Kev

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Kev

Kev

@Kev19081874

Freedom of Choice - Bodily Autonomy - My Body My Choice - Less Government Intrusion - Works in the energy industry

Australia Katılım Eylül 2020
1.1K Takip Edilen939 Takipçiler
Kev retweetledi
Ryan Cole MD
Ryan Cole MD@DoctorCole·
Why is healthcare broken? Big money, over health. Government gave the power to the poker game. You are not at the table.
Peter Girnus 🦅@gothburz

I am Sam Hazen, CEO of HCA Healthcare. The largest for-profit hospital system in the United States. One hundred and eighty-two hospitals. Twenty states. I oversee a spreadsheet called the chargemaster. It has 42,000 line items. Each line item is a price. The prices are not real. I need to be precise about that. They are not estimates. Not approximations. Not market rates. They are anchors. An anchor is a number you set high so that every negotiated discount feels like a victory. No relationship to cost. No relationship to value. A relationship to leverage. My team sets the anchors. That is the job. The price is correct. Take a drug. Keytruda. Immunotherapy. Treats sixteen types of cancer. The manufacturer charges approximately $11,000 per dose. That is the acquisition cost. What the hospital pays. My team enters it into the chargemaster. They do not enter $11,000. They enter $43,000. That is the gross charge. The gross charge is a fiction. No one pays it. No one is expected to pay it. The gross charge exists so that when Blue Cross negotiates a 68% discount, they pay $13,760, and the contract says "68% discount" and both parties feel the transaction was rigorous. A 68% discount on a fictional price produces a real price that is 25% above acquisition cost. That margin is where I live. My 2025 compensation was $26.5 million. Eighty percent of my bonus is tied to EBITDA. Earnings Before Interest, Taxes, Depreciation, and Amortization. It is also earnings before the patient opens the bill. Same dose of Keytruda at the hospital across town. Gross charge: $12,000. Blue Cross rate: $10,200. Same drug. Same dose. Same needle. Same cancer. Different spreadsheet. The CMS transparency data showed the ratio between the highest and lowest negotiated price for the same drug at the same hospital can reach 2,347 to one. Not 2x. Not 10x. Not 100x. Two thousand three hundred and forty-seven to one. For the same thing. In the same building. On the same Tuesday. The price is correct. Every drug in the chargemaster has twelve prices. Twelve. Gross charge. Medicare rate. Medicaid rate. Blue Cross. Aetna. Cigna. UnitedHealth. Humana. Workers' comp. Tricare. Auto insurance. And the self-pay rate. The self-pay rate is for the person without insurance. It is the gross charge. The fictional number. The anchor. The person without insurance pays the number that was designed to be negotiated down from. They pay the ceiling because they have no one to negotiate on their behalf. Same drug. Same chair. Same nurse. They pay the price that no insurer in the country would accept. I maintain a file. CDM line item 637-4892-PKB. Saline flush. Sodium chloride 0.9%. Acquisition cost: $0.47. We charge $87. That is an 18,410% markup. The saline flush is used before and after every IV infusion. A chemo patient receiving twelve cycles will be charged $87 for saline fourteen times per visit. I know the math. My team built the math. The math is the job. The price is correct. In 2021, the federal government required hospitals to publish their prices. The Hospital Price Transparency Rule. Machine-readable file. Gross charges. Discounted cash prices. Payer-specific negotiated rates. We complied. We posted the file. The file is a 9,400-row CSV on our website under "Patient Financial Resources." Four clicks from the