The law is rarely black/white and is subject to interpretation, and specific facts and circumstances. To think that a professionally licenced person can freely use his professional status to spread total bullshit is not the way it's supposed to work. Lawyers, accountants, engineers, probably cosmeticians would lose their licence for doing that. CPA, in TV interview: "I think there are flaws in the US tax laws and I recommend that people refuse to pay taxes until further study has been done..." Engineer: "Don't waste money on fancy circuit testers. Just insert a knife into any outlet and you'll be able to see if there is power."
... Across the country, doctors who jeopardized patients’ lives by pushing medical misinformation during the pandemic and its aftermath have faced few repercussions, according to a Washington Post analysis of disciplinary records from medical boards in all 50 states.
State medical boards charged with protecting the American public often failed to stop doctors who went against medical consensus and prescribed unapproved treatments for covid or misled patients about vaccines and masks, the Post investigation found.
At least 20 doctors nationally were penalized for complaints related to covid misinformation between January 2020 and June 2023, according to board documents, which The Post obtained by filing requests with state medical boards and reviewing public records. Five of those doctors lost their medical licenses — one had his revoked, while four surrendered theirs. Discipline is typically connected to patient care, not just what doctors say.
It is impossible to know how many doctors were spreading misinformation because most states do not monitor or divulge those complaints. But The Post’s requests to the boards yielded at least 480 covid-misinformation-related complaints in the last three years — meaning only a tiny fraction of those led to disciplinary action....
20 out of 480 is only 4%. We are a case study in how not to address a pandemic.
Doctors make judgement calls all the time. That's kinda the heart of the ads that all say "ask your doctor if Grxbsq is right for you." The doctor can certainly say "I don't think Grxbsq is going to work as well for you as Xzmqdk," but s/he can't say "I don't think Grxbsq is any good, despite all the studies, and I think you should just use the eye of newt and toe of frog." And it seems that a medical review group would be able to see the difference when they look at a given case.
Doctors make judgement calls all the time. That's kinda the heart of the ads that all say "ask your doctor if Grxbsq is right for you." The doctor can certainly say "I don't think Grxbsq is going to work as well for you as Xzmqdk," but s/he can't say "I don't think Grxbsq is any good, despite all the studies, and I think you should just use the eye of newt and toe of frog." And it seems that a medical review group would be able to see the difference when they look at a given case.
I will be getting the new Covid vaccine, along with flu and the new RSV vaccines, all at the same time if that's okayed.
We got the RSV vaccine. Actually had a little more reaction than for flu or Covid. Arm more sore; felt like crap for a few hours. Asked our primary about getting them all together. She, and also the pharmacist, suggested getting RSV separate but Covid and flu together were OK. Get one in each arm.
We got the RSV vaccine. Actually had a little more reaction than for flu or Covid. Arm more sore; felt like crap for a few hours. Asked our primary about getting them all together. She, and also the pharmacist, suggested getting RSV separate but Covid and flu together were OK. Get one in each arm.
Thanks. I read an article saying that the new Covid and flu vaccines are approved for simultaneous admin, but a determination about getting the new RSV vaccine with them has yet to be made. I'll consider your advice and keep them separate unless I hear otherwise.
I will be getting the new Covid vaccine, along with flu and the new RSV vaccines, all at the same time if that's okayed.
We got the RSV vaccine. Actually had a little more reaction than for flu or Covid. Arm more sore; felt like crap for a few hours. Asked our primary about getting them all together. She, and also the pharmacist, suggested getting RSV separate but Covid and flu together were OK. Get one in each arm.
Walgreens said only 2 shots at a time, any 2, then wait 2 weeks. They also said Medicare does not cover RSV and it would cost $350 . I got the flu and Covid vaxxes, and will wait on RSV until my next doctor's appt. Maybe the cost can be folded into other care for Medicare reimbursement.
Ours were "free." We've got a UHC Medicare supplement plan with Walgreen pharmacy coverage. Getting that vax pretty much paid for our plan. Had no idea.
Ours were "free." We've got a UHC Medicare supplement plan with Walgreen pharmacy coverage. Getting that vax pretty much paid for our plan. Had no idea.
I rejected Medicare D out of hatred for the private insurers. Perhaps a mistake.
Ours were "free." We've got a UHC Medicare supplement plan with Walgreen pharmacy coverage. Getting that vax pretty much paid for our plan. Had no idea.
