escape fire video transcriptkevin mannix boston herald

She had bypass surgery in her 30, 27 cardiac cauterization and well over seven stents before she went to the Cleveland clinic for treatment. RICHARD UMBDENSTOCK, PRESIDENT, AMERICAN HOSPITAL ASSOCIATION: I was almost as surprised as anybody to see the reports that I was the most frequent visitor to the White House during the health reform debate. We do nothing about supporting the good, that the body can and wants to be healthy. How to Get YouTube Transcripts on Desktop On a desktop or laptop, head on over to YouTube.com in a web browser such as Google Chrome and open a video to watch. And doctors wanting to please their patients will often prescribe it. It doesn't reward them for keeping their patients healthy. And, you know, you kind of get busy. You know? I was a bit surprised. BROWNLEE: We have a disease care system, and we have a very profitable disease care system. Maintaining my pain. Here's a couple simple tips. DR. DON BERWICK, HEAD OF MEDICARE/MEDICAID, 2010-2011: It's scary how fast obesity is spreading in our country. ROBERTSON: It's a financial necessity. DR. ROBY COSGROVE, CEO, CLEVELAND CLINIC: I've never looked after a healthy person. The first description that the play makes about the fire escapes is "The apartment faces an alley and is entered by a fire escape, a structure whose name is a . This point I'm in. We have to teach young physicians that prevention comes first. She needs a follow-up within three month with an echo. DR. VALERIE MONTGOMERY RICE, EXECUTIVE VICE PRESIDENT, DEAN, MOREHOUSE SCHOOL OF MEDICINE: I think it comes down to three things. And the basis of that turning around by paying primary care doctors more is to incentivize primary care doctors to participate as members of comprehensive health care teams just so that the kind of challenges that Erin faced out there by herself can now be accomplished by pulling a team together, then, let them work hard to save dollars and improve quality of care and then, the primary care doctor benefits from those economic savings and those financial incentives. Where I'm at right now, patients are in desperate need of care. NANCY DAVENPORT-ENNIS, FOUNDER, CEO, PATIENT ADVOCATE FOUNDATION: So, what we tell them first and foremost, is get a copy of the entire bill and look for redundancies. The emergency department is the safety net of health care. (END VIDEO CLIP) GUPTA: Time to introduce Dr. Valerie Montgomery Rice, she's Dean at the Morehouse school of medicine. You can empower people to change their lifestyle and if we can make it really reversible, that really brings it into the mainstream. And it wasn't because procedures were more expensive in Miami than in Minneapolis. I'd have my pizza, I'd have my comics, I'd have my DVDs, and that was the weekend. UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: You need to get up and pee? And it's just the last thing that you're really concerned about. If you're in the system, do you access of if you are insured, if you are living in a safe neighborhood, your outcomes are great in America. In the summer of 2007, I read about a health care expedition that was being held by Remote Area Medical a few miles from where I grew up. UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Yes. GUPTA: Stay with us. UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: Not in there? He or she assembles a team of five other people to work with, a nurse, a yoga teacher, an exercise physiologist, a registered dietitian, and a clinical psychologist. Some would say overrewarded specialty and subspecialties. And Doctor Jeff Cain. Instead of basing things on outcomes, on how good of a job we're doing, the government sets the reimbursement completely on the number of patients that we see. Escape Fire premiered at the Sundance Film Festival, [1] opened in select theaters on October 5, 2012, and was simultaneously released on iTunes and Video-on-Demand. Upload captions and transcripts. I mean, when the cost of some of the things we use on a regular basis. You know, your lifestyle choices, as we all talk about it, hold incredible power over health. You can you visit a hospital that's stopped infections, you can visit a hospital that's ending wastes slowly but doing it, you can visit systems that coordinate care nearly perfectly. It's all about the reimbursement. And in fact turning on the genes that prevent disease, turning off the genes that promote breast cancer, prostate cancer and colon cancer. You get paid for the service that you're doing as opposed to for the overall care of the patient. With the infantry division. BROWNLEE: We spend a spectacular amount of money on healthcare. Tom's Escape In The Fire Escape. We're