Why Chinese Hackers Would Want US Hospital Patient Data 171
itwbennett (1594911) writes In a follow-up to yesterday's story about the Chinese hackers who stole hospital data of 4.5 million patients, IDG News Service's Martyn Williams set out to learn why the data, which didn't include credit card information, was so valuable. The answer is depressingly simple: people without health insurance can potentially get treatment by using medical data of one of the hacking victims. John Halamka, chief information officer of the Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center and chairman of the New England Healthcare Exchange Network, said a medical record can be worth between $50 and $250 to the right customer — many times more than the amount typically paid for a credit card number, or the cents paid for a user name and password. "If I am one of the 50 million Americans who are uninsured ... and I need a million-dollar heart transplant, for $250 I can get a complete medical record including insurance company details," he said.
Time for medicare for all in the usa (Score:3, Insightful)
Time for medicare for all in the usa also the million-dollar heart transplant is loaded with markup where you can likely go out side of the usa and pay way less for it.
also due to court rulings in favor of inmate care you can just go to prison / jail to get one as well.
http://www.cbsnews.com/news/pr... [cbsnews.com]
Parasites in Congress (Score:1)
The parasites in congress are the problem, not the answer. They're feeding their friends, the lawyers. Let's be honest; It's a lot better for me to order tests than to evaluate a person. The insurance company doesn't pay me to do the latter, and the lawyers are waiting for me to do the former. The more tests I do, the harder a case they have to demonstrate, and the lower my insurance, so higher my profit. It's really simple. Keep electing your lizards instead of their lizards, and healthcare will continue t
Re:Parasites in Congress (Score:4, Informative)
and how many times have people, especially women have gone to the doctor and been ignored or told their symptoms were nothing? when the doctor should have done a test or procedure based on the patient's complaint? or in my wife's case a lower doctor wanted to do a c-section without doing the right tests first and her doctor who was the chief of obgyn at the hospital said no and after they did the tests it was found a c-section was not required
even then it's hard to sue for malpractice. the lawyers who do this have nurses on staff who review the charts and only a small percentage end up in a lawsuit.
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Since you wanted to play the Grammar Nazi card and took extra care to fluff up your response to sound as pretentious and educated as possible, allow me to cri
Beautiful Bitch Slap! (Score:2)
Best retort to Grammer/spelling Nazi I have seen yet.
It always amuses me how the pendants seem to exemplify the very things they wish to bitch about.
The worst being the ones who like to use antiquated meanings or rules that have long since fallen out of conventional usage.
The world owes you much for this post. (^;
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Re:Time for medicare for all in the usa (Score:5, Informative)
Yes, because the single payer systems in Europe of trouble free right?
I'm not saying we don't have an issue, but your 1 step solution is a joke. The same corruption, greed and poor administration that afflicts us now would continue in the new system. It would just include all the problems of government waste and politics as well.
The problem in the US is states have enacted their own laws governing what treatment is required by law. So states that are pro-patient rights oppose allowing patients being able to seek insurance outside of the state as that would be an end run around their laws. As a result, patients cannot for any meaningful patients rights groups of a large enough size to make a difference in the healthcare market. There aren't enough doctors because younger doctors can make more money doing plastic surgery and other cosmetic specialty work, and the older doctors get pair so much they only feel the need to work 2 days a week. Tuition to medical schools in this country is borderline insane.
This is a very complex issue and throwing black and white solutions at it while calling your opponents stupid will get your no-where.
Re:Time for medicare for all in the usa (Score:4, Interesting)
Take a look at this comparison [wikipedia.org]. Even though the US government pays much more per capita than Canada it does not cover everybody it while Canada does. Here is a possible reason;
A 1999 report found that after exclusions, administration accounted for 31.0% of health care expenditures in the United States, as compared with 16.7% of health care expenditures in Canada.
Single payer systems make administration much simpler.
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The US health system is a (sad) laughing stock of the western world, and is by far the most expensive for individuals. But at the end of the day the irrational fear of "socialism" amongst average americans has given them the inefficient private system they demanded.
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Not necessarily. Administration is a very nebulous term, and your data is incomplete. Is this 31% of expenditures covered by medicare? Medicaid? Private insurance? A combination of two or more?
