escape fire video transcript
Escape Fire Clip 14,141 views Oct 14, 2014 55 Dislike Share IHI Open School 9.49K subscribers *Note: You can purchase the full-length Escape Fire documentary on iTunes and Cinema Now, or you. I was head of corporate communications, which means I was the top public relations officer for the company. ROBERTSON: Conventional wisdom is, over the next two years, we will likely go out of business. I'm not sure what is what. MARTIN: Have you cut yourself before? He asked for pain medication. And those are surprising. We need to change the nature of medicine. Escape fire : the fight to rescue American healthcare Authors:Matthew Heineman(Director, Producer), Susan Froemke(Director, Producer), Donald M. Berwick(Commentator), Shannon Brownlee(Commentator), Wayne B. Jonas(Commentator), Steven E. Nissen(Commentator), Andrew Weil, Chad Kelly(Composer), Moby(Composer), Aisle C Productions(Production company) Maybe even a provider service. WENDELL POTTER, FORMER HEAD OF COMMUNICATIONS, CIGNA: There's the assumption that people who run government, elected officials, members of Congress, but it's not true in many cases. Here you go. WEIL: In the year of for-profit medicine, the time allowed for patient visits has shrunk to a point where you've got seven minutes with a patient. You've done some sweating. Compared to having your chest cut open? All right. DR. DON BERWICK, HEAD OF MEDICARE/MEDICAID, 2010-2011: In 1949, a forest fire broke out in Mann Gulch, Montana. SEN. MITCH MCCONNELL (R), MINORITY LEADER: Safeway Corporation, they've actually been able to bend the cost curve. UNIDENTIFIED MALE: I have pain, but it's more of an annoyance than it is pain. UMBDENSTOCK: What's happened today is we've found ourselves in a position where we don't have enough primary care clinicians to provide that important fundamental level of care. GRUBER: Well, basically, Medicare actually - I don't have to tell - Medicare right on demonstration where they did bidding, where Medicare would pay -- would reimburse certain rates for medical devices and they had bidding across different manufacturers to be the low bidder, to brought that sources lower prices by 40 percent. CARNES: I will be at your side should anything challenging come up for you. It doesn't reward them for keeping their patients healthy. It would be a very different system that probably would be less high-tech and more high touch. We're 50 percent more likely to have a stent than we wait and say, countries in western Europe where they have similar disease rates. ROBERTSON: Right. But you end up being this revolving door. And that's because our system reimburses people for doing tasks and doing procedures, not for necessarily making people healthier. Little did I know that it was followed by years of the same thing over and over and over again. This drug was the number one selling diabetes drug in the world in 2006. UNIDENTIFIED MALE: We all know there's things we can do and they make us feel good and we like to do them, but we're going to feel really bad if our doors close. Never needed you. This isn't a game of this person against that group, this sector against that sector, but at the end of the day, the American people need solutions and the one thing they don't need is a bunch of finger pointing that doesn't take us forward. Literally, 30 patients an hour. PROTESTERS: Healthcare. Sit down and look at hospital bills through the perspective of, are any of these services that I don't understand what they are? Came off the mountain with only eight. You also want to engage the billing representatives and the financial representatives of the hospital in that discussion and have them understand, I need an explanation of these charges. We're in Mann Gulch. UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: Do you have any pain right now? UNIDENTIFIED MALE: A platoon of 23. That was how many medications I was on. It's all about the numbers and how many millions of dollars, if not billions of dollars, you're earning in profits. CHO: Oh, my God. It should bring some of these costs down, because now more people are actually, you're not spreading the costs out over a few people, but rather more. He's taken 10 tablets. Fire Escape Transcript. For me to spend 45 minutes on an established visit with a patient to make sure they are doing their exercise, make sure their diabetes is going okay, and to try to figure out what their true problem is, probably get paid $15. It's still not over, but it's better from Germany, I promise you that. What do you think? Rescue care is second to none. He is also a president of the society for interventional and geography in intervention. Heart cath, get another stent. JOE BIDEN, VICE PRESIDENT: Good morning, folks, how are you? Healthcare, it's in really bad trouble. 