Articles tagged with: healthcare

The Healthcare Maze #8 - Veterans Medical Debt

The Healthcare Maze #8 - Veterans Medical Debt

We continue our discussion of medical debt in the U.S. This episode focuses on veterans medical debt. We are pleased to have Jerry Ashton as a guest on the podcast. Jerry Ashton is a four-decade executive in the credit and collections industry. In 2011 he was inspired by his experience with the Occupy Wall Street movement . In 2014 he co-founded RIP Medical Debt, a 501(C)(3) charity dedicated to buying and abolishing unpaid and unpayable medical debt. In 2021 he established a public benefit corporation called “Let’s Rethink This” (www.LetsRethinkThis.com) . At present he is now focused on relieving our veterans of unpaid VA medical debt in a campaign called End Vet Med Debt (#EndVetMedDebt).

“In It to Win it - Because Lives are at Stake!" The VA Mission Daybreak challenge to reduce veteran suicides. A prize pool of $20,000,000 is in play.

“In It to Win it - Because Lives are at Stake!

As our newsletter readers know, Let’s Rethink This and three other team members comprising Patient Orator, Seva Exchange and Audacity Therapeutics threw their hat in the ring on July 8. Several days later, the VA announced that there are 1,370 others in the competition. Whoa! Only 40 of these contestants will participate in the grand prizes.

Will LRT make the cut? 

That will be up to a multidisciplinary judging panel of over 300 members whose expertise range from product development to venture capital and technology firms to mental health research in academia and Veteran service experience at community-based organizations and VSO’s (Veteran Service Organizations).

Here’s how the VA describes it:

“Each eligible solution will be assessed by a mental health care professional or suicide prevention coordinator, a Veteran or a family member of a Veteran, and a technical reviewer with relevant expertise in the submission focus area.”

What to Expect

When the finalists are announced in mid or late August, we promise to put out a special newsletter with those details and what this will mean for LRT and its team members – win, lose or draw.

Military and Medicine

Military and Medicine

It takes a special kind of person and supportive network to commit to the selfless service required of those who join the military.  As a physician, I can relate.  But to simultaneously embark on the path to serve BOTH in healthcare AND for our country?  That takes commitment and dedication to the next level.

This issue of Physician Outlook is dedicated to those in uniform who don BOTH the white coat and military fatigues, altruistically giving of themselves to protect not just our freedom but also our health, sacrificing precious time with their loved ones (and themselves) in the process.

We owe a debt of GRATITUDE to our active duty Military and our Veterans, not a $6 BILLION debt from unpaid medical bills! Learn about www.EndVeteranMedicalDebt.com by reading Jerry Ashton’s article “A Look at V.A. Hospitals.”  Ashton (a Navy Veteran and former debt collector) remains on the Board of #RIPMedicalDebt, the well-respected charity that he co-founded in 2014. Jerry’s latest project, an organization called Let’s Rethink This (www.LetsReThinkThis.com)  is shining a much needed spotlight on the medical debt burden that plagues our nation’s protectors and proposing solutions to collectively help relieve that debt by working with the Veterans Administration and its network of hospitals. Physician Outlook is proud to be one of the Impact Organizations being highlighted by LRT and partnering with Ashton and his team to help #EndVetMedDebt.

Nurses at the bedside of our patients are the true backbone of our healthcare system. I had the pleasure of personally meeting Bronze Star recipient Nurse Colonel Olga Rodriguez (now retired), a fellow Latina in medicine, at the annual www.Free2Care.org conference in Austin Texas this fall. She is an “old school” Syracuse University trained nurse who is passionate about patient safety and Nursing Education, focusing on the importance of bedside and field Nursing.

In an article titled “We Need Our Bedside Nurses,” Dr. Linda Hodges, a civilian Critical Care physician (who works in ICUs across the country) discusses the alarming trend of registered nurses wanting to leave the bedside, pondering “what nursing would be like if we made the bedside job one that doesn’t need escaping from.” The best nurses (and physicians) are walking away from what has become a malignant system.

Perhaps the most fascinating story you will read in this issue is “Military in Medicine” which spotlights the career of (Retired) Colonel Kevin C. O’Connor, a Family Practice physician who calls himself the “Forrest Gump” of Military Medicine.  He has some fantastic ideas about how to solve the physician shortage, and a great appreciation for physician-led, coordinated and collaborative team-based care. He has some pretty influential connections to share these ideas with, and I am blessed to consider Kevin a friend and colleague, so thankful that he “gets” the importance that primary care plays in the world of medicine and population health.

Authentic Medicine

Why is the system malignant? As former Army Major and Emergency Room Physician Dr. Natalie Newman points out in “Dollars and Sins” (an article that first appeared on Dr. Doug Farrago’s blog www.AuthenticMedicine.com) that one cannot “fake it until you make it in medicine. The art and science of medicine is simply too complex, as is the human body.”  Everyone wants to be “a doctor” these days without going to medical school or doing a residency, and that is just plain dangerous.  Legislation cannot replace education. What most young nurses don’t realize is that profit-motivated puppeteers are purposefully taking advantage of their lack of experience and naïveté. Obtaining a Doctorate in Nursing is NOT the solution to solving the physician shortage. The more obvious solution to addressing projected shortages is to “grow more doctors,” something I have previously written about.