Paul Krugman (who has a fucking Nobel prize in economics) has explained all that in his New York Times column.
One of Krugman's examples is to compare regular Medicare with Medicare Advantage. The insurance industry and their Republican and "moderate" Democratic supporters said that they could do it more efficiently in the free market. They had their chance. The government paid the insurance companies 15% more for Medicare Advantage to "help them get started," and it finally went down to 5% more. They were n
Where did you go to school? (Score:2)
You're (you might notice that I spelled that correctly) the only person I know of to ever mention individual state laws as a health care problem. A law can simply be passed making health care a federal matter to deal with that. And tu
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Yes, because the single payer systems in Europe of trouble free right?
I'm not saying we don't have an issue, but your 1 step solution is a joke. The same corruption, greed and poor administration that afflicts us now would continue in the new system. It would just include all the problems of government waste and politics as well.
"Government waste"? Every other health care system in the world has lower costs that the US as a percentage of GDP and per capita:
http://www.theguardian.com/news/datablog/2012/jun/30/healthcare-spending-world-country
You would reduce waste by going with single-payer.
And these costs don't even get the US the highest life expectancy or lowest child mortality rates.
I'm sure there are good arguments against single payer, but worries about waste are not one of them.
Re:Time for medicare for all in the usa (Score:5, Insightful)
"Yes, because the single payer systems in Europe of trouble free right?"
1) Where did the OP claim that it was trouble free?
2) Why does it have to be trouble free before it can be useful?
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Yes, because the single payer systems in Europe of trouble free right?
Ever hear, "Price, quality and service. Pick any 2." The Europeans, and Canadians, have decided that they would let their waiting times increase to what they feel is a tolerable amount. In exchange, they have quality about equal to ours and it costs around half of what we pay.
I've compared the outcomes of surgery, cancer, heart disease, and other treatments in the US/Canada/Europe/Australia, and they're all about the same in developed countries. Some of the best outcomes are in the Veterans Affairs system -
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the million-dollar heart transplant is loaded with markup where you can likely go out side of the usa and pay way less for it.
Yeah. With heart transplants, as with anything else, you get (more or less) what you pay for. Sure, that discount heart transplant you paid $30 for in Mumbai *might* be just fine...but I'd bet my life against it.
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Time for medicare for all in the usa also the million-dollar heart transplant is loaded with markup where you can likely go out side of the usa and pay way less for it.
also due to court rulings in favor of inmate care you can just go to prison / jail to get one as well.
http://www.cbsnews.com/news/pr... [cbsnews.com]
Boy, is that ever the exception that proves the rule. In order to get a heart transplant somebody had to sue the California prison system for him.
If they didn't want to pay for it, they could have released him on parole. He was sentenced for burglary and robbery. A patient with heart failure isn't going to be able to commit any more burglaries and robberies. He'll be lucky if he can walk around the block.
Despite this unusual example, prisoners have some of the worst health care in the country.
I read a serie
Re:Time for medicare for all in the usa (Score:4, Insightful)
You don't pay taxes?
It isn't free, it is just that your money that you are paying is being placed in an other category.
Re:Time for medicare for all in the usa (Score:4, Insightful)
I never said it was free, but we all pay taxes while only some of us don't have to fork out ridiculous additional sums for medical cover.
For example, I will never be hit with a bill for medical treatments my insurance won't cover. There isn't a moment I have to worry about getting charged for my stay in hospital. I don't have to worry about whether my insurance will cover the drugs my doctor has prescribed me, the most I will pay is £8.05, even if the drug costs £10,000 a course.
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I never said it was free,
Liar. Well, unless you really don't pay taxes (which may well be true, dunno):
He never said "free." He said it won't cost him anything when he needs it. He paid for it in advance with his taxes.
Why is it that when somebody disagrees with you, you wingnuts call him a "liar"? Look up "liar" in the dictionary. A paper dictionary.
Re:Time for medicare for all in the usa (Score:4, Insightful)
Don't be daft. You are paying for your medical care in your tax bill and in all the other goods and services you buy that have taxes embedded in their prices.
There is no free lunch (2nd law of thermodynamics).
