• @stoly
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    3116 days ago

    So they spent $400m to save money? How many decades until they break even? Imagine what good that money could have done.

    • @SpaceNoodle
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      1016 days ago

      I’m sure they’re bilking patients out of hundreds of millions a year with that “investment.”

    • @[email protected]
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      515 days ago

      Given that medicaid costs something like 880000 million dollars, I can pretty much promise that it saved money if it was denying people en masse.

      The whole healthcare system private and public is corrupt and lining the pockets of the wealthy at scale. All the middlemen are leeches from the insurance companies, to the “service” companies that clean hospitals, nursing homes, to the medical supply companies that charge egregious prices.

      It doesn’t matter if the healthcare provider is nonprofit because all the other ancillary services make loads and loads of cash… which means medicare/medicaid and all private insurances end up spending tens of thousands of dollars per patient, or more. Turns out… private health insurance profits are regulated to a percentage of money spent on treatments…more spend = more potential profits. It’s a balancing act of raising insurance subscription prices and raising treatment cost negotiations so that they hit that percentage and maximize profit per year.

    • @Maggoty
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      14 days ago

      Well no. They spent 400 million dollars and got a buggy system that routinely dropped people, assigned benefits to the wrong place, failed to load required data, and so much more. Medicaid isn’t concerned with saving money.

      • @stoly
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        114 days ago

        This isn’t about Medicaid. This is about conservatives constantly looking for their bogeyman.

        • @Maggoty
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          014 days ago

          You think the Tennessee government told Deloitte to to give them a fucked up system?

          • @stoly
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            114 days ago

            That’s poor oversight. And an incomplete product. Too big for their britches.