Earlier this month an Illinois physician learned her ER as getting a new boss. He called himself "Doctor George." And he was *deeply* unhappy with her failure to do Medicare fraud.
American Physician Partners was like 100 other PE medical rollups. It used debt to swallow small practices in a specialty, emergency med, promising investors it would make the $ back by billing more & paying docs less, thanks to an "oversupply" of ER docs levernews.com/private-equity…
APP's founders had fancy credentials. Mark Green is a special ops flight surgeon & GOP congressman, now 1 of the Hill's most prolific stock traders. John Rutledge rolled up 2 rural hospital chains that reaped $$$$ returns for GTCR & Warburg Pincus.
But...
Everyone I interviewed said APP was an operational dumpster fire: It overpaid for TX practices *after* the state passed a surprise billing law, then allegedly used wage theft to offset shrinking reimbursements, alienating salaried docs it then replaced with $400/ hour temps.
Paying such bounties for temp docs then required APP to understaff ERs even more aggressively than typical PE-gutted emergency rooms. "They were behaving like someone with a gambling debt," one doctor explained. prospect.org/health/2023-07…
Then 2 weeks ago, APP announced it was shutting & transferring all contracts to...others. Different private equity owned ER operators, perhaps. Hospitals themselves, maybe. In Waukegan, Kelly Wren learned her new ER director would be...someone she'd heard of on TV news!
And the mysterious "Doctor George"? Yeah, no one seemed to know his actual name, including the COO of the hospital itself.
But Dr. Wren was lucky, actually. APP paid her for the month of June right on time July 20.
At Manatee Memorial Hospital, in lieu of a June paycheck, docs received a kind message from hospital CEO Tom McDougal:
Meanwhile in Tennessee, a Canadian hospitalist said all of the APP docs working in their hospital on H1-B visas had to stop working immediately because their work visas were no longer valid.
Most insanely, the liberal malpractice insurance policies every physician requires to take a gig in a direly understaffed ER "supervising" way more PAs and NPs than any doctor feels is safe? Yeah so...
Wilder still, APP *still hasn't filed bankruptcy.* An attorney told me that unlike many PE firms APP owner Brown Brothers Harriman does not bankrupt portfolio companies often. But Cerberus, the firm named after Hell's 3-headed watchdog that is APP's biggest creditor, sure does!
Many docs suspect the lack of a bk filing suggests APP's owners/lenders are playing very dirty to avoid paying docs what they're owed.
A recent court filing in a wage theft case estimates APP stiffed 8 doctors by $13.99 MILLION over 5 years
Unruly corporate collapses invariably screw workers even more than rigged Chapter 11s.
Thanks to the unprecedented rate hikes our PE-operated central bank has inflicted we'll likely be seeing many more APPs.
(And just like that, a 100-year-old trucking firm went poof)
Alas..
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The murder of the UnitedHealth CEO by a guy who underwent spinal fusion surgery for debilitating pain has unleashed a furious debate about US health care, most of it dumb
Thankfully I found a whistleblower suit filed by a surgeon UHC hired to deny spinal fusion surgery coverage..
But first: the predictable chorus of obtuse propagandists saying it's vulgar to villainize insurers which after all "barely generate profits", reminds me of a book I've found invaluable for demystifying this shit.
The author was a Mafia reporter. US health care is a crime scene
Cook's book introduced me to the world of unnecessary hysterectomies, which became a scourge soon after unions began negotiating Blue Cross coverage. But hysteretomy isn't so profitable today. Spinal fusion, on the other hand, can rake in up to $250K/pop prospect.org/health/2024-12…
You already know a company called RealPage orchestrated a vast 15-year conspiracy to eternally inflate American rents.
But it gets worse: prospect.org/infrastructure…
RealPage pretends to sell "algorithms" but a former exec says its software is really a "bastardization" designed to do one thing only: remove human judgment/logic/decency from the process of determining rent prices & raise them "hella way too high"
RealPage sets rents for >65% of units in most major metro areas & rents have risen accordingly. Some landlords reported 20-plus% revenue gains their first year of using the software.
Along the way, huge rent hikes got baked into the math of underwriting multifamily mortgages.
Since getting Covid I've had frequent bouts of what feels like "worst hangover of all time."
Last month a neurologist told me he'd learned at an "NIH panel" that "Long Covid is psychological."
Somehow, NIH spent $1.2 billion arriving at this conclusion. prospect.org/health/2024-06…
.@thesicktimes FOIA-d docs to explain how the NIH Long Covid project spent so much achieving so little of value to folks w/ LC, which Fauci himself in 2020 noted is suspiciously similar to ME/CFS aka "chronic fatigue syndrome"
TLDR: they didn't hire anyone with ME/CFS expertise
@thesicktimes The med establishment has a long history of not taking "chronic fatigue syndrome" seriously dating back when CDC gave it that dumb name in the 1980s.
It was originally called "chronic Epstein Barr" after the virus whose antibodies usually show up in elevated levels in sufferers
Would Boeing murder a whistleblower? Before this month I'd have said it depends. I didn't think Boeing would kill a middle manager who never worked on the 737 Max & left in 2017.
"I don't think one can be cynical enough when it comes to these guys," said a longtime exec.
He told me to open Maps & find the airport 180 miles east of the 737 factory where Boeing stores "finished" jets that are too fucked to deliver. "The engines alone are worth billions."
Airlines won't accept the 737s until Boeing fixes their problems. As the dead whistleblower's lawsuit explains, jets coming off Boeing assembly lines have a lot
Bosses pressured workers to push 787s out with 100s of dangerous defects even after the FAA grounded 787s in 2013
holy shit: a childhood friend of dead Boeing whistleblower Swampy Barnett said he told her straight up: "If anything happens to me, it's not suicide."
This echoes what his lawyer & brother told me for my piece yesterday.
I was shocked: Boeing has dozens of whistleblowers; whistleblowing is thankless/isolating/self-destructive stuff; Swampy didn't even work on the 737 Max. But... prospect.org/justice/2024-0…
Swampy was found with his finger on the trigger of a silver pistol. A physician who is a regular contributor to the indespensable site #NakedCapitalism says this is a major red flag
This shocks even me: Rite Aid just clawed back already-paid severance payments from the bank accounts of thousands of laid-off workers, literally the same day Bloomberg reported its CEO is slated to receive $20 MILLION when the co emerges from Chap 11.
Naturally, Kirkland & Ellis & Alvarez & Marsal made out okay: they've billed the bankrupt dumpster fire pharmacy chain $50 million so far news.bloomberglaw.com/antitrust/rite…
I wrote the whole pathetic story of this Hunter Biden of American companies last fall. (Did you know Rite-Aid used to own the biggest PBM? They sold it for a half billion dollar loss, and it's all been downhill from there.) prospect.org/power/2023-11-…