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Yes that is true. What's also true is that most people doesn't need the most expensive type of treatment which makes the total less than a medical insurance in the US. The difference is that those that can't afford paying for an insurance still can get the necessary care. And if one want to and can afford it - go for it and get an insurance too and get that unnecessary CT scan or MRI whenever you feel like!
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The PPACA has pretty much eliminated the issue of not being able to pay for medical care in the US, at least in the 27 states that have expanded medicaid.
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Ah, no. It has helped. Somewhat. Mostly it's shuffled the deck a bit. Still a whole bunch of people with essentially no way to pay for healthcare. The ACA was never designed to completely solve the problem, only improve it. And improve it a bit it has, with quite a bit of collateral damage.
The really sad part about the ACA is that the big winners were the insurance companies. They had to suck up and drop the pre existing conditions clause and had to allow for children to stay on their parent's insu
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I think everybody understands that they pay for medical care in their tax bill.
The difference is that in the U.S., you pay $10,000 a year for medical premiums, and in Europe and Canada, you pay $5,000 a year in additional taxes.
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No, there is a "nearly free" lunch if you are a multinational corporation or an executive attached to one.
The REAL average tax rate of fortune 500 companies is 13%. That's what Mitt Romney pays -- well, the income we KNOW about.
The last stat I looked at showed that the government paid around 52% of all medical expenses. And administrative costs at hospitals were around 42%.
What should we learn from this? In the US our cost is about twice to four times as much for healthcare as other civilized countries. Mo
Re:Time for medicare for all in the usa (Score:4, Insightful)
What unemployment thing? We are a few tenths of a percentage point behind the US on unemployment, nothing major.
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Please fact-check before throwing negative comments someones way.
US Unemploymnent : 6.3%
UK Unemploymnent : 6.4%
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Please fact-check before throwing negative comments someones way.
US Unemploymnent : 6.3%
UK Unemploymnent : 6.4%
Imperial or US percentages?
uh-huh (Score:5, Insightful)
Are there documented cases where the uninsured poor have bought blackmarket medical records to get healthcare? This seem preposterous.
Re:uh-huh (Score:4, Interesting)
This seem preposterous.
As a person in the medical billing field, I've regularly seen faked insurance cards, but they're easy to weed out thanks to electronic eligibility verification. Given that people will walk right up to the counter with their "Homana" insurance card printed on cheap paper, I can absolutely believe that we've treated people who claim to be Jane Doe, have an insurance card with Jane Doe's name, group and policy # on it, and know Jane Doe's DOB (sufficient information to pass eligibility verification). The only way the insurance company would figure it out is if the real Jane Doe was being seen by a doctor somewhere else that day, or if Jane Doe actually read any of the paperwork she gets past the line "This is not a bill".
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The idea that somebody would get a million-dollar heart transplant with a stolen SSN number and DOB seems especially preposterous. The surgeons would have to go over the previous medical history and records in great detail.
The guy they quoted was CIO of Beth Israel Deaconess hospital. Either I'm awfully stupid, or he got it wrong.
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whenever some company starts offering low-price transplants to the uninsured poor, you'll have your answer.
Ironically, a $150,000 heart surgery is low price compared to the million dollars your insurance company will be billed.
You might also have a hard time pointing the finger at the real crooks here.
Re:uh-huh (Score:5, Informative)
Um, No. In a Government funded Health system Such as in NZ, well below your predicted 1mil.
Quote; You might also have a hard time pointing the finger at the real crooks here.
not really, the crooks are your govt selling your health care to the highest bidder.
