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    <title>The Business of Healing</title>
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    <description>Healthcare podcast covering hospital systems, medical education, physician employment, healthcare policy, and the future of academic medicine. Exploring corporate healthcare, nonprofit hospital governance, medical school funding, and patient care quality. Real cases, expert analysis, systemic change.</description>
    <copyright>2025</copyright>
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    <pubDate>Fri, 17 Jul 2026 05:35:59 -0500</pubDate>
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      <title>The Business of Healing</title>
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    <itunes:category text="Education"/>
    <itunes:type>serial</itunes:type>
    <itunes:author>Joseph Kumka</itunes:author>
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    <itunes:summary>Healthcare podcast covering hospital systems, medical education, physician employment, healthcare policy, and the future of academic medicine. Exploring corporate healthcare, nonprofit hospital governance, medical school funding, and patient care quality. Real cases, expert analysis, systemic change.</itunes:summary>
    <itunes:subtitle>Healthcare podcast covering hospital systems, medical education, physician employment, healthcare policy, and the future of academic medicine.</itunes:subtitle>
    <itunes:keywords>healthcare, medical news, hospital systems, academic medicine, physician, healthcare policy, medical education, investigative journalism, healthcare reform, public health</itunes:keywords>
    <itunes:owner>
      <itunes:name>Joseph Kumka</itunes:name>
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    <itunes:complete>No</itunes:complete>
    <itunes:explicit>No</itunes:explicit>
    <item>
      <title>Power, Money, and the Fight for Academic Medicine</title>
      <itunes:episode>1</itunes:episode>
      <podcast:episode>1</podcast:episode>
      <itunes:title>Power, Money, and the Fight for Academic Medicine</itunes:title>
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        <![CDATA[<p><strong>The Hidden Hospital: Power, Money, and the Fight for Academic Medicine</strong></p><p>When you see "University of Minnesota Medical Center" above a hospital entrance, you assume it's where the state's brightest medical minds teach, research, and heal. But what if that prestigious name is just branding, and the reality underneath is far more complicated?</p><p>In this episode, we investigate a 30-year power struggle that began with a desperate financial rescue and has now erupted into a full-blown institutional crisis. In 1997, the University of Minnesota sold its failing hospital to Fairview Health Services for $87.5 million, and even paid them $20 million to take it. The deal was supposed to save academic medicine in Minnesota. Instead, it set the stage for a slow-motion divorce.</p><p><br><strong>What you'll learn:</strong></p><ul><li>How a deal between Fairview and university physicians blindsided university leadership in 2025</li><li>Why the Medical School dean voted against his own doctors' agreement</li><li>What happens when academic medicine becomes a "side hustle" squeezed between clinical productivity targets</li><li>The hidden transformation happening at academic medical centers nationwide</li><li>Why a university that lost its hospital decades ago may never get it back</li></ul><p>This isn't just about Minnesota. It's about what we lose when healthcare becomes purely business, and why the deals we make in crisis can reshape our future in ways we don't understand until it's too late.</p><p><em>This is an AI generated podcast from most current available sources. </em></p>]]>
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        <![CDATA[<p><strong>The Hidden Hospital: Power, Money, and the Fight for Academic Medicine</strong></p><p>When you see "University of Minnesota Medical Center" above a hospital entrance, you assume it's where the state's brightest medical minds teach, research, and heal. But what if that prestigious name is just branding, and the reality underneath is far more complicated?</p><p>In this episode, we investigate a 30-year power struggle that began with a desperate financial rescue and has now erupted into a full-blown institutional crisis. In 1997, the University of Minnesota sold its failing hospital to Fairview Health Services for $87.5 million, and even paid them $20 million to take it. The deal was supposed to save academic medicine in Minnesota. Instead, it set the stage for a slow-motion divorce.</p><p><br><strong>What you'll learn:</strong></p><ul><li>How a deal between Fairview and university physicians blindsided university leadership in 2025</li><li>Why the Medical School dean voted against his own doctors' agreement</li><li>What happens when academic medicine becomes a "side hustle" squeezed between clinical productivity targets</li><li>The hidden transformation happening at academic medical centers nationwide</li><li>Why a university that lost its hospital decades ago may never get it back</li></ul><p>This isn't just about Minnesota. It's about what we lose when healthcare becomes purely business, and why the deals we make in crisis can reshape our future in ways we don't understand until it's too late.</p><p><em>This is an AI generated podcast from most current available sources. </em></p>]]>
