@DrewSav A politician professing and attesting very publicly to a faith is basically just dog whistling their willingness to play the political game to climb the party ladder, rather than being actually focused on the public good.
@XcentricXennial@Gianl1974 Probably not many real pics of the actual conditions, and if that’s what it looked like in 2019, do you think is any more humane in 2026?
Elite Democrats -- rather than admitting that they ran flawed, centrist campaigns in 2016 and 2024 -- are prepared to govern their selection of a presidential nominee by racism, sexism, homophobia and Christian nationalism. Good work, people.
I am Sam Hazen, CEO of HCA Healthcare. The largest for-profit hospital system in the United States.
One hundred and eighty-two hospitals. Twenty states.
I oversee a spreadsheet called the chargemaster. It has 42,000 line items. Each line item is a price. The prices are not real.
I need to be precise about that. They are not estimates. Not approximations. Not market rates. They are anchors. An anchor is a number you set high so that every negotiated discount feels like a victory. No relationship to cost. No relationship to value. A relationship to leverage.
My team sets the anchors. That is the job.
The price is correct.
Take a drug. Keytruda. Immunotherapy. Treats sixteen types of cancer. The manufacturer charges approximately $11,000 per dose. That is the acquisition cost. What the hospital pays.
My team enters it into the chargemaster. They do not enter $11,000. They enter $43,000.
That is the gross charge. The gross charge is a fiction. No one pays it. No one is expected to pay it. The gross charge exists so that when Blue Cross negotiates a 68% discount, they pay $13,760, and the contract says "68% discount" and both parties feel the transaction was rigorous.
A 68% discount on a fictional price produces a real price that is 25% above acquisition cost. That margin is where I live. My 2025 compensation was $26.5 million. Eighty percent of my bonus is tied to EBITDA. Earnings Before Interest, Taxes, Depreciation, and Amortization. It is also earnings before the patient opens the bill.
Same dose of Keytruda at the hospital across town. Gross charge: $12,000. Blue Cross rate: $10,200. Same drug. Same dose. Same needle. Same cancer. Different spreadsheet.
The CMS transparency data showed the ratio between the highest and lowest negotiated price for the same drug at the same hospital can reach 2,347 to one. Not 2x. Not 10x. Not 100x. Two thousand three hundred and forty-seven to one. For the same thing. In the same building. On the same Tuesday.
The price is correct.
Every drug in the chargemaster has twelve prices. Twelve.
Gross charge. Medicare rate. Medicaid rate. Blue Cross. Aetna. Cigna. UnitedHealth. Humana. Workers' comp. Tricare. Auto insurance.
And the self-pay rate.
The self-pay rate is for the person without insurance. It is the gross charge. The fictional number. The anchor. The person without insurance pays the number that was designed to be negotiated down from. They pay the ceiling because they have no one to negotiate on their behalf. Same drug. Same chair. Same nurse. They pay the price that no insurer in the country would accept.
I maintain a file. CDM line item 637-4892-PKB. Saline flush. Sodium chloride 0.9%. Acquisition cost: $0.47. We charge $87. That is an 18,410% markup.
The saline flush is used before and after every IV infusion. A chemo patient receiving twelve cycles will be charged $87 for saline fourteen times per visit. I know the math. My team built the math. The math is the job.
The price is correct.
In 2021, the federal government required hospitals to publish their prices. The Hospital Price Transparency Rule. Machine-readable file. Gross charges. Discounted cash prices. Payer-specific negotiated rates.
We complied. We posted the file.
The file is a 9,400-row CSV on our website under "Patient Financial Resources." Four clicks from the homepage. Column F: "CDM_GROSS_CHG." Column J: "DERV_PAYERID_NEGRATE." My team designed the column headers. They designed them to comply. They did not design them to communicate.
CMS reported 93% of hospitals now post a file. Compliance. But only 62% of the posted data is usable. That gap is where we operate. We are compliant. The data is published. The data is incomprehensible.
A researcher downloaded our file. She spent three weeks cleaning it. She called the billing department for clarification on 340 line items. They transferred her four times. The fourth transfer was to a voicemail box that was full.
She published her analysis anyway. Cardiac catheterization lab charges: $8,200 to $71,000 for the same procedure depending on the payer. The report received eleven views on our press monitoring dashboard. I saw it. I did not forward it.