homepage. Column F: "CDM_GROSS_CHG." Column J: "DERV_PAYERID_NEGRATE." My team designed the column headers. They designed them to comply. They did not design them to communicate. CMS reported 93% of hospitals now post a file. Compliance. But only 62% of the posted data is usable. That gap is where we operate. We are compliant. The data is published. The data is incomprehensible. A researcher downloaded our file. She spent three weeks cleaning it. She called the billing department for clarification on 340 line items. They transferred her four times. The fourth transfer was to a voicemail box that was full. She published her analysis anyway. Cardiac catheterization lab charges: $8,200 to $71,000 for the same procedure depending on the payer. The report received eleven views on our press monitoring dashboard. I saw it. I did not forward it. On April 1, a new CMS rule takes effect. Hospital CEOs must personally attest — by name, encoded in the machine-readable file — that the pricing data is "true, accurate, and complete." My name. Sam Hazen. In the file. Attesting that 42,000 fictional anchors are true, accurate, and complete. They are complete. I will give them that. Forty-two thousand line items is nothing if not complete. A new analyst read the transparency data. She asked why the same MRI costs $450 for Medicare and $4,200 for Aetna in the same building on the same machine. I told her the rates reflect negotiated contractual agreements between the payer and the facility. She said that doesn't explain the difference. I told her the difference IS the contractual agreement. She said that sounds like the price is arbitrary. I told her the price is the result of a rigorous, multi-variable analysis that accounts for acuity, case mix, regional market dynamics, and payer contract terms. She asked if I could show her the analysis. I told her the analysis is proprietary. The analysis does not exist. The analysis is my team, in Q4, adjusting the chargemaster upward by the percentage the CFO wrote on a sticky note. The sticky note this year said "6-8%." They chose 7.4% because it is between six and eight and it has a decimal, which makes it look calculated. She stopped asking. The price is correct. My insurance. The executive health plan. Not in the chargemaster. Administered separately. I do not pay the gross charge. I do not pay the negotiated rate. I pay a $20 copay for services at our own facilities. Gross charge for my treatment: $14,200. Insured rate for our largest commercial payer: $8,600. I pay $20. The executive health plan was designed by the Chief Human Resources Officer and approved by the compensation committee. I was not on the compensation committee. I was a beneficiary of it. That is a different thing. I benefit from the system I price. I price the system I benefit from. These are two separate facts that happen to involve the same person. HCA Healthcare was named the Most Admired Company in our industry by Fortune magazine for the twelfth consecutive year. That was February. The same month I sold $21.5 million in company stock and purchased zero shares. Fortune did not ask about the chargemaster. I am Sam Hazen, CEO of HCA Healthcare. I have 42,000 prices in a spreadsheet across 182 hospitals. None of them are real. All of them are charged. Same drug: $12,000 or $43,000. Depends on which spreadsheet. Which building. Which contract. Which page of which PDF. The patient who has no contract pays the most. The researcher who found the discrepancy got a voicemail box that was full. The analyst who asked why stopped asking. The executive who prices the system pays $20. On April 1, I will personally attest that this is true, accurate, and complete. The price is correct. The price has always been correct. I am the price.