      </content:encoded>
      <pubDate>Wed, 12 Nov 2025 17:17:20 -0600</pubDate>
      <author>Joseph Kumka</author>
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      <itunes:author>Joseph Kumka</itunes:author>
      <itunes:duration>830</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>
        <![CDATA[<p><strong>The Hidden Hospital: Power, Money, and the Fight for Academic Medicine</strong></p><p>When you see "University of Minnesota Medical Center" above a hospital entrance, you assume it's where the state's brightest medical minds teach, research, and heal. But what if that prestigious name is just branding, and the reality underneath is far more complicated?</p><p>In this episode, we investigate a 30-year power struggle that began with a desperate financial rescue and has now erupted into a full-blown institutional crisis. In 1997, the University of Minnesota sold its failing hospital to Fairview Health Services for $87.5 million, and even paid them $20 million to take it. The deal was supposed to save academic medicine in Minnesota. Instead, it set the stage for a slow-motion divorce.</p><p><br><strong>What you'll learn:</strong></p><ul><li>How a deal between Fairview and university physicians blindsided university leadership in 2025</li><li>Why the Medical School dean voted against his own doctors' agreement</li><li>What happens when academic medicine becomes a "side hustle" squeezed between clinical productivity targets</li><li>The hidden transformation happening at academic medical centers nationwide</li><li>Why a university that lost its hospital decades ago may never get it back</li></ul><p>This isn't just about Minnesota. It's about what we lose when healthcare becomes purely business, and why the deals we make in crisis can reshape our future in ways we don't understand until it's too late.</p><p><em>This is an AI generated podcast from most current available sources. </em></p>]]>
      </itunes:summary>
      <itunes:keywords>healthcare, medical news, hospital systems, academic medicine, physician, healthcare policy, medical education, investigative journalism, healthcare reform, public health</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>No</itunes:explicit>
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    <item>
      <title>The Billion-Dollar Knot: How Minnesota's Academic Medicine Became an Unsolvable Puzzle</title>
      <itunes:episode>2</itunes:episode>
      <podcast:episode>2</podcast:episode>
      <itunes:title>The Billion-Dollar Knot: How Minnesota's Academic Medicine Became an Unsolvable Puzzle</itunes:title>
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        <![CDATA[<p><b>The Minnesota Medical Center Puzzle: A Billion-Dollar Governance Knot No One Can Untie</b></p><p>How did three nonprofits, a state university, a hospital system, and a physician group, become so financially entangled that none can survive without the others, yet none can agree on who should lead? This deep-dive investigation unpacks the 28-year saga of Minnesota's M Health Fairview partnership, where $500 million flows annually through a three-way structure that's breaking down.</p><p><br><strong>What You'll Learn:</strong></p><ul><li>The 1997 hospital sale that created today's crisis, when the University of Minnesota sold its teaching hospital for $87.5 million to escape near-bankruptcy, never imagining the long-term consequences</li><li>Why Fairview Health Services lost nearly $740 million between 2020-2023 yet still operates with billions in assets, and why "losing money" doesn't mean what you think it means</li><li>How $440 million moves annually from physicians to the University with no visible independent valuation, and why that creates serious governance questions</li><li>The real story behind two spectacular merger failures (Sanford Health and Essentia Health) and what they revealed about power, control, and institutional survival</li><li>Why the University's dean voted against a major partnership deal but was outvoted on his own board—exposing the governance paradox at the heart of this crisis</li></ul><p><br><strong>Perfect For:</strong> Healthcare executives, policy experts, nonprofit board members, medical students and physicians, anyone interested in how billion-dollar institutions actually work—and sometimes don't.