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by MrBingley
3478 days ago
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> “Your job is to get patients,” said a former clinician at Salt Lake Behavioral. “And you get them however you get them.” > Two dozen current and former employees from 14 UHS facilities across the country told BuzzFeed News that the rule was to keep patients until their insurance ran out in order to get the maximum payment. Coincidentally, I was discharged this morning from a psychiatric hospital in Canada. In a non-profit system, there is no financial motive to keep patients longer than necessary. Furthermore, hospitals in Canada almost always operate at capacity to keep costs low. This is a double-edged sword of course, but it means doctors have an incentive to help their patients recover so they can be discharged to make room for new arrivals. |
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I had a swimming instructor who told me her brother was mentally ill and was in and out of these all the time. He'd feel he'd need to stay there a few more weeks, but they'd push him right out. He'd do okay for a while, then stop taking his meds (because most of those meds do make you feel like shit), then he'd start having delusions again.
Eventually he'd be back to begging for 40ozs and eventually be back in the center. America's system doesn't provide enough funding, not just for mental health, but all the other services around health to help people out and be self sustainable in their communities.