Sunday, May 23, 2021

SCI Loot by Hospitals

 

Dalit-Online 

Weekly e news paper 

Editor: Nagaraja.M.R.. Vol.17....Issue. 21...........23/05/2021

 

 

Editorial  : Private  Hospitals  Robbing  Patients

-         PIL  Appeal to Honourable Supreme Court of India

 

https://www.livelaw.in/top-stories/pvt-hospitals-are-robbing-covid19-patients-plea-in-sc-seeks-guidelines-for-admission-of-patientsfees-and-discharge-from-hospitals-160916

 

https://youtu.be/EYLZugXs2KI

 

https://youtu.be/-j2IeDAXmi0

 

Now  crores of Indians are facing life threatening  covid disease. Even in these trying times private hospitals linked to politicians are fleecing money from patients. Politicians in power are part of this  loot  and not enforcing  government  mandated price caps and bed reservations.

 

Many affluent  persons having lakhs of rupees property and income have got BPL ration cards using their connections. By virtue their BPL card those rich people get  free medical treatment in hospitals, free ration, etc. Whereas poor , needy persons without any connections don't   have BPL card they neither get free medical treatment or free ration. They either die by hunger or lack of medical care.

 

Government  declare  it does not have enough money to buy oxygen, ventilators , to build  emergency hospitals. Whereas it  is spending crores of rupees on unnecessary  projects like central vista , flyovers,  etc. Government is failing in prioritising  spending.

Above two movie clip web links aptly describes  hospital scenario.

 

Hereby we request Honourable  Supreme Court of India  to order central and state governments :

 

1.      To reimburse   medicals Bills  of Ministers , judges , MLAs , MPs  towards covid treatment or other ailments only if admitted in government hospitals.

2.      To  scientifically  fix prices of ICU beds, ventilators , medicines,  medical care charges specifically for COVID treatment and immediately  enforce it on private hospitals.

3.      To order government to take  control of erring private hospitals under NDMA Act forthwith.

4.      To allot hospital beds in both government and private hospitals on scientific basis  not on the basis of recommendations by powers that be.

5.      To order central and state governments to immediately stop  low priority projects and to divert that money for covid care.

6.      To order Ram Janma bhoomi trust , TTD , Malankara church and Jamia Masjid  ( who have collected crores of rupees public donation ) to  lend money  to government  as loan towards covid care.

7.      To strictly maintain accountability of  covid expenses by governments.

8.      To initiate  criminal prosecution of  rich people with BPL cards.

9.      To  extend free health care , free ration facilities to needy even if they don't have BPL card.

10.  To admit all patients even if without money to pay for admission,  treatment. To initiate  criminal prosecution  of doctors , hospitals who refuse treatment of poor.

 

With Regards

Nagaraja Mysuru Raghupathi

 

Cruel  Greedy COVID  Hospital

 

       On June 24, when Mayanka Sanghotra learned that her mother, Narender Kaur, had tested positive for COVID-19, she was naturally alarmed. She could not get through to any of the government helpline numbers listed online, but she did discover that Shanti Mukand Hospital, located about ten minutes away from her home, was dedicated to patients infected by the novel coronavirus. Within hours, Sanghotra had her mother admitted to the hospital.The doctors at Shanti Mukand said the 52-year-old Narender’s condition was critical. She had very unstable oxygen levels. Sanghotra was prepared to do anything to ensure the best possible medical intervention, so when she was told that the hospital offered a COVID package for Rs 4 lakh and they would start the treatment immediately when she deposited the amount, she agreed.The package included Rs 36,500 per day for a bed without a ventilator (Rs 30,000 for the bed and Rs 6,500 to provide PPE kits to the hospital’s staff). Everything else, depending on the number of days Narender Kaur would spend in the hospital and the type of medical services she would require, would be calculated upon her discharge. Since Sanghotra could not withdraw more than Rs 50,000 per day from her bank, she paid the Rs 4 lakh in instalments.The doctors assured Sanghotra that her mother’s condition was slowly improving. But there were problems. Within two days, Narender had to be put on non-invasive ventilation (NIV) oxygen support. On July 1, Sanghotra was informed that her mother did not have a pulse and now needed a ventilator.