</p><p><strong>What Makes This Different:</strong> No conspiracy theories. No villains. Just meticulous analysis of public financial filings, governance documents, and institutional history to understand how reasonable people making rational decisions created an unsolvable structural problem.</p><p><strong>The Core Question:</strong> When a university needs a hospital it can't afford, a hospital needs academic prestige it doesn't control, and physicians need both partners to survive—who should hold ultimate authority? Minnesota has been trying to answer that question for 28 years.</p><p><strong>Based Entirely on Public Records:</strong> IRS Form 990 filings, audited financial statements Attorney General communications, and credit rating reports. Every claim is sourced and verified.</p><p><em><br>This is an AI generated podcast from most accessible sources at present time. </em></p>]]>
      </description>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[<p><b>The Minnesota Medical Center Puzzle: A Billion-Dollar Governance Knot No One Can Untie</b></p><p>How did three nonprofits, a state university, a hospital system, and a physician group, become so financially entangled that none can survive without the others, yet none can agree on who should lead? This deep-dive investigation unpacks the 28-year saga of Minnesota's M Health Fairview partnership, where $500 million flows annually through a three-way structure that's breaking down.</p><p><br><strong>What You'll Learn:</strong></p><ul><li>The 1997 hospital sale that created today's crisis, when the University of Minnesota sold its teaching hospital for $87.5 million to escape near-bankruptcy, never imagining the long-term consequences</li><li>Why Fairview Health Services lost nearly $740 million between 2020-2023 yet still operates with billions in assets, and why "losing money" doesn't mean what you think it means</li><li>How $440 million moves annually from physicians to the University with no visible independent valuation, and why that creates serious governance questions</li><li>The real story behind two spectacular merger failures (Sanford Health and Essentia Health) and what they revealed about power, control, and institutional survival</li><li>Why the University's dean voted against a major partnership deal but was outvoted on his own board—exposing the governance paradox at the heart of this crisis</li></ul><p><br><strong>Perfect For:</strong> Healthcare executives, policy experts, nonprofit board members, medical students and physicians, anyone interested in how billion-dollar institutions actually work—and sometimes don't.</p><p><strong>What Makes This Different:</strong> No conspiracy theories. No villains. Just meticulous analysis of public financial filings, governance documents, and institutional history to understand how reasonable people making rational decisions created an unsolvable structural problem.</p><p><strong>The Core Question:</strong> When a university needs a hospital it can't afford, a hospital needs academic prestige it doesn't control, and physicians need both partners to survive—who should hold ultimate authority? Minnesota has been trying to answer that question for 28 years.</p><p><strong>Based Entirely on Public Records:</strong> IRS Form 990 filings, audited financial statements Attorney General communications, and credit rating reports. Every claim is sourced and verified.</p><p><em><br>This is an AI generated podcast from most accessible sources at present time. </em></p>]]>
      </content:encoded>
      <pubDate>Mon, 17 Nov 2025 05:00:00 -0600</pubDate>
      <author>Joseph Kumka</author>
      <enclosure url="https://2.gum.fm/op3.dev/e/pdcn.co/e/pscrb.fm/rss/p/pdst.fm/e/dts.podtrac.com/redirect.mp3/prfx.byspotify.com/e/media.transistor.fm/3262f44f/fe60a371.mp3" length="40317143" type="audio/mpeg"/>
      <itunes:author>Joseph Kumka</itunes:author>
      <itunes:duration>2518</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>