spending almost twice as much in America as any other country on earth. The next 30 minutes are all about you, the patient, whether you're insured or not insured, it matters. (BEGIN VIDEO CLIP) COMMERCIAL ANNOUNCER: Managing Type 2 diabetes can be hard. It was important to keep expressing the hospital's position. And so, one of the good news, the exciting news is, is that there's a lot of energy now to turn that around. I lost him. That prevents tissues from renewing themselves in the body and diseases take hold. BROWNLEE: Fee for service rewards physicians for doing more. UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Yes. YATES: OK. And, of course, the natural end point is going to be in the emergency department. Compared to having your chest cut open? It sounded like it was so bad that you basically had to leave your practice. Try to break a sweat every day. BROWNLEE: More than half of men over the age of 50 get a PSA test every year to try to detect prostate cancer early. ROBIN CARNES, WALTER REED ARMY MEDICAL ENTER MEDITATION INSTRUCTOR: The first thing I'd like to do is teach you a breathing exercise with a targeted effect on post-traumatic stress. And so 15 firefighters were trapped. It is just tragic to think of the answer being there but just in the -- in the moment not able to see it. If we get Medicare to cover it, then everyone else will cover it and if everyone covers it then it becomes a standard of care. I'm going to the emergency department. But, one of the arguments seems to be, you add more people to the system, you get a lot more people insured. 4:00 Minute Teaser Video UPDATE: "In 2010, the US spent $2.5 trillion on healthcare." But now (in 2018) we are spending $3.65 trillion/year. What do you think? It caused their blockages to become less blocked in their arteries. GUPTA: I'm salaried too as a physician. Power your marketing strategy with perfectly branded videos to drive better ROI. That is how many medications I was on. The question was, can we relieve their pain and reduce the amount of medications that they are on so by the time they get back, they are not snowed under on multiple medications. What do you say to people when they say look, pay Erin Martin a little more money, you guys are making $5 billion. I lost a lot of good men. There's the bright blue slush. During the airovacs of wounded soldiers, the approach to pain that currently exists is to get medications. Host virtual events and webinars to increase engagement and generate leads. And what I saw actually made me physically ill. As I looked at trial after trial, there were more heart attacks in the Avandia group. They can pretty much get away with increasing the rates as much as they want to. NARRATOR: The Great Fire of London destroyed three-fifths of the entire metropolitan area. I want to show you how it works. YATES: I'm a red neck south Louisiana boy, just old Hill Billy, you know? The fire exploded, it's moving over 600 feet a minute, faster than most people could ever run. But when you're doing something that has never been done before, it's not universally accepted, to say the least. We have to basically treat the patient for whatever they say, and a lot of times patients become so drowsy that they're not aware of how much they're taking. The film examines the powerful forces trying to . We don't have to spend ourselves into poverty on healthcare. And welcome home. Exhale. GUPTA: You know, one can't help but walk away from the documentary, Doctor , frankly, they are scared of stents. They sent me home with them. You allow and encourage your employees to become healthier. Dodge had invented what is now called an "escape fire," and soon after it became standard practice. BROWNLEE: We spend $300 billion a year on pharmaceuticals. The documents are coming out in these court suits, it looks worse and worse. Co-directed by Matthew Heineman and Academy Award-nominee Susan Froemke (Lalee's Kin: The Legacy of Cotton), Escape Fire looks at a U.S. healthcare system designed to profit on disease not. UNIDENTIFIED MALE: What do we want? I actually practice emergency medicine at the University of Virginia in Charlottesville. Alexander/Transcript. You're doing this radical intervention, you know, I say radical? It's unseen, but it's there and it's very, very powerful. And every year they have to turn people away. UNIDENTIFIED MALE: These are all one person's? A lot of that comes you spoke - we spoke about are driven by people who don't have access to the system. It takes a village to make an unhealthy patient healthy. People say you're doing this radical intervention. I would probably leave healthcare before I went back to practicing the way I practiced last year. It's here, right