 

 “The doctors still said that at least her condition was not deteriorating,” Sanghotra recalled.She was asked to arrange for three injections, each for Rs 40,000. Then she was asked to procure the anti-viral drug remdesivir. It was apparently out of stock at the hospital pharmacy.“It was only available on the black market for prices ranging from Rs 30,000 to Rs 80,000. The doctors had asked for six vials,” said Sanghotra. She managed to get four vials from the hospital pharmacy itself. About a week later, on July 10, she received the other two directly from the manufacturer, whom she was able to call thanks to some of her contacts.The bill that Mayanka Sanghotra was asked to clear.Soon after this, she received a call from the hospital’s billing department. As of July 5, they told her, her bill had exceeded Rs 7.5 lakhs.“I was confused. If there was a package for Rs 4 lakhs, how was the bill Rs 7.5 lakhs?” she said.The billing department gave her an elaborate breakup of the costs. “This included costs for everything, including sanitisers, all in lakhs! Did the COVID package include nothing needed for COVID treatment?” Sanghotra wondered.Sanghotra had seen a small notification somewhere that the Delhi government had put a price cap on the treatment of COVID-19 in private hospitals. When she asked the hospital about it, they would not give her a direct answer. So she went home and started looking for help online.She got in touch with Malini Aisola, the co-convenor of the All India Drug Action Network (AIDAN). Together, they navigated several rounds of negotiations with everyone involved.Amresh Kumar, a member of the ruling Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) in Delhi, got in touch with Sanghotra and promised to help her. “But instead of intervening, the government representative actually abandoned Mayanka to negotiate on her own,” said Aisola. “The role of the government representative was to step in and ensure the hospital followed the government rules. But all he told Mayanka was, ‘try and negotiate and maybe they will give you a 10% discount’.’’Acting on Kumar’s suggestion, Sanghotra went to Dr Tejender Pal, a physiotherapist at Shanti Mukand, that very day for help. Pal directed her to Dr Mohan Dube, the hospital’s director of medical services (DMS).

 

 In a supposed display of altruism, Dube assured her that if she deposited Rs 5 lakh with the hospital by the following Monday, he would help convince the management to decide in their favour.“How was it in my favour when a government price cap existed?” Sanghotra asked.Also Read: We Need to Consider Nationalising Private Hospitals if We Are to Avert a Total DisasterAn order ignoredOn June 20, the Delhi government had issued an order capping prices for COVID-19 treatment in private hospitals. The order said: “…All COVID beds would be at rates given by the Committee subject to upper limit of 60% of the beds of total hospital bed capacity.”The order explicitly specified the rates. All National Accreditation Board for Hospitals and Healthcare-accredited hospitals, such as Shanti Mukand, could charge no more than Rs 10,000, Rs 15000 and Rs 18,000 respectively for a bed in the isolation ward, a bed in the ICU without a ventilator and a bed in the ICU with ventilator support.Although the order exists on paper, many private hospitals work their way around it and charge patients much more than the specified limits.“No one at the hospital ever told me about the existence of this order!” Sanghotra observed.On July 11, Sanghotra wrote a complaint letter with the subject: “Grievance regarding billing of patient Mrs Narender Kaur for COVID-19 treatment in violation of Delhi Government Order of 20 June 2020” and sent it to the hospital authorities as well as the Delhi government.In response to this letter, Amresh Kumar and Dube told her over a conference call that ‘things could have been resolved with discussions’.On July 14, Aisola accompanied Sanghotra to the hospital to meet Dube

 

