About the Author
Jamie Court is the executive director of the Foundation for Taxpayer and Consumer Rights in Santa Monica, California.
Works by Jamie Court
Corporateering: How Corporate Power Steals Your Personal Freedom... And What You Can Do About It (2003) 37 copies, 1 review
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Reviews
HMOs are a much-discussed part of life in present-day America. This book shows how they, the only health care option for millions of people, are more interested in profit than in giving good medical care.
Included are plenty of examples of people with major medical problems who were forced to go to a non-HMO doctor for treatment and pay the entire expense themselves. They're the lucky ones; the unlucky ones died because an HMO bureaucrat decided the treatment wasn't "medically necessary" or show more would cost too much.
Doctors are paid a fixed budget for every patient under their care, an amount as little as $6.00 per patient per month. Any treatment the doctor orders comes out of that money, giving the doctor plenty of incentive to order the minimum amount of health care. If an HMO gets sued for negligence, even if it is obviously guilty, because of a loophole in federal law, it is almost never financially liable. This book also includes a patient self-defense kit that explains what to do in the world of HMO bureaucracy.
Whether or not you have ever had to deal with an HMO, this book tells things like they really are, and is very highly recommended. show less
Included are plenty of examples of people with major medical problems who were forced to go to a non-HMO doctor for treatment and pay the entire expense themselves. They're the lucky ones; the unlucky ones died because an HMO bureaucrat decided the treatment wasn't "medically necessary" or show more would cost too much.
Doctors are paid a fixed budget for every patient under their care, an amount as little as $6.00 per patient per month. Any treatment the doctor orders comes out of that money, giving the doctor plenty of incentive to order the minimum amount of health care. If an HMO gets sued for negligence, even if it is obviously guilty, because of a loophole in federal law, it is almost never financially liable. This book also includes a patient self-defense kit that explains what to do in the world of HMO bureaucracy.
Whether or not you have ever had to deal with an HMO, this book tells things like they really are, and is very highly recommended. show less
Corporateering: How Corporate Power Steals Your Personal Freedom...and What You Can Do About It. by Jamie Court
Not really sure how to give a book of this sort a rating. I do believe that it's an extremely valuable reflection on the influence of certain corporate practices, and of the U.S. population's lack of knowledge and understanding of the situation and of the implications of Things continuing as they are.
Statistics
- Works
- 3
- Members
- 84
- Popularity
- #216,910
- Rating
- 3.8
- Reviews
- 2
- ISBNs
- 5