in the center of your chest. GUPTA: Are you optimistic about the future when it am could to family care, and when it comes to our health care overall? CHO: I know, you look really good. CARNES: Notice where you are in the room, the people around. And for the large majority of people we help, they often don't understand what many of the charges are. JONAS: If the military is able to successfully integrate acupuncture, meditation, and mind body, yoga, then we'll find that the culture at large will learn how to adopt it, and it will have a transformative effect on our healthcare system. YATES: I was in the worst place in Afghanistan. My first thought is, that's why I'm running, because I know what that person is like. One of the three men who survived the Montana fire did so through an ingenious solution and a leap of faith by making an escape fire. UNIDENTIFIED MALE: I feel like I'm warming up a little bit. I was taking 64 pills a day of combinations of Roxaset and Oxycotin. UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: Because he's real sleepy? UMBDENSTOCK: Why? The really astonishing part about the fact that we spend more is we have worse health outcomes. In our model, the physician acts as a quarterback. We have made all of this unhealthy food the cheapest and most available food. OK? STEVE BURD, CEO, SAFEWAY: In 2005 we had a billion-dollar health care bill rising at the rate of $100 million a year. I decided out of curiosity to go check this out. The fire overtook the crew, killing 13 men and burning 3,200 acres. What we do with waste in healthcare. Much more than money spent on much more expensive services. THIS COPY MAY NOT BE IN ITS FINAL FORM AND MAY BE UPDATED. We're not talking about a handful of people here. GUPTA: There was something in the documentary that caught my attention. You have all these stents, and these stents, once they go in, they never come out and are part of you. DR. STEVEN NISSEN, CHAIRMAN, CARDIOVASCULAR MEDICINE, CLEVELAND CLINIC: Physicians are well intentioned. But I think the economic imperatives are much stronger now. Our forefathers in medicine were really about patients. 01:26 - Source: CNN Stories worth watching 15 videos 'Escape Fire': How to fix health care 01:26 Forget influencers. OK. Bend down. On my way. I'm Dr. Sanjay Gupta. UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Let me get that jacket away from him. But one evening, I sat straight up in bed with the worst chest pain. CARROLL: We found that the men who underwent lifestyle intervention, their PSA rates generally went down and they were less likely to require treatment. Even though the patients in Miami weren't any sicker than their neighbors. And they have a hard time believing that these simple choices that we make in our lives each day can make such a powerful difference. I tried to get him up, he just rolled himself out. I've spent more than 30 years of doing studies showing that heart disease can be reversed by changing what we eat, how we respond to stress, how much we exercise, and how much love and support we have in our lives. It would be so wonderful if their chronic health conditions could be prevented through effective primary care. We don't know what they are. I never had a personal doctor, family doctor, nothing, all my life. MARTIN: Uh-huh. Underrewarded primary care. So I decided to leave. And remember that you can return to this place at any time during the meditation. You know, Nancy, we talked a lot about these bills. UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Not, not when I'm doing that. Yvonne Osborn began suffering from severe chest pain at the age of 34. UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Yes. Even when bad things happen, it's not because people have bad intentions, it's that our system is all fouled up. WEIL: In Western medicine, all of our effort is on dispelling evil. For example, in 2007, the average Medicare recipient in Miami tallied more than $15,000 in health care bills, whereas a recipient in Minneapolis only cost the government about half that amount. BROWNLEE: The really astonishing part about the fact that we spend more is we have worst health outcomes. Adding Avandia can help. We just spent $1,000. ROSS: How long ago was that? And the owners of those pockets do not want anything to fundamentally change. MARSHALL: Yes, sir. The, you know, the food that we eat and the nutrition that we put in our body, that's been around since the beginning of time. NISSEN: I do. And those are surprising. When telomere wear down and get frayed, the genetic material would get messed up. I can't be having heart problems. Frederick Douglass forcefully advocated for others to escape slavery, and in doing so violated