cardiac bypass (heart surgery): $37,000-$45,000
valve replacement (heart surgery): $43,000-$53,000
angiogram (diagnostic test): $3600-$4400
angioplasty with 2 stents (heart surgery): $17,000-$20,000
total hysterectomy (surgery): $10,000-$13,000
laparoscopic excision of endometriosis (surgery): $4900-$6000
prostate removal (cancer surgery): $10,000-$12,000
prostate brachytherapy (cancer surgery): $21,000-$25,000
excision of cancerous skin lesion: $1000-$1500
colonoscopy (diagnostic test): $1500-$1800
radical mastectomy (breast cancer surgery): $8300-$10,000
radiation therapy (one course of treatment): $15,000-$27,000
gastroscopy (diagnostic test): $1100-$1300
laparoscopic cholecystectomy (gall bladder surgery): $6800-$8400
total hip replacement (surgery): $18,000-$22,000
total knee replacement (surgery): $19,000-$23,000
cataract removal (eye surgery): $3500-$4000
thyroidectomy (surgery): $8300-$10,200
endoscopic sinus surgery: $6500-$7900
wisdom teeth removal: $1900-$2400
varicose veins (both legs): $6300-$7800
hernia repair: $5400-$6600
knee arthroscopy: $4000-$5000
biopsy: $1000-$1500
MRI scan: $1000-$1200
CT scan: $600-$800
ultrasound: $150-$200.
Link, http://www.everybody.co.nz/page-56d7ef0e-9e87-46ad-9ab9-843e76f8301e.aspx
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My god, those are American prices!
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What the insurance gets billed and what they pay is rarely close. If they get billed $1,000,000 for a transplant, they might pay $250,000.
Re: uh-huh (Score:3)
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A friend of mine had to travel to New Orleans for his liver transplant because he was going to die before getting it in Canada... He paid cash, about $250k. He was told he got a deal because he paid cash. Insurance companies get billed about double because they take months or sometimes years to pay, and always argue the amount so the hospital has to settle for a lesser amount to get paid in finite time; hence the artificial inflation.
Less likely government (Score:2)
and more likely some hacker group wanting to sell SS# and CC# on the black market.
That's my opinion.
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I'd agree with you. Using a person's name, address, social security number, and date of birth (all items included in the hacking), you can steal someone's identity and open lines of credit in their name. Then you run up a big tab, buying electronics and the like, and let the person whose identity you stole deal with the bill. This happened to me awhile back, except I was lucky that the thieves paid for rush delivery of the credit card before changing the address from mine to theirs. The card arrived at
Re:Less likely government (Score:5, Interesting)
I'm amazed at how skillfully the finance and corporate community has ingrained "identity theft" into consumer's minds. (And yes, I'm using "consumer" instead of "citizen" on purpose.)
If someone uses a fake credit card to buy items from a store, they have defrauded the store and the credit card company. It should be irrelevant whether the name on that card is fake, or belongs to some other uninvolved third party.
And yet, the industry has managed to redirect the mindset and conversation to shift much of the blame onto that uninvolved third party, making them feel like they are the ones violated by this process, and leaving them with the mess to clean up while those defrauded only write off their losses after the third party goes through hoops to "prove" their own innocence. Meanwhile, there's rarely effort to go after the actual criminal at all.
I understand the reasons why there is a credit market, but I reject the notion that what was once called fraud, perpetrated against a business that is responsible for their losses, is now theft against an unrelated third party that is guilty until proven innocent by the corporate megaliths that run the financial world.
Re:Less likely government (Score:4, Interesting)
I agree that it is fraud and that it's ridiculous that the result of Identity theft is up to the affected person to prove/clean up. I don't think that the name "Identity theft" puts the blame on the victim, though, any more than "car theft" puts the blame on the owner of the stolen car. (Before someone complains "identity theft isn't theft because you still have your identity", imagine if someone kept "borrowing" your car while you slept but returned it every morning with more scratches and dings. You'd still have use of it when you wanted it, but the value of the car would drop quickly and it would be up to you to pay the repair costs. This is what identity thieves do to your credit.)
Sadly, as was my experience during my identity theft, the companies just don't care. The credit card companies see the fraud as something to write off as a cost of doing business and then they move on. Capital One actively blocked both me and the police from investigating. They told me "we can't give you the address on the card with your name on it because if you go and kill the person, we'd be liable." They would just ignore when the police called. (Calls routed to a voicemail box that was never answered.) The credit agencies are even worse. They see your credit file as a profit engine. New lines of credit on your credit file help drive their profits. Anything that blocks this is bad for business. So protecting against identity theft is bad for business. As far as the fraud goes? Well, that's the little people's concern, not theirs. (I was lucky that I caught it when I did or I'd have been fixing the problem for a long, long time.)
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>> I don't think that the name "Identity theft" puts the blame on the victim, though, any more than "car theft" puts the blame on the owner of the stolen car.