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Kev retweetledi
The Solari Report | Catherine Austin Fitts
Why Everyone Is Talking about Catherine Austin Fitts' Latest Conversation with Tucker Carlson Catherine Austin Fitts’s recent conversation as a guest of Tucker Carlson has drawn well in excess of a million views, thousands of comments and a remarkable response, highlighting the positive influence she has had—and continues to have—on people’s lives. For those who have not yet watched the show in full, the video below provides a sense of the conversation, comments, and its relevance. Catherine’s discussion with Tucker also did a great job of explaining why it is so important that we pass legislation to stop programmable money—so the interview link is a great one to send to your representatives! solari.com/catherine-on-t… Limited Time Special Offer for New Subscribers: solari.com/tucker-carlson…
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Kev
Kev@Kev19081874·
@TansuYegen Its rubbish She's conscious, you don't do cpr on a person who is clearly breathing BS
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Tansu Yegen
Tansu Yegen@TansuYegen·
A video just appeared of someone saving a life with CPR on a beach in Thailand, while back home people are worried about blame instead of action 🙏
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Kev@Kev19081874·
@jasonpizzino Transportation and delivery issues?
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Jason Pizzino 🌞
Jason Pizzino 🌞@jasonpizzino·
I’m in Vietnam atm. Is this a sign of abundance or shortage of oil? X always knows best 👍🏼
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Thai Enquirer
Thai Enquirer@ThaiEnquirer·
Century-Old Dutch Embassy in Bangkok for Sale, Raising Heritage Concerns The historic Embassy of the Kingdom of the Netherlands in Bangkok, a colonial-era landmark recognized for its architectural and cultural value, is being put up for sale, raising alarm among heritage advocates and the Dutch community in Thailand. The embassy villa, built during the reign of King Vajiravudh (Rama VI), has been recognized by the Association of Siamese Architects for conservation and is listed as a heritage site at risk on the Siam Society’s Heritage Alert platform. Located on Witthayu (Wireless) Road in Pathumwan district, adjacent to the U.S. Embassy, the compound is a rare green space in central Bangkok. Heritage groups warn that selling the property could result in the irreversible loss of a unique cultural and diplomatic landmark. According to the Siam Society, the site has a layered history: it was once owned by French royal physician Dr. Alphonse Poix and later by Thai nobility, including Prince Bovoradej, who led the 1933 “Rebellion of Prince Bovoradej.” The property was leased at various times to the British Alumni Association, occupied by the Japanese army during World War II, and used by Salesian Roman Catholic priests, including for the Don Bosco Vocational School for disadvantaged children. In 1948, the Dutch government purchased the property as its first permanent embassy in Thailand, and it has remained a diplomatic hub ever since. The embassy underwent major renovations in 2004–2005, adding modern office facilities while preserving the historic villa, with further interior updates completed by 2007. The Dutch Ministry of Foreign Affairs plans to relocate the embassy to Dusit Central Park by August 2026. While developers are eyeing the prime central Bangkok site for potential mixed-use or landmark projects, heritage advocates emphasize that the property represents over 400 years of Dutch-Thai diplomatic relations and serves as a symbol of cultural, historical, and diplomatic significance. The Dutch community in Thailand has launched petitions urging the Netherlands government to reconsider the sale, warning that the loss would be felt not only in Thailand but internationally, as the embassy embodies centuries of shared history and cross-cultural ties. #Thailand #Bangkok #Netherlands #สถานทูตเนเธอร์แลนด์
Thai Enquirer tweet mediaThai Enquirer tweet mediaThai Enquirer tweet media
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Kev
Kev@Kev19081874·
@PKulkarnii @bowtiedstocks In the US maybe, not in Australia We are in a rate rising cycle while the rest of the world is going in the opposite direction
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BowTiedStocks
BowTiedStocks@bowtiedstocks·
People were asking me what is going to cause our housing bubble to pop They couldn’t see a ‘catalyst’ Would you agree war in the Middle East, AI job losses, bond yields ripping and oil going to $200 could perhaps deliver that ‘catalyst’ ?? Oh but I couldn’t see it 6 months ago… My sweet summer child
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Kev@Kev19081874·
@RetardsTo @bowtiedstocks Yes, two more weeks to flatten the resi property curve 6 years later ...... ummmm, maybe two more weeks then?
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Kev
Kev@Kev19081874·
The question was "what will be the catalyst" ? Not that there would not be a catalyst, there needs to be one or more obvious factors to trigger the end of the resi property market bubble Historically they have been interest rate hikes ( the recession we had to have where rates went up above 18% - thanks Paul Keating), global market conditions and major slowdowns, banks restricting lending, back in the good old days when you had to beg them to fund a mortgage but don't bother asking for a second resi loan for an investment property Other factors that seem pretty obvious are mass unemployment, rising mortgage defaults, banking stress, restrictions on lending, and I am sure you can add to that short list? So now we have what looks like a block swan event that is just starting to get underway and expected to get much worse as it is anticipated that this war in West Asia escalates and becomes prolonged as has been promised by Iran So you are suggesting that you predicted such an event 6 months ago? Yes, we get that AI is coming with a vengeance and there will be both job losses as well as reduced hirings, the economy is likely heading into a recession now due to this war, but until you see some of the clear triggers around the finance side of the equation and the demand supply imbalance reverting back to normalacy, how do you suggest that the bubble starts to deflate?
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Kev
Kev@Kev19081874·
@_aussie17 Trump needs to change his ChatGPT mode from kindergarten to adult, or at least man child . The way he sends out txt is embarrassing
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aussie17
aussie17@_aussie17·
Susie Wiles diagnosed with breast cancer.
aussie17 tweet media
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Kev@Kev19081874·
@JustMikeMcKay Yes The coroner should provide the cause of death from a toxicology report to end all the speculation and put the British press in their place
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ᒍᑌᔕT ᗰIKE
ᒍᑌᔕT ᗰIKE@JustMikeMcKay·
🤔 What killed Tom Pardhy and put his gf Naomi Raksha in ICU? ❌ Spiked drinks ✅ Speedballing - a heroin and cocaine cocktail Highly unlikely you'll read that in any UK red top as it doesn't fit the mystery / suspicious deaths in Thailand headlines they love so much.
ᒍᑌᔕT ᗰIKE tweet media
ᒍᑌᔕT ᗰIKE@JustMikeMcKay

