UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson fatally shot outside of Hilton hotel in Midtown in possible targeted attack

They trying to make an example out of him but he's going to walk regardless

Never going to find a jury that will get a conviction
 
some quotes for the lazy that dont click links

Those secret bonuses have been paid out as part of a UnitedHealth program that stations the company’s own medical teams in nursing homes and pushes them to cut care expenses for residents covered by the insurance giant.

In several cases identified by the Guardian, nursing home residents who needed immediate hospital care under the program failed to receive it, after interventions from UnitedHealth staffers. At least one lived with permanent brain damage following his delayed transfer, according to a confidential nursing home incident log, recordings and photo evidence.

“No one is truly investigating when a patient suffers harm. Absolutely no one,” said one current UnitedHealth nurse practitioner who recently filed a congressional complaint about the nursing home program. “These incidents are hidden, downplayed and minimized. The sense is: ‘Well, they’re medically frail, and no one lives for ever.’”

One term that UnitedHealth executives obsessed over was “admits per thousand” – APK for short. It was a measure of the rate that nursing homes sent their residents to the hospital. Under the “Premium Dividend” program, a low APK qualified a nursing home for the various bonus payments the insurer offered. A high APK meant that a nursing home received nothing.

Internal emails show, for example, that UnitedHealth supervisors gave their teams “budgets” showing how many hospital admissions they had “left” to use up on nursing homes patients.

Two current and three former UnitedHealth nurse practitioners told the Guardian that UnitedHealth managers pressed nurse practitioners to persuade Medicare Advantage members to change their “code status” to DNR even when patients had clearly expressed a desire that all available treatments be used to keep them alive.
“They’re pretending to make it look like it’s in the best interest of the member,” another current UnitedHealth nurse practitioner said. “But it’s really not.”

The rest of my article is a few stories of patient having what appears to be clear signs of strokes but werent immediately sent to the hospital. Instead the
United Health on site person tried to say it was something else, or they're told to report to corporate first and see what they say. Either took hours for a reply or they asked for a on site test to be done. Patients suffered permanent damage ect.
 
some quotes for the lazy that dont click links











The rest of my article is a few stories of patient having what appears to be clear signs of strokes but werent immediately sent to the hospital. Instead the
United Health on site person tried to say it was something else, or they're told to report to corporate first and see what they say. Either took hours for a reply or they asked for a on site test to be done. Patients suffered permanent damage ect.
Damn homie didn't even see your post. Insurance is a scam
 
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