I think there is a distinction, though, because in the case of "car theft", you rarely have to prove that it was not you using the car. Imagine if every time a car was stolen, the owner never noticed until it was used in a robbery (or driven through a red light camera), and you were assumed guilty until you proved it was not you driving. That
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1) That is a hypothesis, not an opinion
2) The summary states "...the data, which didn't include credit card information...", which contradicts half of your hypothesis.
I'm not so sure.... (Score:5, Insightful)
The thesis is that you can waltz into a doctor's office AND a hospital with faked records and get the treatment needed. Basically the important bit is the insurance info - what has happened to "you" is less important than what you want to eventually happen to you (in the example given, a heart transplant).
I kinda doubt this, at least in a general sense. First off, you can show all the insurance cards and 'insurance info' to the medical provider all you want. The provider is going to query the insurance company before doing anything expensive. Fine, you say, call them all you want, the 'patient' is insured (it's just not the right patient). Now comes the hard part. The minute that the insurance company starts getting claims from both Peoria and Trenton, NJ flags are going to go up. Other old records would be sought (for something big like a transplant or joint replacement) which would likely not match.
Anything remotely resembling a heart transplant is going to fall apart unless both the real and fake patient have nearly identical physiques, ages and problems. More routine issues could go undetected for a while but persistent discrepancies would show up and as soon as the insurance company flagged the claim as problematic, big ticket items would be placed on hold until things go cleared up. When I worked in an early Medicaid HMO in the 1980's we had some problems with folks 'sharing' the Medicaid ID card (no picture, just a printout basically). It was pretty obvious when the patient's weight varied 30 pounds every other week. We soon insisted on photo ID.
And, in fact, the feds also insist on photo ID these days. Yes, if you're bleeding out we don't ask for it up front but as soon as your blood pressure normalizes we're poking around to figure out just who you are.
So it's possible that that full on medical records might be of value, but it's going to be much harder to monetize than a credit card number and likely would be of limited use. That doesn't mean that the information shouldn't be sealed up, of course. I'm just not sure how big a deal this is. And, in the case of the Community breach, they apparently did not get that information anyway.
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You may be right with prescriptions. And the people using the fake medical identity would not be getting the prescriptions for themselves but for resale on the black market, and would probably be a career criminal. If they are local (relative to the real person) and they go to the same pharmacy (which would already have the account info in their computer) maybe they wouldn't be asked for ID or flagged as fraudulent. Although it's still a little hard to believe, because the drugs that are valuable on the bla
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It only works for so long - insurance has dealt with this fraud for ages now too - they get curi
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Yes, the summary's idea that one could get a heart transplant with faked records is baloney.
I couldn't make sense of the summary, at first. If my medical condition is bad enough that a transplant is needed, then why should I need someone else's medical records? My own would do.
On the other hand, I suppose someone's glaucoma could get me medicinal marijuana...
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There are doctors who specialize in the medical cards. All you have to 'prove' is that you have any chronic pain (or basically, any condition) at all. All you do is take in a copy of your medical records and a 'C' note and you're in. Here in Spokane they open their doors once a month for renewals and new issues. There are few doctors in the issuing system, and they generally work a few days in each town.
And medical weed is
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You're right about he insurance, but I can't help but wonder if the reasons the data is valuable are far more mundane: in order to target specific product and services for sale. If you know a patient has a specific condition, you can target them with ads for specific therapies.
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The manufacturers can already get that info, as well as pharmaceutical manufacturers. No need to be all covert about it. They made sure of that when they wrote HIPAA.
Re:I'm not so sure.... (Score:5, Informative)
Some hospitals are taking photos of patients with higher cost proceedures as early as 6 years ago. My photo is in my medical records. A stolen ID would be spotted by any staff reviewing my medical history.
Re:I'm not so sure.... (Score:5, Interesting)
Maybe, but maybe not. I know someone whose identity was stolen and used by a criminal who was arrested. Despite the fact that the guy looks NOTHING like the criminal in question (different height, weight, skin color, etc), he found himself fired from his job for having a criminal record and harassed by police officers who just assumed he was the criminal. It took him years to get anyone to even listen to him and even then it took years to fix the problem as one fixed system would get "re-infected" as the bad data flowed back in from other systems.
