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Overtreated: Why Too Much Medicine Is Making Us Sicker and Poorer

Shannon Brownlee
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The bottom layer would become Medicaid, which would cover the indigent; the middle layer would be Medicare, which would cover the costs of hospital, nursing home, and home health care for the elderly; and the top layer he borrowed from Bettercare, a voluntary supplemental insurance to cover doctor's fees, in and out of hospitals. Cohen said later, "Like everyone else in the room, I was stunned by Mills' strategy. It was the most brilliant legislative move I'd seen in thirty years.

Prescription for Nutritional Healing, 4th Edition: A Practical A-to-Z Reference to Drug-Free Remedies Using Vitamins, Minerals, Herbs & Food Supplements

Phyllis A. Balch, CNC
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Special sitz bath basins are available on the Internet or at local home health care retailers, the same ones who supply wheelchairs and other medical appliances. You can fill another basin with water that is a few degrees warmer, and immerse your feet in it while sitting in the sitz bath. If no suitable basins are available, place the sitz bath water in a bathtub. You may wish to cover your body with a sheet or blanket to increase your comfort. As discussed above, the temperature of the water should vary according to the type of illness you are treating.

Generation Rx: How Prescription Drugs are Altering American Lives, Minds, and Bodies

Greg Critser
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There were other places to find them as well: at YMCAs, in low-income churches, and by networking through the home health care programs of community hospitals. Kilpatrick was then able to show how such tactics had worked in "saving" one large company's launch of a new drug for major depression disorder. "At an approximate cost of $600,000, the rescue recruitment program gained 125 new randomized clinical-trial patients ... and brought the study in on schedule. Without the agency's assistance, the study would have been delayed by 8.6 months.

Medical Herbalism: The Science Principles and Practices Of Herbal Medicine

David Hoffman, FNIMH, AHG
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Broader Context of Treatment In Herbal home health care, Dr. Christopher recommends the following fomentation.9 (A fomentation is the application of hot moist substances to the body.) Fomentation Verbascum thapsus 3 parts Lobelia inflata 1 part Make a strong infusion of dried herb mixture. Dip a cloth in the fomentation and wrap around the neck at night, repeating the procedure each night until the condition clears up. References 1. National Center for Chronic Disease Prevention and Health Promotion, www.cdc.gov/tobacco/hlthcon.htm 2. Hirono I, Mori H, Culvenor CC.

Making Them Pay: How to Get the Most from Health Insurance and Managed Care

Rhonda D. Orin
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Home Health Care Agency: An organization currently certified or licensed by the state to render home health care services Hospital: An institution rendering inpatient and outpatient services for the medical care of the sick or injured. It must be accredited as a Hospital by either the Joint Commission on Accreditation of Health Care Facilities or the Bureau of Hospitals of the American Osteopathic Association. A Hospital may be a general, acute-care, or a specialty institution, provided that it is appropriately accredited as such, and currently licensed by the proper state authorities.

The China Study: The Most Comprehensive Study of Nutrition Ever Conducted and the Startling Implications for Diet, Weight Loss and Long-term Health

T. Colin Campbell, Ph.D. and Thomas M. Campbell II
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The angioplasty procedure alone costs $31,000, and bypass surgery costs $46,000.32 In marked contrast, the year-long lifestyle intervention program only costs $7,000. By comparing the patients who underwent the lifestyle program with those patients who underwent the traditional route of surgery, Dr. Ornish and his colleagues demonstrated that the lifestyle intervention program cut costs by an average of $30,000 per patient.32 Much work remains to be done. The health care establishment is structured to profit from chemical and surgical intervention.

Medical Herbalism: The Science Principles and Practices Of Herbal Medicine

David Hoffman, FNIMH, AHG
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Herbal home health care. Springville, UT: Christopher Publications, 1976. 16 THE NERVOUS SYSTEM Afascinating aspect of herbalism is the way in which plants affect human consciousness. The integration of all life revealed by the Gaia hypothesis shows us that awareness and expanded consciousness are part of the greater being we belong to. Words and names are meaningless when considering such things, but just as our Earth feeds us, heals our arthritis, and strengthens the function of our hearts, so it supports and nurtures our nervous systems.

Making Them Pay: How to Get the Most from Health Insurance and Managed Care

Rhonda D. Orin
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Offer of coverage for home health care (Sees. 59A-22-36; 59A-46-40; 59A-46-27). NEW YORK Baseline mammograms ages 35-39, every 2 years ages 40-49, every year age 50 and over or at any age for high-risk persons (Sees. 3216(i)(ll); 3221 (1)(11)). Pap smears for women over the age of 18 (Sees. 3216(i)(15); 3221(1)(14)). Preventive and primary care services to age 19, not subject to deductibles and coinsurance (Sees. 3216(i)(17); 3221(1)(8)). Diagnosis and treatment of correctable medical conditions resulting in infertility (Sees. 3216(i)(13); 3221(k)(6)).