        <![CDATA[<p><b>The Minnesota Medical Center Puzzle: A Billion-Dollar Governance Knot No One Can Untie</b></p><p>How did three nonprofits, a state university, a hospital system, and a physician group, become so financially entangled that none can survive without the others, yet none can agree on who should lead? This deep-dive investigation unpacks the 28-year saga of Minnesota's M Health Fairview partnership, where $500 million flows annually through a three-way structure that's breaking down.</p><p><br><strong>What You'll Learn:</strong></p><ul><li>The 1997 hospital sale that created today's crisis, when the University of Minnesota sold its teaching hospital for $87.5 million to escape near-bankruptcy, never imagining the long-term consequences</li><li>Why Fairview Health Services lost nearly $740 million between 2020-2023 yet still operates with billions in assets, and why "losing money" doesn't mean what you think it means</li><li>How $440 million moves annually from physicians to the University with no visible independent valuation, and why that creates serious governance questions</li><li>The real story behind two spectacular merger failures (Sanford Health and Essentia Health) and what they revealed about power, control, and institutional survival</li><li>Why the University's dean voted against a major partnership deal but was outvoted on his own board—exposing the governance paradox at the heart of this crisis</li></ul><p><br><strong>Perfect For:</strong> Healthcare executives, policy experts, nonprofit board members, medical students and physicians, anyone interested in how billion-dollar institutions actually work—and sometimes don't.</p><p><strong>What Makes This Different:</strong> No conspiracy theories. No villains. Just meticulous analysis of public financial filings, governance documents, and institutional history to understand how reasonable people making rational decisions created an unsolvable structural problem.</p><p><strong>The Core Question:</strong> When a university needs a hospital it can't afford, a hospital needs academic prestige it doesn't control, and physicians need both partners to survive—who should hold ultimate authority? Minnesota has been trying to answer that question for 28 years.</p><p><strong>Based Entirely on Public Records:</strong> IRS Form 990 filings, audited financial statements Attorney General communications, and credit rating reports. Every claim is sourced and verified.</p><p><em><br>This is an AI generated podcast from most accessible sources at present time. </em></p>]]>
      </itunes:summary>
      <itunes:keywords>academic medicine, teaching hospitals, healthcare governance, nonprofit hospitals, medical school funding, hospital mergers, University of Minnesota, Fairview Health Services, healthcare finance, academic medical centers</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>No</itunes:explicit>
      <podcast:transcript url="https://share.transistor.fm/s/3262f44f/transcript.txt" type="text/plain"/>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>The Accidental Architecture of American Healthcare</title>
      <itunes:episode>3</itunes:episode>
      <podcast:episode>3</podcast:episode>
      <itunes:title>The Accidental Architecture of American Healthcare</itunes:title>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
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      <link>https://share.transistor.fm/s/cc00f90d</link>
      <description>
        <![CDATA[<p><strong>How American Healthcare Became an Accidental System: The Untold History of HMOs, PPOs, and Academic Medicine</strong></p><p>Ever wondered why healthcare in America feels so complicated? This episode reveals the surprising truth: nobody actually designed our current system.</p><p>We trace the fascinating origins of health insurance back to the Great Depression, when desperate hospitals invented prepaid plans just to survive. Discover how World War II wage controls accidentally created employer-based insurance, how a single tax code decision locked in this bizarre system, and why the "father of the HMO," Dr. Paul Ellwood, thought managed care would save American medicine.</p><p><strong>In this episode, you'll learn:</strong></p><ul><li>Why hospitals were going bankrupt in the 1930s and how the Baylor Plan became Blue Cross</li><li>The forgotten history of prepaid group practice and why the AMA tried to crush it</li><li>How WWII wage freezes accidentally created our employer-based insurance system</li><li>The real difference between HMOs and PPOs—and who actually invented them</li><li>Why academic medical centers nearly collapsed in the 1990s</li><li>How "prior authorization hell" became the compromise nobody wanted</li></ul><p>This is a story of path dependence. Each generation made rational choices to protect their own interests: hospitals stabilizing revenue, employers avoiding wage controls, politicians preserving the status quo. But those individual decisions accumulated into a system that serves nobody's original vision.</p><p>Whether you're a physician frustrated by prior authorizations, a patient confused by your insurance, or just curious about how we ended up here, this episode connects the dots between century-old decisions and today's healthcare chaos.</p><p><br><em>This is an AI generated podcast curated from publicly accessible sources.</em></p>]]>