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All the medical service providers I use now require I show photo ID which they then scan.
This theft has no particular utility when it comes to stealing medical services.
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All the medical service providers I use now require I show photo ID which they then scan.
This theft has no particular utility when it comes to stealing medical services.
Unfortunately an aceptable ID such as a drivers license is easy to fake, especially since the admittance clerk is just looking for something to scan and not a cop trained to spot fakes.
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Some hospitals are taking photos of patients with higher cost proceedures as early as 6 years ago. My photo is in my medical records. A stolen ID would be spotted by any staff reviewing my medical history.
Presumably not if the imposter went somewhere in the country where you've never been.
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Yep. Look up "Red Flags rule".
Exaggeration much ...? (Score:1)
Something tells me it would be a little trickier than that given all that is involved in that million-dollar heart transplant. Not to mention all the local news coverage, the calls to the insurance company prior to surgery given the high cost of the surgery, getting on the waiting list, etc, etc. Not to say that it's
bass akwards (Score:3)
Until patient confidentiality is enshrined into laws with real teeth and my insurance company, employer, or local black market guru can't get their hands on them I think I'll pass.
Re:bass akwards (Score:4, Informative)
Moving to the UK's system means no insurance company, and your employer et al do not have access to your medical records. In-fact, most doctors do not have access to your medical records - they are only now bringing in a system where your medical records are shared on an on-demand basis with other hospitals and surgeries. Walk into an A&E department and they won't have your medical records.
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Medical records are insecure... so it's time to migrate to a system like the UK where they contain comprehensive information about each person? Am I actually reading this?
Until patient confidentiality is enshrined into laws with real teeth and my insurance company, employer, or local black market guru can't get their hands on them I think I'll pass.
So instead your info is leaked one way or the other anyway and you have what, exactly, as a benefit that you would lose going to a single payer system?
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Until patient confidentiality is enshrined into laws
Huh? [wikipedia.org]
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you are truly naive, HIPAA doesn't even mandate encryption. the max is $250K penalty for repeat violations if corrected within certain time frame. in other words, no teeth.
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It's not the heart transplant people that want it (Score:2)
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there's also blackmail (Score:2)
to all the important or otherwise image conscious people who have diseases and conditions they don't want made public.
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Bulls3#!t (Score:4, Interesting)
This isn't being collected for individuals. That's to much work. It will be used for bulk insurance fraud. A portfolio of bogus patients to be mixed into a doctors insurance billing.
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Obviously using it to get a heart (kidney, corneal, etc) transplant is ridiculous as the waiting period is far too long to maintain the charade. Maybe useful to defraud a pharmacy for some oxycotin (and the good drugs are so tightly watched that this is unlikely, my wife is on morphine, and she is monitored closely by both the doctor and pharmacy)
Plus a poor uninsured can get medical treatment just by walking into a hospital, they won't get transplants, but just about
Other reasons than fraud (Score:2)
Not the obvious, obviously (Score:2)
Really (Score:2)
If I am one of the 50 million Americans who are uninsured ... and I need a million-dollar heart transplant, for $250 I can get a complete medical record including insurance company details.
It would be less painful to just kill yourself than to receive an organ transplant based on someone else's medical record and then wait for rejection to set in.
The obvious reason... (Score:2)
They were looking for ancient Western secret to short life.
the most common type of identity theft? (Score:2)
Re:Biometric security - Copyrighted (Score:3, Funny)
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Time to add DNA information to our medical records!
That is not necessary. All they need to do is ask for a government issued photo ID card, and make sure the name on the card matches the name on the insurance form. My experience is that about 100% of doctors and hospitals already do that. TFA claims that just knowing an SSN and DOB is enough, and that is not true.
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Because nobody could possibly figure out how to make a fake photo ID [wikihow.com]?
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Because nobody could possibly figure out how to make a fake photo ID [wikihow.com]?
That requires far more effort than just downloading an SSN and DOB, especially faking a modern ID with holograms, embossing, and maybe an embedded chip. It also increases the legal consequences if you get caught.