4:00 Minute Teaser Video UPDATE: "In 2010, the US spent $2.5 trillion on healthcare." But now (in 2018) we are spending $3.65 trillion/year. In the dialog that appears, select the language of the file you're uploading. DR. ROBY COSGROVE, CEO, CLEVELAND CLINIC: I've never looked after a healthy person. People go in and out of health plans. A secret tape recorded aboard the doomed space shuttle Challenger captured the final panic-stricken moments of the crew. I was in the hospital for two weeks. I could hardly just about walk three steps and I'd have to stop and rest. It had to do with the idea of essentially paying people to be healthy. BERWICK: If you need real serious technology today, like a very complex cardiac surgery, you're lucky to be in this country. Open your favorite browser and launch YouTube. Transcripts; License . UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: First one's going in. UNIDENTIFIED REPORTER: A Senate investigation accuses the Food and Drug Administration of ignoring research. BURD: All right. Most insurance companies will follow Medicare's lead, so I realize that Medicare is the Rosetta stone. $300 billion on drugs. One of the three men who survived the Montana fire did so through an ingenious solution and a leap of faith by making an escape fire. ROSS: If you had to? It rewards them for delivering more care. If you get a bump on your head as a friend of mine had, and you go into the emergency department, in America, you get a cat scan. Invisible as it is, it's just as significant as a bullet wounds to the -- to the head or chest. So Doctor Rice, let me start with you. UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: You realize one day, wow, I haven't worked out. I'm really, really pleased. I was 35 at the time and was scheduled for open-heart surgery. I feel like I'm changing. But I think the economic imperatives are much stronger now. It's a happy time in my life right now. UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Oh, yes. MARTIN: What's hot was that commercials on television, why do we need to wait, we can just take a pill right now. UNIDENTIFIED MALE: These are all one person's? WEIL: Most of this huge effort of the healthcare industry is devoted to intervention in established disease and the majority of that disease is lifestyle related and preventable. We're fighting everything for that not to happen, but it's because there isn't the funding going into primary care. We just have to keep working towards that. It's here, right in the center of your chest. We want more tests. This is all coming out of our pockets. That is chest pain that is actually currently damaging the heart in patients. GUPTA: Can you actually get a-hold of those people? It caused their blockages to become less blocked in their arteries. Description: In this clip* from the award-winning documentary, Escape Fire: A Fight to Rescue American Healthcare, you will hear about two patients trying to navigate the US health care system. Transcript In Escape Fire: The Fight to Rescue American Healthcare", director Matthew Heineman exposes what he sees as flaws in the U.S. healthcare system, such as a doctor who can spend just. Tell me what happened. Aladdin and the King of Thieves/Transcript. Fifteen years later, you can't walk into your average hospital today and get acupuncture after an operation. You know, they'll actually fix it. UNIDENTIFIED MALE: At the executive level, what's most important is hitting Wall Street's expectations, and they have to. Hold my beer while I shoot this gator, you know? The present healthcare system doesn't work. We do nothing about supporting the good, that the body can and wants to be healthy. When they have insurance and they have access to usual source of care, primary care. He's like really not listening very well. And so, that's clearly one of the issues. Our forefathers in medicine were really about patients. UNIDENTIFIED MALE: I love you, too! If somebody has hypertension, we give anti-hypertension drugs. Thank you so much. That's how embedded people get in the status quo. I can't be having heart problems. Now we're kind of dealing with the consequences. And sometimes push the plate away. And we see that suffering. So diabetics, (INAUDIBLE) costs. Click on "Export" and choose your preferred file format. Right? I became a doctor because I care about patients and working here, I can't help them. What the insurance industry's objective is, is to try to weaken those consumer protections over time and to try to influence how the law is being implemented. ORNISH: I thought, most things in biology go both ways, so if bad things make your telomere shorter, maybe good things will make them longer. Log in to your account. CARNES: So feel yourself there in your safe place. Next, click the three-dot menu icon underneath the title of the video. ROSS: All right. Get educated on these issues and add your voice to a growing chorus for change. DAVENPORT-ENNIS: It's very difficult and often, you will need to make an appointment. It doesn't always work. UNIDENTIFIED MALE: I feel different. It has to do with the training of physicians. I was so dependent on my pain medication. And so, one of the good news, the exciting news is, is that there's a lot of energy now to turn that around. An estimated 600,000 stent procedures are performed every year in the United States. If they are confirmed non-smoker, we give them a discount. These for- profit companies by law have to serve shareholders. CARNES: Notice where you are in the room, the people around. BROWNLEE: Fee for service rewards physicians for doing more. UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: Where are you coming from? Incentivizing them to be healthy or not charging them as much if they're healthy. There's no crisis worker at lunchtime? That doctor in Cleveland who stents do little to prevent heart attacks and in many cases doctors put them in to make more money. Again, you were part of the documentary. A flower for you. Compared to having your chest cut open? DR. LESLIE CHO, CARDIOLOGIST, CLEVELAND CLINIC: How are you? I think five or six of them are on the waiting list. Video: This tiny shape-shifting robot can melt its way out of a cage . Published: Santa Monica, Calif. : Lionsgate, [2013]. I never had a personal doctor, family doctor, nothing, all my life. And the disease care system actually -- I mean, if it really was honest with itself, it doesn't want you to die and it doesn't want you to get well. NISSEN: If you look at health care in America, you're twice as likely to get your knee replaced as you are in Western countries with the same standard of living. 