. Rather than blaming victims, we need to demand political action and stand in solidarity with those who battle to remain healthy within our transparently rigged and unhealthy food environment, writes James Muecke, with Grant Ennis.

Source: Sugar shovellers are making us sick, fat and poor (and check out what they pay in tax!)

‘Gamble responsibly’ message is a cop-out. Regulators must step up

Australians experience the biggest gambling losses per capita in the world.

With a suicide rate of 10.4 per 100,000 people, according to Australian Institute of Health and Welfare, we rank about 18 out of 36 among OECD countries. And in terms of gambling, we are among the worst, experiencing the biggest losses per capita. The two can be linked: studies show gambling is the cause of an estimated 400 suicides annually.

Source: ‘Gamble responsibly’ message is a cop-out. Regulators must step up

Ivana Trump died of blunt force injuries to her torso, medical examiner says | Donald Trump | The Guardian

Donald and Ivana Trump

Falls in Australia due to accidents and/or lack of balance in the aged are also the greatest cause of death and quality of life deterioration in the elderly and are not attended to well enough by our public health system. We once helped the elderly crossroads, giving them a seat and generally offering assistance. However not anymore.

US health officials consider falls to be the leading cause of injury-related death for people who are 65 years of age or older. About 64 out of 100,000 elderly people die as a result of accidental falls, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Source: Ivana Trump died of blunt force injuries to her torso, medical examiner says | Donald Trump | The Guardian

‘Appalling’ Medicare telehealth cuts must be delayed to protect vulnerable amid Covid surge, doctors urge | Health | The Guardian

Stock photo of a stethoscope on a laptop keyboard in a doctor’s surgery

The Clinical Oncology Society of Australia (COSA) president and medical oncologist, Prof Fran Boyle, said the timing of the changes was “appalling” considering the dramatic increases in Covid cases across the nation.

Source: ‘Appalling’ Medicare telehealth cuts must be delayed to protect vulnerable amid Covid surge, doctors urge | Health | The Guardian

Victorian emergency nurses leaving jobs because of burnout

nurses ppe

NSW is saying let it rip the numbers and spread are secondary to the vaccinations. However what about the hospitals Gladys. If Vic is currently suffering what about NSW?

Victoria’s emergency nurses are tired, stressed and burned out. Almost 20 months after COVID-19 was first detected, many working in hospitals are being forced into double shifts due to a shortfall of skilled and qualified critical care staff. Some haven’t taken annual leave since the pandemic began. And now, the state is facing its biggest outbreak since August 2020.

Source: Victorian emergency nurses leaving jobs because of burnout

How Australia Won Universal Health Care — And How Workers Saved It With a General Strike

In 1974, the Whitlam Labor government introduced Australia’s first universal health care system. Despite its flaws, Medibank was a huge step forward — and Australia’s unions organized a general strike to defend it against conservative attacks.

Source: How Australia Won Universal Health Care — And How Workers Saved It With a General Strike

‘This Ain’t Right!’: Top US Insurers Made $11 Billion in 2nd Quarter | Common Dreams News

Public health workers, doctors, and nurses protest over lack of sick pay and personal protective equipment outside a hospital in the Bronx on April 17, 2020. (Photo: Giles Clarke via Getty Images)

The LNP in Australia & Greg Hunt MP see the American model of healthcare the best model for Australia. Americans certainly don see it as such.

Five of the most profitable health insurance companies in the U.S. brought in over $11 billion in profits in the second quarter of 2021, it was reported on Friday—an outrageous amount of money, especially during a pandemic, that progressives said provides further evidence of the need for Medicare for All. Between April and June of this year, UnitedHealth Group, Aetna, Anthem, Cigna, and Humana reported profits of $4.37 billion, $2.78 billion, $1.8 billion, $1.47 billion, and $588 million, respectively. Health insurance companies’ second quarter earnings contrast sharply with the hardships faced by many Americans.

Source: ‘This Ain’t Right!’: Top US Insurers Made $11 Billion in 2nd Quarter | Common Dreams News

US ranks last in healthcare among 11 wealthiest countries despite spending most | US healthcare | The Guardian

The other countries analyzed in the report were Australia, Canada, France, Germany, the Netherlands, New Zealand, Norway, Sweden, Switzerland and the UK.

Greg Hunt Australian Health Minister so admires the American Medical System he believes we should adopt it here. The latest report however thinks otherwise.

The US is last on a ranking of healthcare systems among 11 of the wealthiest countries in the world, despite spending the highest percentage of its GDP on healthcare, according to a new report from the Commonwealth Fund.

