in US Healthcare, prices aren't an indication of quality at all.
instead, prices are a ransom note determined by administrators
they are most definitely not a proxy for quality--which is what you'd expect in a free market--but rather a proxy for how much the hospital system thinks they can get away with
the govt shutdown is over healthcare expenses...good. way overdue to point the spotlight at this wasteful fiat system.
imyjimmy张帆
imyjimmy张帆
imyjimmy@Nostr-Check.com
npub19jlh...5aws
software developer in healthcare tech. into bitcoin and decentralized identity
PMOs were supposed to give small pharmacies leverage. Now they’re just another layer in the stack.
Most of the big ones are owned by wholesalers anyway, so “choice” usually means picking which middleman you like.
Three wholesalers and three PBMs control almost everything. The PMOs just make it look plural.
Joining a PMO is survival math. Opting out isn’t brave—it’s financial suicide. It’s not a legal monopoly. It’s a network you can’t afford to leave.
Independents didn’t get crushed—they got slowly absorbed under “management services.” “Independent pharmacy” is now more of a tax status than an actual business model