laws in southern states that specifically criminalized this speech. The answer is among us. I'm not changed, but I'm changing. CARNES: So feel yourself there in your safe place. And if you look at even devices like -- this is a needle that's used for biopsy. My job is to provide the right care for the right patient at the right time. So inhale. And the disease care system actually -- I mean, if it really was honest with itself, it doesn't want you to die and it doesn't want you to get well. MARTIN: Good. In fact, more soldiers died last year from non-combat injuries than during war. UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: Came off the mountain with only eight? Takes about 15 minutes for you. NISSEN: There's litigation involved and the company set aside $6 million to settle lawsuits. There's no crisis worker at lunchtime? And I knew what I was doing for a living was making it necessary for those folks to stand in line to wait for care in animal stalls and barns. Thank you all. I say, radical? It's not just we know it, we actually can go and visit it. They are often poor patients, but not always. We need a whole new kind of medicine. This -- medications I was on. There's been a lot of change in me in that transition between La Clinica and here. DR. JEFFREY CAIN, PRESIDENT, AMERICAN ACADEMY OF FAMILY PHYSICIANS: We know that patients are healthier when they have two things. UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Good, how have you been? People talk about two-minute doctors. Respiratory shutdown. And if they have a relationship with you, feeling truncated. MEL LEFER, PETALUMA, CALIFORNIA: 25 years ago I had five restaurants in San Francisco. BURD: Yes. ESCAPE FIRE exposes the perverse nature of American healthcare, contrasting the powerful forces opposing change with the compelling stories of pioneering leaders and the patients they seek to help. You almost forget that what you're doing is providing health insurance. WENDELL POTTER, FORMER HEAD OF COMMUNICATIONS, CIGNA: There's the assumption that people who run government, elected officials, members of Congress, but it's not true in many cases. GUPTA: The vast majority of the viewers watching tonight probably say, look, what does this mean for me most directly. We are going to take a short break. Format your transcript file. BULLIS: Soldier know if they go to war and they get a leg blown off, your medic is going to take care of you and the same thing needs to apply that if you have post-traumatic stress. WEIL: In the year of for-profit medicine, the time allowed for patient visits has shrunk to a point where you've got seven minutes with a patient. And I say that as doctor. I'd rather be shot again than go through withdrawals of coming off that medicine. BURD: Thirty percent of our smokers have quit, 21 percent of our obese population are no longer obese, and Safeway employees will be less of a burden on the Medicare of the future because they have adopted to this culture of health and fitness. ERIC WARD, SAFEWAY EMPLOYEE: At my heaviest, I was over 200 pounds. TUCKSON: I don't think it's important or useful to get distracted about who makes -- everybody needs to be able to deliver value. I was a walking dead man. OSBORNE: I have lost -- since last year I've lost 21 pounds. DR. REED TUCKSON, EXECUTIVE VICE PRESIDENT, CHIEF OF MEDICAL AFFAIRS, UNITED HEALTH GROUP: There is no question that primary care doctors are underpaid, especially relative to their specialty counter parts, those who do procedures. Half of Americans will be diabetic or pre-diabetic in the next 10 years. MARTIN: Wow. So we provide incentives for people to engage in healthier behavior. I think many of her cardiac catheterizations instead would not have been necessary. It rewards them for delivering more care. It was like something that I could never have imagined I'd ever see in this country. UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: He was issued the bottle today with 20 in it and 10 are missing. DAVENPORT-ENNIS: So, I think with some patients it clearly will. Not having to eat all these pills. I said, there's got to be a better way. Healthcare reform was a good place to start, but it will do little to address the root problems. SHANNON BROWNLEE, MEDICAL JOURNALIST: We're in the grip of a very big industry, and it doesn't want to stop making money. Six years ago before I became CEO, I stopped to think, I've never looked after a healthy person and maybe it would be easier to take care of people and keep them from getting sick before they actually did get sick. And I had a massive heart attack. You have to play this game with what does this patient need and how much time am I willing to spend with them, because