Dube told them that Sanghotra should write an application regarding her financial constraints with respect to the payment of the hospital bill. He instructed Dr Samrul Hoda from the billing department to ensure that Narender Kaur’s case was dealt with at the prices set by the government.A poster released by Shanti Mukand. Photo: Facebook/shantimukandhospitalHoda went through Sanghotra’s application in detail. He told her and Aisola that they could escalate the matter all they wanted, but the pharmacy bills of almost Rs 3 lakhs had to be paid separately, irrespective of the government cap.When the two women reminded Hoda of the conversation with Dube, he said he was following Dube’s instructions. When the women asked to confirm this claim, Hoda said Dube’s phone was unreachable at the moment.“We said our primary concern was just to get Mayanka’s mother the medical attention she needed. We were there for a resolution, not a fight,” said Aisola.There was no sense to the pharmacy bills. “Most tests and treatments I was billed for were already included in the package!” said Sanghotra. By then, she had deposited about Rs 3.5 lakhs with the hospital and saw no reason to pay the pharmacy bills separately.On July 17, Hoda called Sanghotra and said: “Either arrange the payment or you can take the patient out of this hospital.”Sanghotra was shocked. “This was so unethical. How can a person from a hospital say things like this? I was depressed and helpless,” she said.On the evening of July 17, however, the billing department of Shanti Mukand Hospital asked Sanghotra to settle her bills according to the government-specified rates. She paid Rs 4.22 lakhs and they asked her to deposit an advance for the next few days. She paid Rs 18,000 in advance for one day.Photograph of the final bill. Photo: By arrangementTwo hours later, Sanghotra received a call from the hospital. Her mother’s oxygen levels were unstable, she was told. A few minutes later, she received another call. Narender Kaur had gone into a cardiac arrest. By the time Sanghotra got to the hospital at 9:30 pm, her mother had been declared dead.Questions, but no answersOn July 26, I asked Hoda about the COVID-19 packages at Shanti Mukand Hospital. He gave me the figures specified in the Delhi government order of June 20 and assured me that the hospital abided by these rules.Then I asked him to confirm if this practice had been adhered to completely since June 20. “I am afraid I cannot discuss these details,” he said, adding that charges go higher when patients insist on better facilities, such as an air-conditioned single room.I asked if this was what had happened with Narender Kaur.He said he could not recall such intricate details. “There’s always an undertaking, though,” he added.Also Read: Majority of Politicians Who Contracted COVID-19 Have Preferred Private HospitalsBut the hospital refused to provide a copy of the undertaking to Sanghotra, even though the AAP’s Amresh Kumar had told her that patients and their relatives have the right to demand such documents from hospitals. So far, this too remains unresolved.When I got in touch with Amresh Kumar of the AAP on August 3, he took two days to respond to my queries. On August 5, he told me: “I do not recall the particular details of this case. There are far too many cases that we have to oversee. But from what I recall, this was a case of overcharging and as is usual in such cases, I put them in touch with the DMS. The patient and the DMS take it [forward] from there.”Kumar added that the last time he had communicated with Sanghotra was during the conference call on July 11, when he spoke with her and Dube. However, though that conference call took place after Sanghotra had sent her complaint letter to the hospital authorities and the Delhi government, Kumar denied any knowledge of the letter.When I told him that Sanghotra’s mother, Narender Kaur, had been declared dead after the bills were finally settled, Kumar said: “That conference call was the last communication I had with them. I have no information after that. You can send me the patient number if the issue has not been resolved yet, and I can then try to help.”Not an isolated caseSanghotra’s story is unfortunately not an isolated case. In a virtual press conference on June 25, several civil society groups, including AIDAN, Anveshi Research Centre for Women’s studies, and 18 others, highlighted the failure of the government’s price cap in private hospitals. With no transparent information system for the public and not much effort by the authorities to enforce the order, COVID-19 patients not only suffer from the illness but also to pay for treatment.When patients approach hospitals for immediate medical requirements, there is already a serious power difference between the two parties, said Inayat Singh Kakar of the People’s Health Movement at the virtual press conference. “It becomes very difficult to challenge the hospital or the government under such duress. It is like trying to fight with your hands tied!” she said.Representative image of a COVID-19 hospital. Photo: PTI“These stories are still just the tip of the iceberg,” Jashodhara Dasgupta from Sahayog said. “It is expected that at least in times like this, the private sector will keep its ideas of profiteering aside and stand in solidarity with people who are suffering. It is unfortunate that we find such unabashed and unethical ways of profiteering and exploitation.”“It is unethical and it is mental harassment,” said Sanghotra. “Private hospitals have a fixed mindset: we need money by hook or by crook.”

