The government the gadolinium companies knew it was killing people - TopicsExpress



          

The government the gadolinium companies knew it was killing people and more than NSF. It killed a healthy football player. Yale university did the study. Its like eating an entire bag of concrete. It hards yours vessels and organs. Its like eating an entire concrete mix bag of corroded rust or having old high metal powered braces on your teeth forever. Its always a metal taste forever. If you DONT have kidney problems going in you probably will when you come out after gadolinium stays in your system. This NSF warning will likely shine a brighter spotlight on the MRI for profit scheme revealed on January 17, 2007, when Illinois Attorney General Lisa Madigan announced that her office had intervened in a whistleblower lawsuit filed by John Donaldson in 2006 against more than 10 Chicago-area MRI centers over their payment of kickbacks to doctors in exchange for referring patients to the centers. According to the complaint, Each participating MRI Service Center involved performs the subject MRI services and then engages in the making of illegal and unlawful kickbacks to the physicians from payments made by both Illinois citizen patients and their insurers. The kickbacks, the complaint alleges, provide a financial incentive for a physician to order unnecessary scan services, or excessive scan services, and thus bill insurers for unnecessary scans. The schemes, the lawsuit alleges, make it impossible for legitimate providers to engage in legitimate practice of providing MRI services and remain in business if the scheme and unlawful practice of paying kickbacks for patients is not stopped. According to Mr Donaldson, he has experienced a substantial drop in physician referrals over the past 24 month as more doctors referred patients to centers involved in the kickback scheme. In the complaint, he says, physicians have advised him that they would prefer to utilize his services, but only if his business would pay kickback payments to physicians for referring MRI patients. Physicians were told the referrals could earn an annual revenue of $84,900 to $132,900, assuming the doctor had a referral rate of 40 scans per month, according to the May 10, 2007, Chicago Tribune, and although there are only 11 companies named in the complaint, the attorney generals office thinks the scheme stretches across the country.
Posted on: Sat, 25 Oct 2014 13:38:45 +0000

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