Source: US ranks last in healthcare among 11 wealthiest countries despite spending most | US healthcare | The Guardian

We got the bill for having a baby – $37,000. Welcome to life in America | Arwa Mahdawi | The Guardian

‘America’s healthcare system isn’t just a nightmare to navigate – it’s inefficient and inequitable.’

Greg Hunt’s aspiration for the Australian health system is to move closer to the American model. The TV series Dr Death shows what Private Health outcomes really can lead to in America. Hospitals and medical schools burying incompetency and malpractice under the carpet in order to secure and not to lose profits moving forward diminishing any interest in patient care being the primary goal. The TV series highlights the American system in relief.

Our insurance covers most of it, but the extortionate prices in America’s healthcare system – and the absurd bureaucracy – boggles the mind

Source: We got the bill for having a baby – $37,000. Welcome to life in America | Arwa Mahdawi | The Guardian

Coronavirus deaths surpass 2500, Italy rushes new doctors into service

Sergio Cattaneo, head of anesthesiology at Brescia Ospedali Civili hospital, where there has been an outbreak of coronavirus.

 

Italy, the second hardest-hit nation after China in the world’s coronavirus pandemic, has announced a new figures that show it has one-third of the world’s total deaths from the new virus.

The crisis has pushed hospitals to breaking point at the epicentre of the contagion in northern Italy and left other regions scrambling to strengthen their own health systems as the number of infected rises nationwide.
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Coronavirus deaths surpass 2500, Italy rushes new doctors into service

Coronavirus has forced politicians out of their ideological comfort zones – Analysis & Opinion – ABC News (Australian Broadcasting Corporation)

Two people stand outside a sign pointing to a coronavirus screening clinic

If Australia’s health system struggles and we have universal health care what chance has America got? (ODT)

via Coronavirus has forced politicians out of their ideological comfort zones – Analysis & Opinion – ABC News (Australian Broadcasting Corporation)

Right time to be patient: medical futurist’s 50 year vision for health

How much of a role will enviroment play in improved health eg Climate Change and Fossil Fuels? (ODT)

“Healthcare is going to be preventive even on a scale that it will not just be about treating diseases or catching them as early as possible but preventing diseases before they would even take shape. That’s the real essence of healthcare,” he said.

via Right time to be patient: medical futurist’s 50 year vision for health

Health Minister orders investigation into health insurer Bupa after alarming announcements

Bupa, one of Australia’s biggest health insurers, told doctors that insured patients will only be eligible for gap cover if they are treated at a Bupa-contracted hospital or day-stay facility. It will come into effect in August

via Health Minister orders investigation into health insurer Bupa after alarming announcements

We Get Sick, They Get Rich | Informed Comment

 

— Cost per day for inpatient hospital stay: $5.49 in Cuba; $1,994 in the U.S.

— Inpatient hernia surgery: $14.59 in Cuba; $12,489 in the U.S.

— Hip-fracture repair: $72.15 in Cuba; $14,263 in the U.S.

— Kidney transplant: $4,902 in Cuba; $48,758 in the U.S.

 

How so? The vast bulk of corporate executive pay today comes in the form of stock awards. The higher a company’s share price, the heftier the CEO’s compensation. This stock connection encourages CEOs to single-mindedly focus on raising their company share prices by any means necessary.Among those any means: Pharmaceutical CEOs will jack up prices on prescription drugs and do whatever they can to get doctors to prescribe more pills. Health providers will push unnecessary tests and procedures. Hospital chiefs will downsize support staffs for patients. All these decisions fatten corporate bottom lines, pump up corporate share prices, and leave our health care downgraded.How could health care get better? Blue-ribbon commissions have all sorts of suggestions. They urge us to eliminate unnecessary procedures, tests, and devices. We need to better coordinate care, they add, and lower prices.

Source: We Get Sick, They Get Rich | Informed Comment

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Americans Urged To Get Saving $30,000 Out Of Way Before Obamacare Repealed – Go to Cuba Ventolin is 0.10 cents, not $130

WASHINGTON—Stressing that citizens who failed to heed the recommendation were putting their health and well-being at risk, experts strongly urged Americans this week to get saving $30,000 out of the way before a Republican-controlled federal government repeals Obamacare.