      </description>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[<p><strong>How American Healthcare Became an Accidental System: The Untold History of HMOs, PPOs, and Academic Medicine</strong></p><p>Ever wondered why healthcare in America feels so complicated? This episode reveals the surprising truth: nobody actually designed our current system.</p><p>We trace the fascinating origins of health insurance back to the Great Depression, when desperate hospitals invented prepaid plans just to survive. Discover how World War II wage controls accidentally created employer-based insurance, how a single tax code decision locked in this bizarre system, and why the "father of the HMO," Dr. Paul Ellwood, thought managed care would save American medicine.</p><p><strong>In this episode, you'll learn:</strong></p><ul><li>Why hospitals were going bankrupt in the 1930s and how the Baylor Plan became Blue Cross</li><li>The forgotten history of prepaid group practice and why the AMA tried to crush it</li><li>How WWII wage freezes accidentally created our employer-based insurance system</li><li>The real difference between HMOs and PPOs—and who actually invented them</li><li>Why academic medical centers nearly collapsed in the 1990s</li><li>How "prior authorization hell" became the compromise nobody wanted</li></ul><p>This is a story of path dependence. Each generation made rational choices to protect their own interests: hospitals stabilizing revenue, employers avoiding wage controls, politicians preserving the status quo. But those individual decisions accumulated into a system that serves nobody's original vision.</p><p>Whether you're a physician frustrated by prior authorizations, a patient confused by your insurance, or just curious about how we ended up here, this episode connects the dots between century-old decisions and today's healthcare chaos.</p><p><br><em>This is an AI generated podcast curated from publicly accessible sources.</em></p>]]>
      </content:encoded>
      <pubDate>Mon, 24 Nov 2025 05:00:00 -0600</pubDate>
      <author>Joseph Kumka</author>
      <enclosure url="https://2.gum.fm/op3.dev/e/pdcn.co/e/pscrb.fm/rss/p/pdst.fm/e/dts.podtrac.com/redirect.mp3/prfx.byspotify.com/e/media.transistor.fm/cc00f90d/d1830def.mp3" length="28059200" type="audio/mpeg"/>
      <itunes:author>Joseph Kumka</itunes:author>
      <itunes:duration>1752</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>
        <![CDATA[<p><strong>How American Healthcare Became an Accidental System: The Untold History of HMOs, PPOs, and Academic Medicine</strong></p><p>Ever wondered why healthcare in America feels so complicated? This episode reveals the surprising truth: nobody actually designed our current system.</p><p>We trace the fascinating origins of health insurance back to the Great Depression, when desperate hospitals invented prepaid plans just to survive. Discover how World War II wage controls accidentally created employer-based insurance, how a single tax code decision locked in this bizarre system, and why the "father of the HMO," Dr. Paul Ellwood, thought managed care would save American medicine.</p><p><strong>In this episode, you'll learn:</strong></p><ul><li>Why hospitals were going bankrupt in the 1930s and how the Baylor Plan became Blue Cross</li><li>The forgotten history of prepaid group practice and why the AMA tried to crush it</li><li>How WWII wage freezes accidentally created our employer-based insurance system</li><li>The real difference between HMOs and PPOs—and who actually invented them</li><li>Why academic medical centers nearly collapsed in the 1990s</li><li>How "prior authorization hell" became the compromise nobody wanted</li></ul><p>This is a story of path dependence. Each generation made rational choices to protect their own interests: hospitals stabilizing revenue, employers avoiding wage controls, politicians preserving the status quo. But those individual decisions accumulated into a system that serves nobody's original vision.</p><p>Whether you're a physician frustrated by prior authorizations, a patient confused by your insurance, or just curious about how we ended up here, this episode connects the dots between century-old decisions and today's healthcare chaos.</p><p><br><em>This is an AI generated podcast curated from publicly accessible sources.</em></p>]]>
      </itunes:summary>
      <itunes:keywords>healthcare history, HMO vs PPO, American healthcare system, health insurance history, academic medical centers, managed care, medical economics, healthcare policy</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>No</itunes:explicit>
      <podcast:transcript url="https://share.transistor.fm/s/cc00f90d/transcript.txt" type="text/plain"/>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>Medicare Advantage Explained: Why Your "Medicare" Might Not Actually Be Medicare</title>
      <itunes:episode>4</itunes:episode>
      <podcast:episode>4</podcast:episode>