I rejected Medicare D out of hatred for the private insurers. Perhaps a mistake.
We've had no problems whatsoever with the UHC/AARP supplement, neither the medical nor pharmacy plan. It pays whatever Medicare doesn't on a Medicare-approved claim.
I rejected Medicare D out of hatred for the private insurers. Perhaps a mistake.
We've had no problems whatsoever with the UHC/AARP supplement, neither the medical nor pharmacy plan. It pays whatever Medicare doesn't on a Medicare-approved claim.
My hatred is more on principle than over problems with claims, though I've experienced some of the latter.
I rejected Medicare D out of hatred for the private insurers. Perhaps a mistake.
We've had no problems whatsoever with the UHC/AARP supplement, neither the medical nor pharmacy plan. It pays whatever Medicare doesn't on a Medicare-approved claim.
My hatred is more on principle than over problems with claims, though I've experienced some of the latter.
I've yet to learn what the RSV cost will be through my MD, and I think I've come out ahead in a lifetime of limiting my investment in insurance companies. Plus,
Sure if it was just the one prescription. We don't have a lot of recurring prescriptions but more than enough to pay for the plan many times over. Lady O takes twice yearly Prolia that without insurance would be over $1,700 per dose. I'm no fan of insurance companies overall but I do get my money's worth.
Sure if it was just the one prescription. We don't have a lot of recurring prescriptions but more than enough to pay for the plan many times over. Lady O takes twice yearly Prolia that without insurance would be over $1,700 per dose. I'm no fan of insurance companies overall but I do get my money's worth.
I didn't decide cavalierly. I looked at the relative costs and benefits with my current Rxs and it worked out better to pay my own way. A $350 RSV this year, if that even ends up being the cost, MIGHT have made the difference this year, but next year . . . ?
I rejected Medicare D out of hatred for the private insurers. Perhaps a mistake.
We've had no problems whatsoever with the UHC/AARP supplement, neither the medical nor pharmacy plan. It pays whatever Medicare doesn't on a Medicare-approved claim.
My hatred is more on principle than over problems with claims, though I've experienced some of the latter.
An old expression comes to mind...
Vrede, you done good. Advantage was a bush plan to destroy Medicare. These plans replace Medicare with private insurance.
Supplements don't do that. They support Medicare by picking up cost above Medicare.
UnitedHealth has a bunch. I'm pretty sure they no longer offer plan F, as I got a letter a year or two back telling me that I was grandfathered in,but there are other good ones too.
Trump: “We had the safest border in the history of our country - or at least recorded history. I guess maybe a thousand years ago it was even better.”
Vrede, you done good. Advantage was a bush plan to destroy Medicare. These plans replace Medicare with private insurance.
Supplements don't do that. They support Medicare by picking up cost above Medicare.
UnitedHealth has a bunch. I'm pretty sure they no longer offer plan F, as I got a letter a year or two back telling me that I was grandfathered in,but there are other good ones too.
AFAIK O Really does not have Medicare Advantage, Part C. He's got the Part D supplement. It annoys me that there has to be a private drug supplement. Meds are so crucial that Medicare ought to cover them, even if it charges a fee above the Part B fee to do so. I want all of my healthcare to be socialized, even if it's socialized-light single payer.
Vrede, you done good. Advantage was a bush plan to destroy Medicare. These plans replace Medicare with private insurance.
Supplements don't do that. They support Medicare by picking up cost above Medicare.
UnitedHealth has a bunch. I'm pretty sure they no longer offer plan F, as I got a letter a year or two back telling me that I was grandfathered in,but there are other good ones too.
AFAIK O Really does not have Medicare Advantage, Part C. He's got the Part D supplement. It annoys me that there has to be a private drug supplement. Meds are so crucial that Medicare ought to cover them, even if it charges a fee above the Part B fee to do so. I want all of my healthcare to be socialized, even if it's socialized-light single payer.
Same here as O Really. If his Supplement pays the full 20%, it is probably plan F, also like mine.
Medicare is great
Trump: “We had the safest border in the history of our country - or at least recorded history. I guess maybe a thousand years ago it was even better.”
I definitely don't like the falsely named "Advantage". We've got the Plan F United Healthcare and prescriptions and haven't paid any substantial medical bills for years. Sure if you never have any medical costs then a supplement seems excessive. But the older you get the more likely something is going to break.