Source: Americans Urged To Get Saving $30,000 Out Of Way Before Obamacare Repealed – The Onion – America’s Finest News Source

If you have regular pathology tests, here is something you should know – » The Australian Independent Media Network

A little back story may be appropriate. In February 2015 I looked at Medicare. It was noticeable that pathology services constituted a large percentage of the total services. I doubt the proportion has dropped since. I contribute to that proportion: I have auto-immune conditions. I spend considerable time and money ensuring they are kept under control.…

Source: If you have regular pathology tests, here is something you should know – » The Australian Independent Media Network

Lies Americans are told about Universalised Health…. Michael Moore’s ” Sicko”|Right Wing Australia Complains…Movie

Sicko – American Healthcare Documentary (2007) – YouTube

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=thkBLpRwdSM
Mar 15, 2015 – Uploaded by paagleTV

Acclaimed filmmaker Michael Moore sets out to investigate the American healthcare system. Sticking to his …

Are the TPP and TiSA the beginning of the globalisation of health care? Health is a human right and is not for sale or for trade. The health system exists to keep our families safe and healthy, not to ensure the profits of large corporations. Breaking the control of the AMA is a first step.

Image from the smh.com.au

It’s hard not feel that we are being attacked at from all angles with corporations eying off developing and developed countries public health services for profit. With an Australian government seemingly hell bent on dismantling its Medicare system with outsourcing payments while introducing co-payments, it’s looking clearer now as to what the current Australian government has planned” writes Mel Mac.

I recently wrote about the TPP and now I think it’s time that we take a look at the Trade in Services Agreement (TiSA). It’s a services-only free trade agreement (FTA) that began in 2012 with exploratory discussions between Australia, US and the European Union (EU) for a year and with formal discussions beginning in early 2013. Australia, US and the EU take it in turns to chair the negotiations in Geneva. The services sector accounts for around 70% of Australia’s economic activity and accounts for around 17% of Australia’s total exports. Current countries negotiating the TiSA are Australia, Canada, Chile, Chinese Taipei, Colombia, Costa Rica, The European Union (representing its 28 Member States), Hong Kong, Iceland, Israel, Japan, Liechtenstein, Mexico, New Zealand, Norway, Pakistan, Panama, Paraguay, Peru, Republic of Korea, Switzerland, Turkey and the United States. These countries also account for around 70% of global trade in services. China and Uruguay have expressed interest but have yet to be invited, it’s also worth mentioning that the Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa (BRICS) bloc have not been invited.

The World Trade Organization (WTO) deals with the global rules of trade between nations and the General Agreement on Trade in Services (GATS) came into effect in April 1994, and involves all WTO members. The TiSA’s aim is to be compatible with GATS yet, set a new standard in services trade that covers all service sectors including health and public services; financial services; ICT services (including telecommunications and e-commerce); professional services; maritime transport services; air transport services; competitive delivery services; energy services; temporary entry of business persons; government procurement; and new rules on domestic regulation to ensure regulatory settings do not operate as a barrier to trade in services. The discussions are held behind closed doors as per other trade agreements, Wikileaks managed to leak draft text from the April 2014 round of discussions involving further deregulation of global financial services markets, despite the Global Financial Crisis (GFC). The draft Financial Services Annex sets rules to assist the expansion of financial multi-nationals into other nations by preventing regulatory barriers. The leaked draft also shows that the US is particularly keen on boosting cross-border data flow, allowing the uninhibited exchange of personal and financial data.

The Australian government has a web page for it’s involvement in TiSA and in the sixth April/May round that Australia also chaired, more than 140 negotiators and sector-specific government experts attended. There were advanced discussions in all areas of the negotiations, including on new and enhanced disciplines (trade rules) for financial services, domestic regulation and transparency, e-commerce and telecommunications, and maritime transport. TiSA parties also agreed to move to a negotiating text for air transport and market access negotiations also continued. The Global Services Coalition or “Team TiSA” organised a substantial industry presence in the margins of the negotiations and as the name suggests is pro the TiSA for the US. Trading in services has grown at a faster pace than trading in goods since the 1980s. The United Nations Conference on Trade And Development (UNCTAD) estimates that in 2013 global services exports reached $4.7 trillion and grew at an annual rate of 5%.  Overall, the services trade has grown by 95% since 2000. World Bank research shows that the services sector has become the dominant driver of economic growth in developing countries, delivering both GDP growth and poverty reduction.  In 2011, the services sector accounted for a massive 49% of GDP in low income countries and 47% in least developed countries. Team TiSA has every right to be cheering for it as it would benefit the US greatly. The US is the world’s largest single-country exporter and importer of services and they generate more than 75% of their national economic output. In 2013 the US exported over $681bn in services, resulting in a $231 billion surplus. Services exports in 2013 grew by $31.8 bn and services imports in 2013 grew by $12.9bn.