      <itunes:title>Medicare Advantage Explained: Why Your "Medicare" Might Not Actually Be Medicare</itunes:title>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
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      <link>https://share.transistor.fm/s/49c1d2e6</link>
      <description>
        <![CDATA[<p>Medicare Advantage vs Original Medicare: What seniors need to know before choosing coverage. In this comprehensive episode, we break down the critical differences between Medicare Advantage (Part C) and Original Medicare, exposing the hidden costs, network restrictions, and prior authorization requirements that affect over 31 million Americans.</p><p><br>Discover why major hospitals like Mayo Clinic are dropping Medicare Advantage contracts, how insurance companies profit from denying care, and what "risk adjustment upcoding" costs taxpayers $25 billion annually. We explain complex healthcare policy using simple analogies anyone can understand—no medical degree required.</p><p><br><strong>Topics covered:</strong></p><ul><li>How Medicare Advantage actually works (and who pays whom)</li><li>Real-world cost comparisons for healthy vs. sick seniors</li><li>The truth about "$0 premium" plans and hidden out-of-pocket costs</li><li>Prior authorization nightmares and denial rates 10x higher than traditional Medicare</li><li>Why Medicare Advantage might save you money when you're healthy but cost thousands more when you're sick</li><li>Network adequacy problems and access to specialized care</li><li>Hospital and physician perspectives on MA reimbursement rates</li><li>Political reasons Medicare Advantage persists despite costing more</li><li>Practical advice for choosing the right Medicare coverage</li></ul><p>Whether you're approaching Medicare eligibility, helping aging parents navigate their options, or simply want to understand one of America's most expensive healthcare programs, this episode provides the clear, unbiased information you need to make informed decisions.</p><p><br>This podcast was created with the assistance of artificial intelligence with publicly available resources. </p>]]>
      </description>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[<p>Medicare Advantage vs Original Medicare: What seniors need to know before choosing coverage. In this comprehensive episode, we break down the critical differences between Medicare Advantage (Part C) and Original Medicare, exposing the hidden costs, network restrictions, and prior authorization requirements that affect over 31 million Americans.</p><p><br>Discover why major hospitals like Mayo Clinic are dropping Medicare Advantage contracts, how insurance companies profit from denying care, and what "risk adjustment upcoding" costs taxpayers $25 billion annually. We explain complex healthcare policy using simple analogies anyone can understand—no medical degree required.</p><p><br><strong>Topics covered:</strong></p><ul><li>How Medicare Advantage actually works (and who pays whom)</li><li>Real-world cost comparisons for healthy vs. sick seniors</li><li>The truth about "$0 premium" plans and hidden out-of-pocket costs</li><li>Prior authorization nightmares and denial rates 10x higher than traditional Medicare</li><li>Why Medicare Advantage might save you money when you're healthy but cost thousands more when you're sick</li><li>Network adequacy problems and access to specialized care</li><li>Hospital and physician perspectives on MA reimbursement rates</li><li>Political reasons Medicare Advantage persists despite costing more</li><li>Practical advice for choosing the right Medicare coverage</li></ul><p>Whether you're approaching Medicare eligibility, helping aging parents navigate their options, or simply want to understand one of America's most expensive healthcare programs, this episode provides the clear, unbiased information you need to make informed decisions.</p><p><br>This podcast was created with the assistance of artificial intelligence with publicly available resources. </p>]]>
      </content:encoded>
      <pubDate>Mon, 01 Dec 2025 05:00:00 -0600</pubDate>
      <author>Joseph Kumka</author>
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      <itunes:author>Joseph Kumka</itunes:author>
      <itunes:duration>2393</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>