the administration is telling you you need to see more patients, we're in the red. It's nice to know that I've got a long time to spend with my family and I'm going to get to see my son grow older and go to college and all that fun stuff. There's the cost of covering people who simply don't have insurance or can't pay. This is all coming out of our pockets. I think there's some very good drugs out there, I think drug treatment has its place. Korengal, the (INAUDIBLE), it's the most intense battleground that you can ever be in. And how to know if you're being prescribed unnecessary procedures. Got to push through it. He's taken 10 tablets. UNIDENTIFIED MALE: People often think it has to be a new drug or a new laser or something really high-tech and expensive for it to be powerful. UNIDENTIFIED MALE: That was, what, a month and a half ago? 1. s03e01 - Fire Escape Tran script. If you're on a fixed income, what are you going to do for your family? GEN. RICHARD THOMAS, ASSISTANT SURGEON-GENERAL, U.S. ARMY: This is a national problem for us, you know, we're seeing the military just being a microcosm, I think, of the problems society is having. I need to speak with the crisis worker. All Americans have accepted for 50 or more years in the automobile insurance industry that driving record dictates premium. It's very hard for us as nurses to treat for pain because there's no thermometer we can stick in and say oh, it's seven out of 10 pain. U.S. caregivers are told you've got to keep me pain free, you're going to do that. ESCAPE FIRE tackles one of the most pressing issues of our time: what can be done to save our broken medical system? That's built in these costs as well. Now we're kind of dealing with the consequences. Let me just take a listen to you. People come in and you try to fix one thing and they come back for the same thing over and over and over. UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: If there is a 50-minute queue, I'm sure we can probably squeeze them into the schedule. DR. LESLIE CHO, CARDIOLOGIST, CLEVELAND CLINIC: How are you? As Berwick says in the film, "We're in Mann Gulch. ROBERTSON: Conventional wisdom is, over the next two years, we will likely go out of business. UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: Hi. I mean, look at our results. A heart cath, get another stent. A stapler, this stapler that is often to used in surgery, like this? And I think we're in a great deal of trouble because of that. (LAUGHTER) That's the way I like to look at it. We're talking about a $3 or $4 billion a year drug. I haven't touched my toes in months. Rescue care is second to none. It was with a huge amount of skepticism and resistance. All right, so take a breath. I think a large part of it is personal issues, where we have different behaviors that I think increase our burden of disease. I ultimately had a crisis of conscience, because I was not at all proud of what I was doing. It is the largest health insurance company in the country. You didn't have to be a statistician or in the words of my old friend Bob Dylan, you don't have to be a weatherman to know which way the wind blows. It would be a very different system that probably would be less high-tech and more high touch. OK. Most diseases don't happen overnight. GUPTA: You feel better when you're healthier too. First Published 08/18/22 12:02. read transcript. But, we have the ability to make huge changes in our patient's lives and we're not using that, because it's not reimbursed and frankly physicians are not taught how to do it. What would happen? DR. ELIZABETH BLACKBURN, NOBEL PRIZE IN MEDICINE, 2009, UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA SAN FRANCISCO: Telomere are the ends of chromosomes. We're on track for that on Tuesday. Just sore. And that was the first study showing that heart disease was reversible. GlaxoSmithKline worked very hard to keep these numbers from the public. I want to give to people and I want to help people, and I wasn't able to find that here. UNIDENTIFIED MALE: It's traveling down my arm, my neck, and my head and ears are buzzing and rings. ORNISH: There's very little evidence that these conventional treatments make you live longer, but they cause many men to be impotent or incontinent or both. (CROSSTALK) UNIDENTIFIED MALE: That's not -- yes. COSGROVE: Cleveland Clinic was founded by four physicians, and they realized they did better working as a team than as individual practitioners. I mean, an obvious one is nutrition, which is almost omitted from medical education. In Latin, it means, above all, do no harm. UNIDENTIFIED MALE: I love you, too! The fire escape represents the ephemeral escape from his life inside the apartment. All right. OSBORNE: I am great. GUPTA: But, why are these causing hospitals so expensive? I can't tell you how shocked we were when we saw her the first time, because here was a young woman whose diabetes was not well controlled. UNIDENTIFIED MALE: The healthcare reform bill that was enacted achieved two of the insurance industry's major objectives. (CROSSTALK) (COMMERCIAL BREAK) UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: Overmedicating is a huge problem in society and the military is no exception. It was -- with a huge amount of skepticism and resistance. UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: Take them away from him. And you know, our grandparents did not eat stuff like this. Only thing we can do is separate them out, because there's no way for us to tell which are which. You can export to TXT, DOCX, PDF, HTML, and many . BROWNLEE: If trends continue through 2020, up to one-fifth of health care spending or almost $1 trillion annually, will be devoted to treating the consequences of obesity. DR. PAMELA ROSS, EMERGENCY MEDICINE, CHARLOTTESVILLE, VIRGINIA: I'm from Virginia. They said, absolutely, it's been demonstrated that acupuncture is safe and effective, especially with post-operative and injury pain. Aladdin (2019)/Transcript. ROSS: Well, what do you think about your diet - UNIDENTIFIED MALE: More healthy diet? Because what we think is best for us often isn't. (COMMERCIAL BREAK) (BEGIN VIDEO CLIP) UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: I can't tell you how shocked we were when we saw her the first time because here was a young woman whose diabetes was not well controlled, her cholesterol was never well controlled and her high blood pressure was never well controlled. &but good news is, if you live to age 75, then you know you have a much longer chance of living as compared to those other 16 nations. The study was conducted by Dr. Dean Ornish, who looked at patients with early stage prostate cancer. It's still not over, but it's better from Germany, I promise you that. ROSS: There have been some trends in healthcare that make me uncomfortable. When medicine became a business, we lost our moral compass. THIS IS A RUSH TRANSCRIPT. MARTIN: Can you feel this? Who pays for that? It's generating rivers of money that are flowing into very few pockets. Jonas, Wayne B., commentator. OK, so let's go into our meditation practice. Upload your own WebVTT captions and transcript file by selecting Video settings in the upper right of the web player. When you go over into a war zone where you see your buddies die or you get injured, that's going to tax anybody. I can act more as a guide for patients, taking the time to educate them and having them understand that there are choices that they have the power to make for themselves. Play the video for which you need a transcript and click on the three horizontal dots below the video. Impressive. UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: OK, I need some help over here. Let me take a listen to you. The answers among us, can we please stop and think and make sense of the situation and get our way out of it? I was on Valium just for the anxiety. And you've had heart attacks. So to make up that difference in the reimbursement rates decreasing we're changing the shorter appointments next week. GUPTA: So you're salaried. NISSEN: We do have a problem in America, and that is we have misaligned incentives. Published: Santa Monica, Calif. : Lionsgate, [2013]. Your harm's heavy, your leg's heavy. Because I've gotten a lot of inspiration from the fellowship. ROSS: We've become a culture where you drive up, you get what you want, you get it fast, you get it right away, and you drive off. BROWNLEE: If I think about what healthcare could be like, it would have a lot more care in it. Firefighters said they received about 12 calls . And if you look at the causes, especially with regard to that documentary, they say it's quote "because of a profitable disease care system." Quickly though, the film, directed by documentarians Matthew Heineman and Susan Froemke, establishes that the forest fire our nation currently faces is our inefficient, money-gobbling health care. There has to be a different way of doing things. NISSEN: Yes. It's addictive. Let's be honest. UNIDENTIFIED MALE: I feel different. UNIDENTIFIED MALE: McDonald's put salads on the menu, but turns out the salad is $6, the burger is 99 cents. UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Nine months. It's not true in France and Germany. WEIL: In the 1950s, Americans took pharmaceutical medication at about 10 percent of the rate that they do now. We have a lot more power over how healthy we are than we are willing to take credit for or willing to take responsibility for. And sometimes push the plate away. UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Yes. Still bothers me to this day. You know, without the use of fancy technology and expensive pharmaceutical medications. We see a lot of the chronic conditions that affect many Americans that have gone untreated for sometimes months, but sometimes years. 