The Medical Racket

Martin L. Cross
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The same is true of people who work in medical labs, nursing homes, home health care businesses, etc. You are not a "snitch," but a hero. VThe investigations, which are now in the hands of the state fraud units, the FBI, and the Inspector Generals, have to become more centralized, with a common computer operation and joint task forces. At present, each group is doing too much of its own thing. A special bureau in the Department of Justice should be enlarged to handle the multiforce investigations. A good estimate is that less than ten percent of the medical fraud is currently being uncovered.

Alternative Cures: The Most Effective Natural Home Remedies for 160 Health Problems

Bill Gottlieb
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If you are using homeopathy for home health care, however, there are some guidelines that you need to follow. Always check with your primary health care provider to be sure that your condition does not require immediate medical attention. Take the remedies one at a time, as combining remedies reduces their effectiveness. Be sure to follow dosage instructions carefully, and stop taking the remedy as soon as you see improvement because, in rare cases, taking too much of a remedy may make symptoms worse.

The Medical Racket

Martin L. Cross
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First American Health Care), the nation's largest home health care provider, had filed $14 million in fraudulent billings. According to the Inspector General of HHS handling the case, that included many items "solely for the personal use and enjoyment of its owners"—even a BMW for the owner's son!

The Herbal Drugstore

Linda B. White, M.D.
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Sage (Salvia officinalis) This common culinary herb has many home health care applications and is easily preserved by drying bundled sprigs. Plant it in well-drained, moderately rich soil and full sun, and sage will bloom around June and draw clusters of bees. In shade, it tends to pout. Sage tea can be used as a gargle for sore throats, mouth ulcers, and gingivitis, and it has a high mineral content. Sage often figures in formulas for premenstrual syndrome.

How to Get Out of the Hospital Alive: A Guide to Patient Power

Sheldon P. Blau, M.D., F.A.C.P., F.A.C.R. and Elaine Fantle Shimberg
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This latter merger, called an integrated care delivery system, purportedly offers patients greater continuity between hospital and home health care or hospice services. It also limits choices for the patient. The old expression, "You pays your money, you gets your choice," doesn't seem to be applicable anymore, at least not when it comes to health insurance. Often, your particular health care insurance dictates where you will receive your medical care and by whom.
Social workers not only act as the patient advocate while the patient is hospitalized, but also are knowledgeable of the services available in your particular community, such as home health care, respite care, nursing homes, assisted living facilities, Meals on Wheels, and so on. They can direct you or your family member to a service agency as needed for family problems; availability of equipment such as hospital bed, bedside commode, or wheelchair; economic needs; ongoing outside counseling; and so on.
How Hospice Helps Sometimes, the reason you want to get out of the hospital alive is so that you can go home to die. This home health care for the terminally ill is called hospice care. (There also are hospice facilities in some hospitals, and free-standing hospice centers.) In the past twenty years, more patients are turning their backs on high-tech impersonal death and have been asserting their right to die at home, surrounded by their loved ones. Using hospice care doesn't mean, however, that you are abandoning your right to medical care.

Making Them Pay: How to Get the Most from Health Insurance and Managed Care

Rhonda D. Orin
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The "Other Care" column covers issues like dental care, vision care, home health care, infertility care, and cosmetic surgery. Many Benefits sections provide some, but very limited, coverage in these areas. For example, while they do not cover routine dental procedures and services, such as annual office visits to dentists or filling cavities, they may cover dental needs that arise out of certain types of injuries; surgery for congenital defects, such as cleft lip and cleft palate; or medical treatment for fractures, tumors, and cysts.

The Medical Racket

Martin L. Cross
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To receive home health care, a Medicare patient must be homebound and under the care of a doctor, who certifies his case and outlines treatment. The system has zoomed to new heights in recent years, with 25,000 firms entering the business. In 1990 it cost Medicare $3.3 billion, but by 1994 that had risen to $12 billion, and is estimated today at almost $20 billion a year. The number of patients has grown simultaneously, from 1.9 to 5 million. Because Washington thought home care would be cheaper than longer hospital stays, it set up a system that encourages fraud.

Alternative Medicine the Definitive Guide, Second Edition

Larry Trivieri, Jr.
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There have been many sincere attempts to teach laypeople to use manual muscle testing as a method of home health care, but there are definite limitations to diagnostic conclusions made by someone not properly trained in manual muscle testing. The skill of the practitioner in the accuracy of performing manual muscle testing, and the diagnostic conclusions that one makes regarding the outcome of a muscle test, are very significant.