 

It has been more than a month since the Delhi government issued its order capping prices of treatment, but grievances like Sanghotra’s have not been resolved. The civil society groups at the press conference released a letter to government authorities such Delhi chief minister Arvind Kejriwal and Lt Governor Anil Baijal. The letter urged them to take action on complaints, establish a formal grievance redressal system, ensure transparency on rates, provide real-time information on fixed-rate beds capacity, extend price caps to all ICU beds and check on the indiscriminate use of drugs like remdesivir and favipiravir.“Over 80% of our doctors are in the private sector; 93% of hospitals are privatised and 64% of hospital beds are in the private sector. So, given a pandemic, it is impossible for the people of this country to limit their healthcare requirements only to the public sector,” said Dasgupta.However, Sanghotra, who is now dealing with her mother’s last rites, said: “I have learnt the biggest lesson of my life: to never, ever go to a private hospital.”Sweta Dash is associated with the Right to Food campaign.

 

How Indian doctors and private hospitals are fleecing patients and corporates

-         Ritesh Kumar Singh

 

Most Indians consider doctors as next to God if not God. We still have many doctors with impeccable ethical records. However, there are many others - not so ethical, and their number is on the rise who don’t think twice before taking their patients for a ride.

 

The arrest of top doctors (including the CEO of Hiranandani Hospital Dr. Sujit Chatterjee) in connection with a kidney transplant case on August 9 is not a rare incident of unethical (and maybe illegal) business practice at big private hospitals in Indian cities.

 

 

 

Some of the common tactics used by money-minded Indian doctors to cheat or fleece gullible patients of their hard earned money are:

 

Prescribing more tests than necessary - to be done at preferred labs (whether in-house at big hospitals or outside labs) for hefty commissions. Sometimes these tests are not even conducted on the samples taken, and fake results are given. By the way, have you heard about sink tests?

Keeping you admitted at hospital rooms when you’re fit to be discharged. A doctor attempted this trick with my son at a hospital in Andheri.

Prescribing expensive medicines/vaccines when cheaper and quality substitutes are available. Often many such medicines/vaccines are available only at prescribed chemist shops. That benefits pharma companies and the doctors who prescribe them but inflate the bills for patients.

Charging patients at different rates for the same treatment. Top private hospitals are charging according to the room a patient selects even for the same operation by the same doctors in the same operation theatre.

Fake operations – this is how it happens. A doctor can assess that you can be made to pay. He will say that you need an urgent operation when you don’t really need it. If you’re still not convinced he’ll say that he needs to send a tissue from your throat for testing whether it has a cancerous cell. Most of us don’t argue with our doctors. So you’ll agree. He’ll admit you and give you anaesthesia.

Unconscious you will be wheeled into operation theatre where your conscious relatives will be not be allowed. After few hours, you’ll be taken out drowsy. After you wake up the doctor will come and say that he has sent your tissue for testing though he doesn’t think you got cancer but he wants to be doubly sure. Can you argue? This again has happened with one of my relatives. After the operation, the doctor simply forgot that he has to discuss the test results before the operation he was very concerned. When my relative approached him to discuss the results of the test even without looking at the reports he smiled and said nothing to worry.  

Use of stent in heart disease treatment even if not needed – 1 stent may cost a patient anything between Rs. 60,000 -100,000 or more depending upon the status of hospitals or pockets of gullible patients. It's not uncommon to give stents to patients at 3 times the import price. Worse, it may be harmful and may cause death yet doctors take bribes to recommend stents.

 

 

Gynaecologists at private hospitals are well-known to force pregnant women to go for C-section which pays better than normal deliveries.

Last but not the least, is luring poor and uneducated people for agreeing to donate organs, kidney in particular, for which there is no dearth of high paying customers as highlighted by the arrests at Hiranandani Hospital in Mumbai and Appolo in Delhi.

Genesis of the problem

 

With profit making being their main motive, private hospitals are pushing doctors through a system of incentives and disincentives to over-bill using whatever means – ethical or unethical – they can think of. With seats in the subsidized government medical colleges being limited, many medical aspirants opt for private medical colleges that charge hefty capitation fees. This makes doctors vulnerable to the whims of private hospitals that pay good money to their empanelled doctors – needed to recover high investments in medical education.

 

With seats in the subsidized government medical colleges being limited, many medical aspirants opt for private medical colleges that charge hefty capitation fees. This makes doctors vulnerable to the whims of private hospitals that pay good money to their empanelled doctors – needed to recover high investments in medical education.

 

This makes doctors vulnerable to the whims of private hospitals that pay good money to their empanelled doctors – needed to recover high investments in medical education.