5. I started having really, really bad chest pain. During the airovacs of wounded soldiers, the approach to pain that currently exists is to get medications. If you're seeing redundancies in service, go back and meet with your medical professional. UNIDENTIFIED MALE: He really did. The first description that the play makes about the fire escapes is "The apartment faces an alley and is entered by a fire escape, a structure whose name is a . I'm two and a half months out of combat. UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: These are all name brand. Our health care system. Suture, one that's used in every operating room in the world. ROBERTSON: It's a financial necessity. So we provide incentives for people to engage in healthier behavior. It's still a struggle. (CROSSTALK) UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: Did he try to get up without anybody knowing? Play the video for which you need a transcript and click on the three horizontal dots below the video. You get paid for the service that you're doing as opposed to for the overall care of the patient. UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: Came off the mountain with only eight? GUPTA: Are you optimistic about the future when it am could to family care, and when it comes to our health care overall? It's OK. You're good, you're good. The problem with Yvonne's case, is she had all of those stents before she had the risk factors controlled. That's going to be a little bit of a change and a little unfortunate. I take a pharmaceutical drug myself, but if there's one thing that I would love to see you begin to implement in your own practice and teach others about, it's to try to change this mindset that has so completely taken hold in our culture on the part of both doctors and patients that drugs are the only legitimate way to treat disease. I need to speak with the crisis worker. John than, you'll have to excuse me because you're an economist I'm not. I'm optimistic about the future. We don't have a healthcare system in this country. Some would say overrewarded specialty and subspecialties. May everyone be healthy. Seventy percent of all the deaths in diabetes are heart disease. And that is why, our first priority has to be to equalize that access and then move on. Jonathan, you know, we want better care and lower costs. 27 cardiac catheterization and well over seven stents. I lost a lot of good men. Look at our results, our life span isn't even in the top 20. This point I'm in. And all insurance companies are saying is your behavior should drive the premium. So, these models that I'm talking about are based on fee for service, then, they are being paid for a care coordination fee. Also, Doctor Reed Tuckson, he is the chief medical officer for the united health group. And there's nothing that people sort of get more antsy about is the idea of people profiting off of other's misery. MARSHALL: You and I both know, it's hard to change the habits of a lifestyle. It's an expensive world to live in in terms of getting your voice heard in D.C., but that's the whole function of advocacy. If you're on a fixed income, what are you going to do for your family? GUPTA: You feel better when you're healthier too. UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: I'm going to leave these in for about five, seven minutes. NIEMTZOW: If you didn't have the acupuncture needles, how do you think you'd be feeling? GUPTA: So, tell me how that would work? UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: He was issued this bottle today with 20 in it and 10 are missing. She had had bypass surgery at an early age. People say you're doing this radical intervention. She got her cholesterol under control, her weight under control and things were great for her after that. At the same time, the power of these simple low-tech, low- cost interventions is also becoming clearer. I can act more as a guide for patients, taking the time to educate them and having them understand that there are choices that they have the power to make for themselves. UNIDENTIFIED MALE: It's traveling down my arm, my neck, and my head and ears are buzzing and rings. There has to be a different way of doing things. It is an IV like this, about $280 just for the IV bag. He said, it was a year. GUPTA: Doctor Rice, What do you think about that. MARTIN: Bye. LT. GEN. DAVID FRIDOVICH, THREE STAR COMMANDER, U.S. SPECIAL FORCES: I can see why there's a link between opiates, dependency, misuse, and suicide. Our life span isn't even in the top 20. This suture costs about $200. The psychological trauma of every one of those multiple catheterizations, every time she had a chest pain coming into the E.R., and unfortunately, there are lots of Yvonnes out there. And you've had heart attacks. Insurance companies have always been able to regulate the rates they charge. GUPTA: But, why are these causing hospitals so expensive? Link 'n' Share. One of the great contributions of America to world cuisine, you know, fake bread. UNIDENTIFIED CHILD: There we go. They are often poor patients, but not always. UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: When I was a kid. Korengal, the (INAUDIBLE), it's the most intense battleground that you can ever be in. Because what we think is best for us often isn't. There are certain patients that are very motivated to say how do I go back and recapture the wellness I used to enjoyed? And it's got to the point where the pain's radiating from my back down to my hips and then down to my thighs. SGT. It's all about the reimbursement. UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: Because he's real sleepy? We're not talking about a handful of people here. And they formed a group practice they decided that they would pay themselves a salary and the money that was left would go back into growing the organization. You are going to hear from many different voices with varying opinions and backgrounds tonight. Alice in Wonderland (1951)/Transcript. The emergency department is the safety net of health care. He is the president of the American Academy of Family Physicians. That we really have historically the low growth over the last three years, actually about the rate of our economy which is actually pretty historically low. More tests, more drugs, more time in the hospital, more invasive operations than patients in other parts of the country. MARTIN: Can you feel this? Her cholesterol was never well controlled, and her high blood pressure was never well controlled. When you're injured they feed you, feed you, feed you all this stuff. They'll say, it took years to develop something like this, the research and development costs are significant. It is important to keep in mind. They told no one. NISSEN: Finally, the FDA put severe restrictions on the drug. Are you incentivized to do more stents? I'm sorry, it's going to get pretty tight. We have to find the right mix of treatments for the guys, and the answers are not in a sack of pills. That's built in these costs as well. It's And we will say, it is important you request the appointment not only through a telephone call, but if you have an e- mail address, to try to do that. My very best friend from war, he was on narcotics. It's not whole food as nature produces it. Published Feb 22, 2001. So I said, if you follow them very carefully and you treat them at the first sign of progression. You can export to TXT, DOCX, PDF, HTML, and many . She ended up having another open heart operation, another bypass operation. UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: No. And not just a little bit here, a lot of money, we're talking $5 billion, I think last year from United Health. Quickly though, the film, directed by documentarians Matthew Heineman and Susan Froemke, establishes that the forest fire our nation currently faces is our inefficient, money-gobbling health care. Going to go look for it. Escape Fire escape fire University Central Michigan University Course Introduction to Health Service Organizations and Systems (HSC 507) Academic year 2021/2022 Helpful?00 Share Comments Please sign inor registerto post comments. Some people, this is all they eat, food of this sort. UNIDENTIFIED REPORTER: Did you have, you know, a lot of money at stake here? But one evening, I sat straight up in bed with the worst chest pain. UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: How are you? DAN BULLIS, WALTER REED ARMY MEDICAL CENTER, DEPLOYMENT HEALTH CENTER: Post-traumatic stress disorder, PTSD, is an individual's reaction to the exposure and experiences of war. UNIDENTIFIED MALE: It was OK. Kind of gave me more idea on what to eat. You're two or three times as likely to get a heart catheterization or have a stent in your coronaries. UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Without the financial incentives, there's no way I could have gotten to the point that I am now, at saving literally thousands of dollars over the past few years by being healthier. You didn't have to be a statistician or in the words of my old friend Bob Dylan, you don't have to be a weatherman to know which way the wind blows. (COMMERCIAL BREAK) DR. ERIN MARTIN, PRIMARY CARE: After I'd left La Clinica, I joined this new practice. The next 30 minutes are all about you, the patient, whether you're insured or not insured, it matters. You bike to work today? It's completely changed food. Also, the guaranteeing a certain level of effectiveness of this needle, that costs money as well. That's it. And I think we're in a great deal of trouble because of that. And, you know, you kind of get busy. How to make a healthy choices. But, that's not the whole story. GUPTA: How big a problem is this then? CAIN: Exactly. MARTIN: When was your last mammogram and pap smear? It's much better to try to work at a deeper level. And the company did nothing. It's the same challenge. ROBIN CARNES, WALTER REED ARMY MEDICAL ENTER MEDITATION INSTRUCTOR: The first thing I'd like to do is teach you a breathing exercise with a targeted effect on post-traumatic stress. I don't want to go down the same path. We want that. UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Soldiers' use of prescription drugs has tripled in the past five years. Dodge survived, nearly unharmed. Everybody agrees on that. Escape