Making Them Pay: How to Get the Most from Health Insurance and Managed Care

Rhonda D. Orin
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Most plans cover home health care by nurses and/or aides, when prescribed by a doctor. Many, however, do not offer extensive details about when they will provide this coverage. If you think this benefit may be important to you, ask for more information. Otherwise just review what's there and mark it down on the chart. Limited coverage for infertility treatments is available under most plans. While most plans claim to cover the "diagnosis and treatment of infertility," the only covered treatment often is limited to intracervical insemination—and not all plans cover that.

The Medical Racket

Martin L. Cross
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In Dade County, Florida, five doctors have been charged with fraud in a massive home health care swindle, part of a 102-count indictment being prosecuted by the U.S. Attorney for South Florida. The scheme, which involved officials of Mederi of Dade County, a home health agency, was extra bold. Seven defendants pled guilty; twelve including the corporation, are going to trial. In return for sizable kickbacks, physicians allegedly signed home health certifications and plans of treatment for patients they had never seen. According to Wilfredo Fernandez, special counsel for the U. S.
In one case, the government suspected that a home health care firm gave gifts to the head of hematology at the University of New Mexico Hospital, ostensibly to encourage him to make referrals. Days after his office was searched by the FBI, he killed himself. Kickback scams are omnipresent in medicine. Dishonest and ingenious doctors can take in sums much greater than $100,000 a year. In one case involving Caremark International, a Minneapolis-based home care company, a federal grand jury indicted them for paying astronomical kickbacks to one physician. How much?

Reinventing Medicine: Beyond Mind-Body to a New Era of Healing

Larry Dossey
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Linda Whitson, of Mansfield, Texas, a registered nurse working in home health care, experienced a typical telesomatic connection with one of her patients: I have had several telesomatic experiences over the past few years. These events have involved my children, close friends, or patients I feel bonded to. All of the occurrences have involved a death or potential life-threatening danger. For example, I received a call about i a.m. regarding a patient I had been seeing on weekly basis. Her daughter had already called 911. I went to my patient's home and had never seen her looking so bad.

Physician: Medicine and the Unsuspected Battle for Human Freedom

Richard Leviton
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The category with the greatest growth was in home health care, which grew by 244%; this category, incidentally, is often provided by nurses, who tend to be more open to alternative medicine approaches. • Mass market sales of medicinal herbs in U.S. drugstores and supermarkets grew by 35% in 1994, worth $106.7 million in sales. Topping the list were garlic, whose drugstore sales grew by 40% to $12.9 million, and ginseng, whose sales climbed by 28% to $31.1 million. Their sales in food stores were even higher: garlic sales in retail food outlets grew by 40% to $12.

The Medical Racket

Martin L. Cross
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Nursing Home Cheats Nursing homes, like home health care, are another growing arena for taxpayer-paid medicine. Today, over 1 million beneficiaries—the aged and those leaving hospitals who need skilled nursing care—are covered by Medicare Part A, the hospitalization segment. Medicare Part B covers the cost of doctors, lab work, ambulance, and medical supplies for 2 million patients in nursing homes. Medicaid covers nursing home care for the poor over the age of twenty-one, and now numbers some 3 million patients at a cost of some $35 billion a year, paid by both the states and Washington.

Choices in Healing: Integrating the Best of Conventional and Complementary Approaches to Cancer

Michael Lerner
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If you choose to die at home, the choice of home health care aides skilled in helping people die is at least as important as the physician and nurses you work with. 10. Some people are afraid that making practical estate arrangements or other arrangements for dying means that they have given up the fight for life. My general experience is that preparing for the possibility of death does not interfere with the fight for life at all—in fact it can enhance it, because you have taken away the worry of not having dealt with these very practical matters.

20 Years of Censored News

Carl Jensen
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Unfortunately, such optimism was misplaced; it did not take health care providers long before they developed a series of medscam techniques including upcoding, unbundling, pharmacy fraud, psychiatric schemes, home health care overbilling, and "ghost" patients. SOURCE: Mother Jones, March/April 1995, "Medscam," by L.J. Davis. UPDATE: Despite the skyrocketing costs of medical care, medical fraud continues unabated.

Making Them Pay: How to Get the Most from Health Insurance and Managed Care

Rhonda D. Orin
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Network Provider: A physician, Hospital, skilled nursing facility, home health care Agency, or any other duly licensed or certified institution or health professional which, at the time of providing or referring Covered Services, was under contract with us to provide Covered Services to our Members. Network Specialist: A Network Provider who has limited his or her practice to certain areas of medicine and who, at the time of providing or referring Covered Services, was under contract with us to provide Covered Services to our Members.



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