Kill the Tapeworm
https://www.bloomberg.com/news/artic...pany-for-staff
Take Jeff Bezo’s nose for disruptive tech, and Warren Buffett’s business savvy and JP Morgan Chase’s cash reserves, and you get something that’s worth watching for sure. Not a lot of specifics at this point, but health care stocks are taking a hit this morning just due to the news release. Three corporate giants are teaming up to combat what billionaire Warren Buffett calls a “hungry tapeworm” feasting on the U.S. economy: health care. |
Leave it to three reasonable Democratic corporate titans to do what the GOP has shown itself incapable of doing.
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The Big Pharma is also afraid of Amazon jumping into the prescription market. Interesting to watch how the FDA reacts to the lobbying efforts by well entrenched purveyors.
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Good luck to these guys, I hope they really throw a wrench into the works with this. :)
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If the Dotard believes he is the greatest deal maker, he has not seen Bezos or Buffet in action. Those two joining in action is awesome news. Hope this works out. From the little I have read, looks like Amazon will establish a healthcare marketplace. I am a Prime Member so will definitely get a few free trips to a doctor. :) |
Alexa, find the best insurance plan for me.
Ok. Alexa, renew my prescription. Ok. |
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Geez Finn, you comment above might vie for top position as your most idiotic post ever. |
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The three companies said they plan to set up a new independent company “that is free from profit-making incentives and constraints.” You never let facts get in the way of a good argument.:rolleyes: |
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Can you imagine the health care industry being in favor of the following care delivery scenario? The patient calls their doctor on the phone to discuss what feels like a case of the flu. The patient connects via Bluetooth a biometric device to their smart phone that can collect and send key health data to their doc. There are even methods that allow blood test results to be sent to docs via smartphones. The great thing about the scenario above is that it doesn't require the sick patient to sit in a waiting room inside a multi-million dollar medical office edifice where the patient is as likely to spread disease as get cured of it. It doesn't require near the staff of capital expense to deliver care. And, with Amazon set to potentially offer pharmaceuticals, imagine the doc in the scenario above sending a prescription order to Amazon and the patient gets their prescription delivered to their door via drone. All of the above is possible right now with current technology. It just needs advocacy and capital investment to push it out broadly into the marketplace. |
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