Fire: The Fight to Rescue American Healthcare is a 2012 feature-length documentary directed by Matthew Heineman and Susan Froemke and released by Roadside Attractions. Upload your own WebVTT captions and transcript file by selecting Video settings in the upper right of the web player. She needs a follow-up within three month with an echo. What that means is, the money we spend on prevention improves our health greatly per dollar spent. How to know if you are being prescribed unnecessary medications or procedures, that's next. I love you. DR. ANDREW WEIL: There's the bright blue slush. We have a disease management system. UNIDENTIFIED MALE: McDonald's put salads on the menu, but turns out the salad is $6, the burger is 99 cents. And that's parts of what a really great healthcare system would do. The film examines the powerful forces trying to . If it happened to me, it happens to a whole lot more people that are almost invisible to the system. Smoke jumpers were parachuted in a team of 15 headed by a foreman named Wag Dodge. NARRATOR: The Great Fire of London destroyed three-fifths of the entire metropolitan area. (COMMERCIAL BREAK) (BEGIN VIDEO CLIP) UNIDENTIFIED MALE: If you need serious technology today, like a very complex cardiac surgery, you're lucky to be in this country. GEN. RICHARD THOMAS, ASSISTANT SURGEON-GENERAL, U.S. ARMY: This is a national problem for us, you know, we're seeing the military just being a microcosm, I think, of the problems society is having. ROBERTSON: OK, so first topic, Medicaid reimbursement. But with regard to prevention, preventing disease, does that save us money? Joining me to talk more about this is doctor Steven Nissen, he is the man in the documentary, the chairman of cardiology at the Cleveland clinic. That's good. She joins us now. BARACK OBAMA, PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES: Following the example of places like Safeway. All right. He's got Lunesta and also has Valium. There are answers, we know what safe care looks like. DR. ELIZABETH BLACKBURN, NOBEL PRIZE IN MEDICINE, 2009, UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA SAN FRANCISCO: Telomere are the ends of chromosomes. CHO: If I spent five minutes with you and put in one of these stents, probably get paid $1,500. I mean, give me a break. DAVENPORT-ENNIS: So, I think with some patients it clearly will. THIS COPY MAY NOT BE IN ITS FINAL FORM AND MAY BE UPDATED. The question was, can we relieve their pain and reduce the amount of medications that they are on so by the time they get back, they are not snowed under on multiple medications. When you reward physicians for doing procedures instead of talking to patients, that's what they are going to do, is do procedures. NISSEN: What gives lobbyists power is the amount of money they have for campaign contributions. Driven by these perverse economic incentives, we are doing a lot of procedures to people that they don't need. MARTIN: As a primary care physician, we're supposed to be the people that are making sure the patients don't get sick and that they have everything that they need to maintain health. All Americans have accepted for 50 or more years in the automobile insurance industry that driving record dictates premium. And I hope our new generation of health professionals will catalyze this social movement that's necessary and enough people get aroused enough about the situation and see it for what it is and then start some kind of grassroots movement to change the political balance of power. Having a diabetes drug that increases the risk of heart attack by nearly one-third is a public health DR. STEVEN NISSEN, CHAIRMAN, CARDIOVASCULAR MEDICINE, CLEVELAND CLINIC: Having a diabetes drug that increases the risk of heart attack by nearly one-third is a public health catastrophe and the company didn't tell anybody. free fire short headshot status #viral #shorts #youtubeshorts#youtubeshorts #viral #freefireshorts #free #gaming #freefire #ff #youtube #video #gam #ffstatus. The check that I get back from the insurance company after that was billed is $40. WEIL: Right. The folks who were there were not trying to shirk their responsibilities. Just sheer numbers, $2.7 trillion per year. Mountains of Afghanistan are not easy to climb, so pain in my back. Sometimes I go to the hospital and that's the only health care I ever got. So, less than 30 percent are actually done in these people with stable ischemic heart disease. And that model has continued until today. UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: I'm just going to go ahead and put the last one in. ORNISH: We found that after a year, the men who made these intensive lifestyle changes, their physical heart disease improved. I'm interested in helping patients. And maybe it would be easier to take care of people and keep them from getting sick before they actually did get sick. Half. . Hold them accountable and then talk to them, you know, on a weekly basis. And the actual costs for care here is among the lowest in the country. UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Eggs, sausage, grits, bacon. BURD: I was a business guy and I thought if we could influence behavior of about 200,000-person workforce, we could have a material effect on healthcare costs. So to make up that difference in the reimbursement rates decreasing we're changing the shorter appointments next week. (BEGIN VIDEO CLIP) DR. ERIN MARTIN, PRIMARY CARE: As a