 

Implications

 

Most of the readers of this post are likely to be the salaried professionals. We all get health cover provided by our employers who pay the premiums to insurance companies.

 

Insurance premiums are negotiated almost every year and rates are decided on the basis previous years claims. The more the claims in the current year, the higher the premium would be next year.

 

Thus, patients or their employers (in the case of salaried people) have to indirectly bear the rising cost of healthcare in the form of high and rising insurance premiums. Since it’s the patients or their employers who’re really bearing the rising cost of health care, insurance companies don’t object to rising medical malpractices unless the net claim payments exceed the premiums received.

 

Worse, they may try to benefit from that by raising insurance premium rates for unorganized individual cover seekers. If you don’t believe me…please try to check what premium your employer is paying for Rs. 500,000 cover and how much you’re paying for your self-financed plan. Premium could be as high as 300-400%.

 

Not only this. Cashless facilities - which most of us prefer but most of the insurance don't - again attract very high premium rates. Reimbursable claims are preferred by the insurance companies because they often reject some of the charges by saying that those are not covered.

 

To cut the long story short, doctors, private hospitals, pharma companies and often insurance companies are having fun at the cost of individuals, and corporates.

 

The way forward

 

MCI is not effective in checking malpractices and corruption in medical field, a system of the standardized treatment protocol or SOPs may help check some abuse but may constrain doctors in treatment. In some cases, it may raise the cost of treatment. Preferred hospital network system though has improved convenience, but is enough to check unscrupulous doctors.

 

Can economics provide any insights to help addressing the growing menace of medical malpractices? We’d like to submit that tweaking the system of incentives and disincentives, and improved access to information and a more transparent healthcare market more transparent will help.

 

Incentives

 

Increasing the supply of seats in govt. medical colleges and capping capitation fee will reduce the investment cost of medical students and hence their vulnerabilities to give in to uncontrolled pursuit of profit by private hospitals that pushes them to cheat and overbill.

 

Access to information and transparency

 

Mandatory recording, archiving and sharing of the recording with patients or their representatives

 

At present, private hospitals do publish the credential of its specialist doctors like education and past experience. How about adding the following information as well say about its gynaecologists:

 

Total deliveries in the last 3 years

Normal deliveries

C-section

Such information will help patients take informed decisions about which doctor to go to for a treatment. Maybe, the doctors (especially those who're ethical and there are still many) should come forward and provide the above information whether asked or not.

 

Rating and ranking of top specialist doctors in fraud prone specializations such as kidney transplant, gynaecology and heart - by a third party independent agency and the ratings to be made available online – without any restrictions

 

Rating of hospitals based on basic infrastructure, charges, indicators of ethical business practices like how many medical malpractice suits filed against...

 

Disincentives

 

The above measures can check most of the malpractices but not all. For serious deviant, stringent punishments including permanent disbarment and imprisonment will be needed.

 

Individual actions by patients

 

Aggrieved patients should take their grievances to consumer courts which are cheaper, faster and don’t require lawyers for representation. Some nice suggestions on how to approach consumer courts for medical malpractice/negligence can be found here. In addition, given the pervasiveness of the internet and social media, it's important that we share our experiences - good as well as bad with doctors and hospitals. If we do, unethical doctors and hospitals will start losing patients that will force them to change their ways. Similarly, good doctors and hospitals should be promoted.

 

What corporate can and should do? 

 

Indian corporates are cutting corners to survive in a sluggish economic environment. Yet they are paying hefty insurance premiums that keep on rising almost every year. How about studying your last 5 years’ insurance bills?

 

Corporates, especially the bigger ones with bigger insurance bills are advised to hire in-house doctors and medical lawyers to investigate being taken for a ride by unethical doctors, hospitals, and take remedial actions.

 

 

 

Post Script: And the above is about better off sections of society. Just imagine how vulnerable the workers of unorganized sector are before such doctors and hospitals since they don’t get health cover facilities from their employers…so most of them go without insurance cover as individual health covers are very expensive.

 

COVID  Care Fundamental  Right

https://dalit-online.blogspot.com/2021/05/covid-care-fundamental-right.html?m=1 

 

 

FIR against COVID Hospitals

https://dalit-online.blogspot.com/2021/05/fir-against-covid-hospitals.html?m=1

 

 

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