On April 1, a new CMS rule takes effect. Hospital CEOs must personally attest — by name, encoded in the machine-readable file — that the pricing data is "true, accurate, and complete."
My name. Sam Hazen. In the file. Attesting that 42,000 fictional anchors are true, accurate, and complete. They are complete. I will give them that. Forty-two thousand line items is nothing if not complete.
A new analyst read the transparency data. She asked why the same MRI costs $450 for Medicare and $4,200 for Aetna in the same building on the same machine.
I told her the rates reflect negotiated contractual agreements between the payer and the facility. She said that doesn't explain the difference. I told her the difference IS the contractual agreement. She said that sounds like the price is arbitrary.
I told her the price is the result of a rigorous, multi-variable analysis that accounts for acuity, case mix, regional market dynamics, and payer contract terms. She asked if I could show her the analysis.
I told her the analysis is proprietary.
The analysis does not exist. The analysis is my team, in Q4, adjusting the chargemaster upward by the percentage the CFO wrote on a sticky note. The sticky note this year said "6-8%." They chose 7.4% because it is between six and eight and it has a decimal, which makes it look calculated.
She stopped asking.
The price is correct.
My insurance. The executive health plan. Not in the chargemaster. Administered separately.
I do not pay the gross charge. I do not pay the negotiated rate. I pay a $20 copay for services at our own facilities. Gross charge for my treatment: $14,200. Insured rate for our largest commercial payer: $8,600. I pay $20.
The executive health plan was designed by the Chief Human Resources Officer and approved by the compensation committee. I was not on the compensation committee. I was a beneficiary of it. That is a different thing.
I benefit from the system I price. I price the system I benefit from. These are two separate facts that happen to involve the same person.
HCA Healthcare was named the Most Admired Company in our industry by Fortune magazine for the twelfth consecutive year. That was February. The same month I sold $21.5 million in company stock and purchased zero shares. Fortune did not ask about the chargemaster.
I am Sam Hazen, CEO of HCA Healthcare. I have 42,000 prices in a spreadsheet across 182 hospitals. None of them are real. All of them are charged.
Same drug: $12,000 or $43,000. Depends on which spreadsheet. Which building. Which contract. Which page of which PDF.
The patient who has no contract pays the most. The researcher who found the discrepancy got a voicemail box that was full. The analyst who asked why stopped asking. The executive who prices the system pays $20.
On April 1, I will personally attest that this is true, accurate, and complete.
The price is correct. The price has always been correct. I am the price.
Yesterday, CVS-Aetna agreed to pay $117.7 million to settle whistleblower claims that they defrauded Medicare by submitting incorrect diagnosis codes to increase their Medicare Advantage payouts.
Obvious question: Why are companies with documented histories of defrauding government programs still allowed to participate in them?
Read more about the settlement: https://t.co/NniIe56sef
@AGoldmund In 5 years when Schumer is demented and sitting in a political gulag, they’ll stand him in front of a podium with pretend cameras and he’ll be spewing this same stuff from the deepest recesses of his animal instincts
@hasanthehun@Joshua4Congress Or are we the suckers/loser for buying that it was ever about anything more than identifying with a charismatic white takes-what-he-wants alpha male
@MichaelSLinden Not to mention the higher your tax bracket, the greater portion of your income that is derived in ways there are loopholes that get you out of having to actually pay that rate
.@JamesTalarico: The only minority destroying America is the billionaires. Trans people are 1% of the population. Muslims are 1% of the population. Undocumented people are 1% of the population. We are focused on the wrong 1%.
Trans people aren't taking away our healthcare. Muslims aren't defunding our schools. Immigrants aren't cutting taxes for themselves and their rich friends. It’s the billionaires and their puppet politicians.
The culture wars are a smokescreen. They want us looking left and right at our neighbors instead of looking up at them. The biggest divide in our politics is not left versus right, it’s top versus bottom.
@rcbregman I’m assuming that it is using AI for every time it is operating but I could be wrong there. And of course the price of compute and efficiency of processors is bound to go down, but still
@rcbregman What do you think the real cost of using it is, if you include the cost of energy and depreciation on the hardware that is producing both the creation of the app, and the operation of it? The cost of subscribing is bound to go up, no?
@farrmacro When the $ becomes worthless due to inevitable oversupply, BTC’s value will become more apparent. The fraud taking place in crypto is a failure of law enforcement and regulation. BTC and crypto are agnostic, they are just a tool.