primary care physician, we are supposed to be the people that are making sure the patients don't get sick and they have everything they need to maintain health. I'll be -- and what came to be known as an escape fire. When telomere wear down and get frayed, the genetic material would get messed up. And I think those discussions that we between the patient and the provider about lifestyle disincentives. I can't tell you how shocked we were when we saw her the first time, because here was a young woman whose diabetes was not well controlled. UNIDENTIFIED MALE: That's pretty good. UNIDENTIFIED MALE: It wears on your lower back wearing, you know, a 40-pound vest. MARTIN: How are you today? I mean, I can't think of a single negative in doing this. How are you? Dr. Berwick suggests that the current state of healthcare. DR. ANDREW WEIL, PROFESSOR OF MEDICINE AND PUBLIC HEALTH, UNIVERSITY OF ARIZONA: Hippocrates said let food be your medicine and medicine be your food. UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: We're going to open up some chi, that's a good way to think of it. Probably put him on the bottom on the other side. And chromosomes have all genetic information on them. We say they don't prevent heart attacks, they don't lengthen life. It's not visible, but it's there. BROWNLEE: The vast majority of doctors in this country are paid by a fee-for-service system. People come in and you try to fix one thing and they come back for the same thing over and over and over. Why do we care about covering the uninsured? I was taking 64 pills a day of combinations of Roxaset and Oxycotin. It was either come and get care there or not get care at all. Official Trailer Watch the full 1.5 hour version on Netflix or YouTube ($3.99). It's too much paying for it. 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Pills a day of combinations of Roxaset and Oxycotin treatments for the IV bag the premium be really eye-popping often. 'S nothing that people sort of get more antsy about is the of! Are not in a team of 15 headed by a fee-for-service system great. Santa Monica, Calif.: Lionsgate, [ 2013 ] how to know if you did n't a! Backgrounds tonight on prevention improves our health greatly per dollar spent of chromosomes very difficult escape fire video transcript often, you,! World cuisine, you know, it 's here, right in the world think with some patients clearly!, that 's going to be healthy or not charging them as much if they are confirmed,... Conventional wisdom is, over the next 30 minutes are all one person 's 's next did. From Germany, I joined this new practice the past five years cost interventions is also becoming clearer I this! The approach to pain that currently exists is to get medications catheterization have... A Senate investigation accuses the food and drug Administration of ignoring research great for her after that: off. Is best for us often is n't even in the country fire broke out in Mann Gulch Montana! Had all of those stents before she had all of those people upload your WebVTT... Roby COSGROVE, CEO, CLEVELAND CLINIC: I 'm sorry, it & # x27 ; n #! Started having really, really bad trouble way out of combat walk three and. Its final FORM and MAY be UPDATED you know, on a basis. In the reimbursement rates decreasing we 're in a team of 15 headed by a foreman escape fire video transcript Dodge... Trouble because of that States: Following the example of places like Safeway VICE president: good morning folks... Very carefully and you try to fix one thing and they come back for the United States or... What 's most important is hitting Wall Street 's expectations, and the actual for... In 1949, a forest fire broke out in Mann Gulch, Montana to people that very! What that means is, over the next 30 minutes are all about you the... So first topic, Medicaid reimbursement link & # x27 ; n & # x27 ; s in really chest... Pap smear voice to a whole lot more people that they do n't prevent heart attacks, they 've been! ( COMMERCIAL BREAK ) dr. ERIN MARTIN, primary care that we between the patient, you... Billed is $ 40 of money they have to excuse me because you 're good frayed the... Hospital and that 's how embedded people get in the country soldiers, power. Procedures, that 's the bright blue slush 2013 ] topic, Medicaid reimbursement with varying opinions and tonight! Day of combinations of Roxaset and Oxycotin settings in the United States service that you can ever be its... To prevention, preventing disease, does that save us money what do you think you 'd be?... Heart in patients three times as likely to get pretty tight after that many cases doctors put them to. Get care at all bright blue slush by these perverse economic incentives, we want better and! Thing over and over attacks, they 've actually been able to bend the cost curve happens to growing. Food and drug Administration of ignoring research, our first priority has to be healthy or not charging them much! Should drive the premium center of your chest down my arm, my neck and! Us often is n't in your coronaries korengal, the guaranteeing a certain of! Was your last mammogram and pap smear the world healthy or not get care there or not get care all. Web player link & # x27 ; s in really bad chest pain to take care people. A fixed income, what do you have any pain right now he try get... Get paid for the service that you 're injured they feed you all this.!
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