Australia chaired the ninth round early last December and this time it was attended by more than 200 negotiators and sector-specific government experts. Good progress was made in advancing the enhanced disciplines (trade rules) for e-commerce and telecommunications, domestic regulation and transparency, financial services, temporary entry of business persons, professional services, maritime and air transport services and delivery services. There was also further discussion of proposals on government procurement, environmental and energy services, and the facilitation of patient mobility. Parties reported on progress in bilateral market access discussions held since the September round and committed to advance these further in 2015. Besides the vagueness and secretiveness above and what it all means for every day Australians, one thing leaps out and that is the facilitation of patient mobility. Luckily another leak was sprung, the proposal was titled ‘A concept paper on health care services within TISA Negotiations’ and it states there is ‘huge untapped potential for the globalisation of healthcare services’ mainly because ‘health care services is (sic) funded and provided by state or welfare organisations and is of virtually no interest for foreign competitors due to lack of market-orientated scope for activity’. It was allegedly a proposal put forward by Turkey, and was discussed by TiSA members in the September round of discussions. And there are justifiable fears that they want to commodify health services globally as well as to promote “medical tourism” for patients.

Experts, such as Dr Odile Frank of Public Services International (PSI) say, ‘The proposal would raise health care costs in developing countries and lower quality in developed countries in Europe, North America, Australia and elsewhere’. Rosa Pavanelli, PSI General Secretary, also commented that ‘Health is a human right and is not for sale or for trade. The health system exists to keep our families safe and healthy, not to ensure the profits of large corporations’. The proposal could see patients being treated in other TiSA countries for reasons such as long waiting times in their home country or a lack of expertise for specific medical problems. The patients’s costs would need to be reimbursed through their own countries social security system, private insurance coverage or other healthcare arrangements.

The beneficiaries of this are the large health corporations and insurance companies, the ones actually behind the negotiations, that would benefit from an approximate $USD 6 trillion business. Public services are designed to provide vital social and economic necessities such as health care and education affordably, universally and on the basis of need. They exist because markets can’t produce these outcomes. Furthermore, public services are fundamental to ensuring fair competition for business, and they provide effective regulation to avoid environmental, social and economic disasters, such as the GFC and global warming. Even the most die-hard supporters of FTA’s admit that there are winners and losers.

New South Wales (NSW) Australia, Nurses and Midwives’ Association organiser Michael Whaites said: “Prime Minister Tony Abbott and Treasurer Joe Hockey have been saying that healthcare expenditure is unsustainable, but Trade Minister Andrew Robb is quietly engaged in negotiations that could potentially see scarce healthcare dollars going overseas”, and that “You can ask whether the government is working in a co-ordinated manner, and indeed what is their real intention on the future of Medicare?” Professor Jane Kelsey, an expert on trade in services at the University of Auckland, warns that health-service-exporting countries such as Australia could find qualified staff being diverted to health export services “that often have better pay and facilities, eroding the personnel base for public facilities and perpetuating inequalities in the health care system”. Education and training investments could also be diverted “to benefit foreign healthcare users, rather than local citizens and taxpayers”.

In August 2014 the Australian Health Department called for expressions of interest from private players interested in taking over the payments of $29bn each year in health and pharmaceutical benefits currently being managed by the Human Services. Human Services Minister Marise Payne said much of the Department of Human Services (DHS) IT infrastructure for processing the payments was old and needed to be replaced and that the private sector might have cheaper solutions. The government claims it is merely testing the market with an initial expression of Interest process, not via cost analysis or efficiencies already provided. Australia Post stuck it’s hand up from the get go and other Australian corporations that are keen are – Eftpos and Stellar (Telstra) with overseas companies being Oracle, Fuji-Xerox, SAP, Accenture and Serco.

It’s hard not feel that we are being attacked at from all angles with corporations eying off developing and developed countries public health services for profit. With an Australian government seemingly hell bent on dismantling its Medicare system with outsourcing payments while introducing co-payments, it’s looking clearer now as to what the current Australian government has planned. The rise of corporations and their lust for profits no matter what the cost is, has to stop. Governments must get out of bed with them and understand that they don’t know best and an even mix of private and government is required sometimes, but not all of the time. The people elect governments to govern and make decisions, we do not elect corporations. Take some advice from them but if you give them an inch they will take a mile as we have been seeing in recent years. Greed is worming it’s way in globally under the guise of competition and job creation. I find this very hard to believe for your average person, for the corporations yes, they keep getting richer and the equality gap wider. Low income countries delivering GDP growth and poverty reduction will be hardest hit and that’s not fair with many only just recovering from the GFC. The US has the most to benefit from this and all other FTA’s, this also needs to stop, they aren’t the biggest power anymore and even if they were why should they get all of the advantages? People over profits, after all you can’t make profits without us and there’s no need to ruin everyone globally once again for it.

This article was originally published on Political Omniscience as Corporations want to profit from global health with TiSA and the TPP.