However, we need to ensure that pre-medical students do not become disillusioned along the path. In his article “Misgivings about Medicine,” high school student Jack McGowan, an aspiring future doctor, writes about how he ALMOST abandoned his childhood dream when he learned about the greedy Private Equity firms that have infiltrated Emergency Medicine and other fields. Fortunately for our future, he remains undeterred in his plans to become a physician after learning that grassroots physician groups are working together to expose the corruption and actively planning ways to “take back medicine.”

Sh!T Following the COVID Storm

It has been two long years since the onset of the worldwide COVID-19 pandemic. We are simultaneously weary and wishful as we have adapted to what has become “the new normal.” This issue features two COVID-related pieces.

Neurologist Dr. Ayushi Chugh’s beautiful poem reminds us of the importance of self-care and positive mindsets, reminding us that COVID-created thunderstorms will eventually be followed by sunshine to brighten the relentless “Coronaceous-Colored Sky.”

If you have ever wondered why the novel coronavirus disproportionately affects some individuals and not others (regardless of vaccination status), the key could be hidden in the person’s “microbiome signature.”  Gastroenterologist Dr. Sabine Hazan (author of the best-selling book “Let’s Talk Sh!T” book) continues to study the role of a diverse and protective microbiome in predicting the clinical severity of COVID-19 disease. As reported by Trial Site News, the case series authored by Hazan and published in the peer-reviewed journal Case Reports in Gastroenterology features 6 members of the same household in which she happened to have some pre-pandemic stool analyses. Results from this family and other patients she has studied support her hypothesis of the protective importance of having a diverse, Bifidobacterium-rich microbiome.

Alternatively dubbed “Hurricane Hazan” and the “Queen of Sh!t,” Dr. Hazan continues to perform cutting-edge research through her FDA-approved COVID-19 prevention and treatment clinical trials. She is currently working on studies that will develop non-invasive baseline testing that could predict an individual’s SARS-CoV-2 susceptibility, perhaps allowing time for individuals to make dietary interventions with pre- or probiotics.

Left and Right Brain Connections

As we celebrate our 2nd birthday as a magazine, our readers will notice that Physician Outlook is taking on a more active role as a quasi- “corpus callosum” by acting as connectors, as synaptic neural bridges between the many severed connections we are experiencing between the left and right hemispheres of society, particularly within the scientific community.

My faith in medicine becomes restored when I hear physicians amicably and heatedly discuss controversial medical topics on podcasts such as “The VPZD Show.” Dr. Zubin Damania (aka ZDoggMD) and Dr. Vinay Prasad have been named the “Click and Clack” of medicine, and discuss difficult topics with a sense of humor and a healthy sprinkling of swear-words. They are part of a movement Dr. Damania has called “the alt-Middle” and we at Physician Outlook invite all who are open-minded and tolerant to become a part of our complementary “Corpus Callosum Crew.”

As a publication Physician Outlook does not censor, avoids picking sides, and actively seeks to represent a spectrum of points of view.  We respect transparency and truth-telling, and firmly believe that the answer to solving divisive issues in education, economics, in politics—in medicine—is to engage in true, meaningful, non-judgmental and peaceful nuanced discourse.

Collaborative problem solving, something that Dr. Diana Blum touches on in her article “Respectful Debate Amongst Doctors,” is at the core of the patient-physician relationship, and as physicians we need to model the kind of tolerance and respect we want to see reflected in the world and in our patients. 

Article by Marlene Wüst-Smith, MD, Pediatrician originally appeared in Physician Outlook.

Rethinking Ways in Which to Diminish Veteran Suicides – Our Next Adventure. Mission Daybreak

Rethinking Ways in Which to Diminish Veteran Suicides – Our Next Adventure. Mission Daybreak

Prepare for the next big iteration of LRT’s “Searchlight/Spotlight/Ignite” as our team prepares itself to compete in a major Veterans Administration contest to locate organizations with innovative approaches to the problem of veteran suicides. And they are putting up serious money to deal with this serious issue - $20 million!!!

Termed Mission Daybreak, it constitutes a grand challenge to thought leaders of any and every industry to develop and put into effect suicide prevention solutions that meet the diverse needs of Veterans.

As there is no single cause and no single strategy to accomplish this task, the VA expects a diversity of “solvers” – including veterans, researchers, technologists, advocates, clinicians, and health innovators – to form teams and generate cures.

LRT intends to lead one of these teams and is in the process of selecting companion organizations (searchlight) whose genius we can spotlight and whose success we can ignite. Does this resonate with you? Please get in touch with us before this month is out if you have (or are) a candidate to be our partner. Hurry. Each day we delay, on average 22 veterans will commit suicide.


Let's Rethink This is licensed under a Creative Commons (BY-NC) 4.0 License

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