I was asked what my theory is... The toxicology report likely lists a combo of alcohol, cocaine, Viagra, weed/ket & Xanax/Valium Mother believes UK headlines on Thailand + drugs / suspicious deaths, in denial about her daughter's likely drug use. ✅ Death by misadventure

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Dr. Urso
Dr. Urso@richardursomd·
“The pandemics are coming from lab. ALL OF THEM …Lyme, Covid, RSV, HIV, and Spanish Flu came out of a vaccine lab” “Vaccine research has created the worst plague in the history”
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Kev@Kev19081874·
@NevilleBartos19 @ThaiEnquirer It was neither, they allowed the Japanese in but were not occupied like Singapore and Malaysia And never colonised throughout its history
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Kev@Kev19081874·
@RennickGBR You would be surprise at how many people in the US support Trump in his decision to go to war I certainly was !
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Gerard Rennick
Gerard Rennick@RennickGBR·
The people of the United States didn’t ask for this war and don’t want this war. This war was started by Israel and the Deep State. This war is not in the best interests of the U.S. or Australian people. It risks destabilising the global order and plays into Chinas hands. It is going to unleash immense poverty and suffering on hard working Australians and the global economy. Why is Pauline Hanson doing the bidding of the Deep State and Israel? What Israel did today in bombing the worlds biggest gas field shows they don’t give a rats about the rest of the world - this war is going to unleash a credit and energy crunch that will impoverish us all - remember it was the Rothschilds who created Israel - they are going to do to the USA what they did to Germany in WW1 and Great Britain in WW11 - bankrupt them through unsustainable debt. ndtv.com/world-news/my-… I thought One Nation was against foreign influence. Yet here we are. We need cool heads calling for de escalation not belligerent rhetoric.
Sky News Australia@SkyNewsAust

Pauline Hanson calls for Australia to help Donald Trump “stamp out evil” by entering the conflict with Iran, just days after the President accused America's allies of refusing to provide assistance. skynews.com.au/australia-news…

