Im glad i found this page. My team and I are looking to buy 50-150 bed hospitals in rural and urban areas. I’m getting a lot of value from your videos! Thank you!
Thank you sooo much for making this video! I have an interview with a tech company who has made it their mission to help with just what you are saying, reduce nurse paperwork to allow them to do what they love most, spending time with their patients! Watching this video allowed me to re-familiaize myself with hospital operations and is massively helpful. Thank you for your time and wisdom!
thank you for all of this! it's hard to find videos to watch/listen to that give details on how a hospital overall works. i'm a deputy coroner in a county with a fair number of hospitals and a lot of learning how to do the job is just doing the calls as they come in and frankly, sometimes i'm a bit lost with hospital calls because i've never worked inside one! the information here is invaluable!
Thank you, this is really helpful for understanding so many parts of the industry. As an aside, I hopped on your SimplePayHealth website and thumbed through your blog postings, which were also great. It would be helpful to have the statistics linked to their sources, though, as well as for your TY channel. (I've watched quite a few YT vids and appreciate your viewpoint and desire to make the industry work properly.) This could be a great job for an intern to organize which would also give them exposure to good statistical sourcing strategies and the details of industry levers and drivers.
In Illinois, CON (certificate of need, a political corrupt process of granting monopoly hospital licensure only to family and friends) has squelched all competition, along with a great deal of human access to medical care provision. Solution: hospital at home? Look at tele-monitoring happening in corporate monopoly very-profitable- 'not-for-profit' hospitals which pay no local taxes. Look at caregiver-to-patient ratios possible, look at compensations to actual medically licensed professionals (rather than third party payer admin)...the numbers make sense. Compare and contrast the downside risk amelioration as well: by definition, nosocomial infections don't happen outside large institutional facilities.
I thought only Medicare uses DRG method, not commercial plans? And I hate the term "elective", it implies it's not necessary or superfluous. Technically everything is "elective".
Thank you for your comment. Commercial insurance uses DRGs for inpatient reimbursement as well… However the way the reimbursement is structured off the DRG is very different than Medicare.
Im glad i found this page. My team and I are looking to buy 50-150 bed hospitals in rural and urban areas. I’m getting a lot of value from your videos! Thank you!
Thank you for watching.
Thank you sooo much for making this video! I have an interview with a tech company who has made it their mission to help with just what you are saying, reduce nurse paperwork to allow them to do what they love most, spending time with their patients! Watching this video allowed me to re-familiaize myself with hospital operations and is massively helpful. Thank you for your time and wisdom!
Thank you for watching and for your feedback.
thank you for all of this! it's hard to find videos to watch/listen to that give details on how a hospital overall works. i'm a deputy coroner in a county with a fair number of hospitals and a lot of learning how to do the job is just doing the calls as they come in and frankly, sometimes i'm a bit lost with hospital calls because i've never worked inside one! the information here is invaluable!
Thank you for watching and for your feedback.
Thank you, this is really helpful for understanding so many parts of the industry.
As an aside, I hopped on your SimplePayHealth website and thumbed through your blog postings, which were also great. It would be helpful to have the statistics linked to their sources, though, as well as for your TY channel. (I've watched quite a few YT vids and appreciate your viewpoint and desire to make the industry work properly.) This could be a great job for an intern to organize which would also give them exposure to good statistical sourcing strategies and the details of industry levers and drivers.
Thank you for watching and for your feedback.
Loving the content, I can't wait to catch you live.
Thank you for watching and for your kind feedback.
In Illinois, CON (certificate of need, a political corrupt process of granting monopoly hospital licensure only to family and friends) has squelched all competition, along with a great deal of human access to medical care provision.
Solution: hospital at home? Look at tele-monitoring happening in corporate monopoly very-profitable- 'not-for-profit' hospitals which pay no local taxes.
Look at caregiver-to-patient ratios possible, look at compensations to actual medically licensed professionals (rather than third party payer admin)...the numbers make sense.
Compare and contrast the downside risk amelioration as well: by definition, nosocomial infections don't happen outside large institutional facilities.
Thank you for sharing your thoughts.
Can u provide me an Admin flow of a 300 beded hospital
I thought only Medicare uses DRG method, not commercial plans? And I hate the term "elective", it implies it's not necessary or superfluous. Technically everything is "elective".
Thank you for your comment. Commercial insurance uses DRGs for inpatient reimbursement as well… However the way the reimbursement is structured off the DRG is very different than Medicare.
Would love to see bite sized content on tiktok, keep it up!
🤣🤷♂️ Thank you for watching!