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Politics : Formerly About Advanced Micro Devices -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: i-node who wrote (735016)8/26/2013 4:38:02 PM
From: Jorj X Mckie1 Recommendation

Recommended By
TideGlider

  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 1579681
 
Considering Obama's Mother, I think she would have been proud to state that he was born in Kenya.

It would have to be a real manchurian candidate situation to think down to the newspaper announcement detail.

There are many inconsistencies, but I think they are there as a result of Obama lying on his university applications and trying to cover that up.



To: i-node who wrote (735016)8/26/2013 5:21:41 PM
From: combjelly  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1579681
 
This is tin foil hat territory.



To: i-node who wrote (735016)8/26/2013 7:13:32 PM
From: bentway  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 1579681
 
Real Hospital Bill: $546 for Bag of Saltwater

THAT'S FOR 6 LITERS OF WATER AND 54 GRAMS OF SALT

By Kate Seamons, Newser Staff
newser.com
( This isn't new. 20 years ago a hospital charged my mother's insurance .50 for EACH cottonball used! )
Posted Aug 26, 2013 5:57 PM CDT

(NEWSER) – As far as price tags go, it's an attention grabber: $546 for six liters of water and 54 grams of salt. But that's what one patient was charged for what the New York Times calls "one of the most common components of emergency medicine": the IV bag. Nina Bernstein digs into the numbers by way of a 2012 food poisoning outbreak in upstate New York. She reviewed some of the more than 100 affected patients' bills, and quickly realized that some were charged as much as 200 times the manufacturer's price for a liter of saline—which has recently ranged from 44 cents to $1—plus another change for "IV administration."

A patient at White Plains Hospital got a bill that included $91 for a single unit of Hospira IV (hospital's cost: 86 cents), plus $127 for administering it. The $546 figure comes from the bill of a woman who spent three days in the same hospital, which paid $5.16 for her six liters of saline. Bernstein acknowledges we're pretty numb to the reality of inflated health-care costs, but sees something more in "the tale of the humble IV bag": "secrecy that helps keep prices high." It's the product of purchasing organizations and distributors and other players who make deals that "so obscure prices and profits that even participants cannot say what the simplest component of care actually costs, let alone what it should cost," she writes. "And that leaves taxpayers and patients alike with an inflated bottom line and little or no way to challenge it." Read her full piece here.