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Kev@Kev19081874·
@complex_maths @matt_barrie If they use bunker oil they can burn other fuels as well surely? If they’re steam ships then you are just firing a boiler to generate steam to operate the turbine
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Jon Klaric
Jon Klaric@complex_maths·
@matt_barrie the biggest irony as well is that tankers are largely fueled by bunker oil, which is a by-product of oil refining. But if there's no oil to refine, there's no by-product to get more oil...
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Matt Barrie
Matt Barrie@matt_barrie·
Australia isn't just last in energy security. 99% of our trade moves by sea. We had 100+ merchant ships a generation ago. Now 4 flagged vessels trading internationally. For the price of a block of Bondi apartments you can start fixing today.
Matt Barrie tweet media
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Kev@Kev19081874·
@afshineemrani That’s quite a crystal ball Will be interesting to see if it transpires
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Afshine Emrani  MD FACC
Afshine Emrani MD FACC@afshineemrani·
Here are my thoughts and predictions on the war. I’ve said before that Trump and Israel would ultimately bring down the Iranian regime—but that real regime change would take time. I still believe that. This conflict is not ending quickly. It will stretch out, likely for at least another year, and intensify before it resolves. Inside Iran, I believe the people will eventually rise—armed, determined, and ready to reclaim their future—but it won’t happen overnight. In the meantime, the regime will lash out, fueling terrorist attacks across the Gulf to destabilize the region. But this is the beginning of the end. I believe that by next year, we will see the foundation of a secular democracy emerge, with Pahlavi serving as a symbolic figurehead of a new Iran. At the same time, the map of the region will change. Israel will push deeper into Lebanon to establish a stronger, lasting buffer zone. Gaza will be taken over, and the West Bank will follow, as Israel’s borders expand in a way not seen in modern history. I do not believe there will be a Palestinian state—rather, populations will ultimately be absorbed by Jordan. I also continue to see the rise of a unified Kurdish state emerging from the instability across Iran, Turkey, and Syria. Looking further ahead, I believe we are heading toward a major global confrontation around August 2028—a defining moment that could reshape world leadership and even lead to unprecedented political decisions in the United States, including the possibility of delayed elections and an extended presidency. Eventually, stability will return, and when it does, I believe the next president will again be a Republican—someone new, with strong leadership—perhaps Rubio.
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Kev@Kev19081874·
@chigrl @mattjcan Any disclosure on what price oz is paying for this privilege? Seems like a long distance and expensive source of fuel
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Tracy Shuchart (𝒞𝒽𝒾 )
Exxon, BP, Vitol ship most US fuels to Australia for a single month in three decades, traders say ExxonMobil, BP and Vitol are shipping a record volume of oil products to Australia ‌from the United States in March, shipping data from trading sources shows, filling a gap left by the loss of regular supplies from Asia as the Iran conflict disrupts supplies. Australia usually relies on Asia for the vast majority of its oil product imports, but China and Thailand have banned fuel exports to preserve domestic supplies ​and refiners across the region are cutting output as Iran's blockade of the Strait of Hormuz sharply cuts crude exports from the ​Middle East. At least 200,000 metric tons of gasoline, diesel and jet fuel have been loaded, or will be ⁠loaded, by the end of March from the U.S. Gulf Coast and West Coast for shipment to Australia, shipping data from three trade ​sources shows. (Reuters)
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Steve Hanke
Steve Hanke@steve_hanke·
Distinguished Columbia Univ. Prof. Jeff Sachs on the US-Israeli war on Iran: “This war is to nobody's advantage. It's a pure lose, lose, lose all around. Lose for Israel, lose for the United States, and lose for the rest of the world.”
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Kev@Kev19081874·
What is it with the Cambodian authorities ? Why not deploy a taskforce and resources to inspect EVERY commercial building to verify if they are operating as a scam compound or not? Do they lack the resources, or is it incompetence or are they being paid off and protecting some of the operators?
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Jacob in Cambodia 🇺🇸 🇰🇭
Unverified Telegram post claims a group of Chinese nationals hired a private ambulance to travel from Koh Kong province to Sihanoukville, allegedly to dodge military police checkpoints along the route. Cambodia's Health Ministry reportedly confirmed the vehicle was a private ambulance and has launched an investigation, saying the ambulance came from the Thmor Da border area, which is thick with scam compounds. Ministry says they won't tolerate emergency vehicles being used as cover for cross-border crime. Could be nothing. Could also be a creative new wrinkle in how compound workers move between sites as the crackdown tightens. Worth watching.
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Steve Hanke
Steve Hanke@steve_hanke·
Distinguished Columbia Univ. Prof. Jeff Sachs on the US-Israeli war on Iran: “This is not even a preemptive attack because Iran wasn't attacking anybody. This is just brazen, naked aggression, and it's the essence of the violation of international law.”
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