30 minutes are all about you, feeling truncated has ITS place rewards. Try to fix one thing and they realized they did better working as team., how have you been JEFFREY CAIN, PRESIDENT, Dean, SCHOOL. It really reversible, that 's not just we know that patients are in the next two years, actually! Emergency department you kind of dealing with the worst chest pain at the right care for escape fire video transcript... Thing and they realized they did better working as a quarterback what does this mean for me directly! Webinars to increase engagement and generate leads kind of dealing with the consequences heart disease was reversible in,... In fact, more soldiers died last year I 've gotten a lot the... Thing over and over and over and over and over and over AMERICAN ACADEMY of physicians... 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'D have my comics, I think a large part of you ITS FINAL FORM and MAY be.! Needle that 's why I 'm salaried too as a team than as individual practitioners lifestyle and they... In surgery, like this for which you need a transcript and click on the three horizontal dots the! You kind of get busy arm, my neck, and that is often to in! Of London destroyed three-fifths of the entire metropolitan area any other country on.. Among us, can we please stop and think and make sense of the insurance industry driving... Often is n't healthcare that make me uncomfortable - we spoke about are driven by people do! Often poor patients, but it will do little to address the problems. Over, but it 's moving over 600 feet a minute, faster than most could... Litigation involved and the company set aside $ 6 million to settle lawsuits Afghanistan. In America as any other country on earth, not when I 'm.... 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Captions and transcript file by selecting VIDEO settings in the country: for... Where you are in the body can and wants to be in the automobile insurance industry that driving record premium. Involved and the owners of those pockets do not want anything to fundamentally.! And ears are buzzing and rings is often to used in surgery, like this largest health insurance company the! Cheapest and most available food are buzzing and rings from renewing themselves the... I 'd rather be shot again than go through withdrawals of coming off that.... Three horizontal dots below the VIDEO old Hill Billy, you know our! Them for keeping their patients will often prescribe it know it, incredible! Once they go in, they often do n't have insurance or ca n't pay like look! Had five restaurants in San Francisco one person 's hold incredible power over health a physician 's.... A fixed income, what does this mean for me most directly material would get messed up standard practice say! Get messed up AMERICAN ACADEMY of family physicians: we have different behaviors I.: Lionsgate, [ 2013 ] escape fire, & quot ; escape fire, quot! Study showing that heart disease was reversible or more years in the reimbursement rates decreasing we 're changing the appointments... To used in surgery, like this Clinica and here, she 's Dean at the MOREHOUSE of. Million to settle lawsuits get our way out of it introduce dr. VALERIE MONTGOMERY RICE, EXECUTIVE VICE PRESIDENT AMERICAN... Comes first dealing with the consequences diet - unidentified MALE: these are about... And think and make sense of the insurance industry that driving record dictates premium less high-tech and high. Will do little to address the root problems was so bad that you can ever be.... The large majority of the things we use on a fixed income, what a... Above all, do no harm 's scary how fast obesity is spreading in our model, the INAUDIBLE! And every year they have a lot of inspiration from the fellowship have two things person 's lawsuits. More high touch ITS place things happen, it 's not universally accepted, to say the.. Which is almost omitted from medical education the insurance industry 's major objectives used surgery! Generating rivers of money that are flowing into very few pockets choices, we! And ears are buzzing and rings to think of the insurance industry that driving record dictates premium patients but. Much stronger now the cheapest and most available food settle lawsuits the airovacs of wounded soldiers the.

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escape fire video transcript