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All they need to do is ask for a government issued photo ID card, and make sure the name on the card matches the name on the insurance form. My experience is that about 100% of doctors and hospitals already do that. TFA claims that just knowing an SSN and DOB is enough, and that is not true.
All they need to do is look up the patient's electronic medical record (if they ever get that working), and see that the height, weight, blood pressure, and contact information are all different.
I don't know how somebody could get my SSN and DOB, and figure out where I get my health insurance. If they did, I'd get their bills, and I'd know that something was wrong.
Hospitals do get patients coming into the ER with fake names, and they have systems in place for dealing with it. There were a couple of articles
Uninsured? (Score:2, Funny)
No one is uninsured now. Obamacare magically fixed that on January first, 2014. This article must be all FUD and spin.
Re:Uninsured? (Score:5, Insightful)
More than 7 million people now have insurance because of Obamacare.
That's 7 million more people than would be insured under the Republic plan of "Fuck you. Walk it off."
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Too bad we couldn't fix it the right way. But that would be eeeeevil soshialisums even more than the not-actually-socialism socialism that Obamacare put into place.
The poor should just die in the streets of preventable illnesses, right?
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It should be noted that while Obamacare is no more socialist than taxes in general, it does have the unfortunate side-effect of decentivizing preventative health care. It's not exactly analogous to the "tragedy of the commons" theory since preventative measures are presumably still better for you in the long run, but it's not hard to imagine that people will become less healthy as a result having minimal fiscal responsibility for the outcome.
I don't think you can really make that case. Do upper middle class people with "Cadillac" insurance plans make less use of their preventative health care coverage than people who have been given subsidized coverage under the ACA? After all they have enjoyed out of pocket caps for a long time, and thus have been effectively deincentivized for a long time. Also, regardless of your insurance, the biggest fiscal impact of poor health is its effect on your career, not the medical bills. You can escape medical bi
Re:Uninsured? (Score:5, Interesting)
Obama, one of the better republican presidents we have had.
Hopefully we get a real liberal next time instead of a poser.
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But if you change the meaning of Socialism to "stuff I don't like", then all kinds of things can become "Socialist".
Re:Uninsured? (Score:5, Interesting)
In the 1930's the right cried 'socialism' to the building of the Grand Coulee dam. It was supposed to boost farming in the middle of Washington State. It was way more electricity and water than would be needed (and we really didn't need that much extra food production at the time).
A few years later WWII happened, and it went from 'socialist' to 'forward thinking' when it allowed the mass production of aluminum for the war effort. (oddly the biggest socialist program in the country, the freeway system, met little opposition as it meant pork for every state, so like you said, they liked it, so it wasn't socialism)
Fortunately for us living here, it currently means very inexpensive electricity (8.8 cents per kwh per my last bill).
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After participating in the pre-war three month mudslog crossing the US with tanks trucks and jeeps the multi-lane Autobahn must of been truly inspiring. And what better way to counter potential complaints of socialism than to make it a militarily advantageous.
It would never make it through congress today, even framing it as a military necessity. Long term thinking has rather evaporated in a wor
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Obamacare is hardly a socialist program.
Given that Obamacare follows the essential features (mandates and private insurance) of a Heritage Foundation idea. http://krugman.blogs.nytimes.c... [nytimes.com]
In fact, calling Obama socialist or liberal is a stretch.
Obama, one of the better republican presidents we have had.
Hopefully we get a real liberal next time instead of a poser.
I wanted an FDR and all I got was this lousy Obama.
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More than 7 million people now have insurance paid for by taxpayers and rising insurance costs to all because of Socialism.
There. I fixed that for you.
You ought to fix your high school education, too, since you don't know what socialism is.
I mean, really, totally clueless. You think that "socialism" is just some word to call people that you don't like, like "retarded."
Just for fun, define socialism, and explain how Obamacare is socialist, in two sentences.
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Your stretch with making the ACA fit the definition of socialism shows a remarkably complete failure of understanding.
Now run off to bed before mommy finds out you've been using her computer again.
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Citation from a site that's not Breitbart.com?
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(If you only realized how difficult it was to type that while laughing my ass off.......)
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How does this have anything to do with Obama? Or are you a bot or human acting as a proxy for a bot?
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