        <![CDATA[<p>Medicare Advantage vs Original Medicare: What seniors need to know before choosing coverage. In this comprehensive episode, we break down the critical differences between Medicare Advantage (Part C) and Original Medicare, exposing the hidden costs, network restrictions, and prior authorization requirements that affect over 31 million Americans.</p><p><br>Discover why major hospitals like Mayo Clinic are dropping Medicare Advantage contracts, how insurance companies profit from denying care, and what "risk adjustment upcoding" costs taxpayers $25 billion annually. We explain complex healthcare policy using simple analogies anyone can understand—no medical degree required.</p><p><br><strong>Topics covered:</strong></p><ul><li>How Medicare Advantage actually works (and who pays whom)</li><li>Real-world cost comparisons for healthy vs. sick seniors</li><li>The truth about "$0 premium" plans and hidden out-of-pocket costs</li><li>Prior authorization nightmares and denial rates 10x higher than traditional Medicare</li><li>Why Medicare Advantage might save you money when you're healthy but cost thousands more when you're sick</li><li>Network adequacy problems and access to specialized care</li><li>Hospital and physician perspectives on MA reimbursement rates</li><li>Political reasons Medicare Advantage persists despite costing more</li><li>Practical advice for choosing the right Medicare coverage</li></ul><p>Whether you're approaching Medicare eligibility, helping aging parents navigate their options, or simply want to understand one of America's most expensive healthcare programs, this episode provides the clear, unbiased information you need to make informed decisions.</p><p><br>This podcast was created with the assistance of artificial intelligence with publicly available resources. </p>]]>
      </itunes:summary>
      <itunes:keywords>Medicare Advantage, Original Medicare, Medicare Part C, Medicare explained, Medicare 2025, seniors health insurance, healthcare for seniors, Medicare vs Medicare Advantage, Medigap, Medicare supplement insurance, Medicare enrollment, turning 65, Medicare eligibility, healthcare costs, Medicare premiums, out of pocket maximum, Medicare Advantage problems, prior authorization, health insurance denials, Medicare Advantage network, hospital networks, Medicare coverage, prescription drug coverage, Part D, Medicare Part B, Medicare costs, senior healthcare, retirement healthcare, healthcare policy, Medicare reform, insurance companies, UnitedHealthcare, Humana, health insurance explained, Medicare choices, Medicare decision, choosing Medicare, Medicare open enrollment, Medicare benefits, dental coverage Medicare, vision coverage Medicare, HMO vs PPO, Medicare HMO, Medicare PPO, risk adjustment, Medicare payments, Medicare spending, healthcare costs America, Mayo Clinic Medicare, hospital insurance, skilled nursing facility, SNF coverage, Medicare appeals, claim denials, healthcare access, senior citizens, elderly care, aging parents, Medicare advice, Medicare tips, healthcare system, American healthcare, health policy, medical insurance, insurance reform, taxpayer costs, Medicare fraud, coding practices, fee for service, capitation, managed care, care coordination, Medicare Advantage enrollment, traditional Medicare, Medicare guidance, Medicare confusion, insurance complexity, medical bills, healthcare expenses, copays, coinsurance, deductibles, Medicare deductible, hospital costs, doctor visits, specialist costs, emergency room costs, Medicare Advantage vs Medigap, switching Medicare plans, Medicare mistakes, Medicare truth, Medicare reality, healthcare journalism, investigative healthcare, Medicare investigation, insurance industry, health insurance profits, patient advocacy, senior advocacy, Medicare rights, appeal process, claim appeals, medical necessity, network adequacy, provider networks, out of network costs, in network providers, Medicare providers, accepting Medicare, Medicare reimbursement, hospital reimbursement, physician payments, Medicare fraud waste abuse, CMS, Centers for Medicare Medicaid Services, Medicare regulations, healthcare compliance, quality ratings, star ratings, Medicare stars, patient outcomes, healthcare quality, Medicare comparison, plan comparison, insurance shopping, Medicare marketplace, healthcare transparency, medical costs, treatment costs, surgery costs, cancer treatment costs, chronic disease management, diabetes Medicare, heart disease Medicare, kidney disease Medicare, cancer care Medicare, specialized care, academic medical centers, tertiary care, Medicare Advantage marketing, insurance advertising, misleading advertising, senior scams, Medicare scams, insurance agents, broker commissions, Medicare sales, enrollment period, special enrollment, guaranteed issue, medical underwriting, pre existing conditions, health status, Medicare eligibility rules, Medicare Part A, hospital insurance costs, nursing home costs, rehabilitation costs, physical therapy, home health care, hospice care, end of life care, palliative care, Medicare beneficiaries, dual eligible, Medicaid, low income seniors, Medicare savings, healthcare savings, reducing healthcare costs, medical debt, hospital bills, surprise billing, balance billing, observation status, inpatient vs observation, admission status, Medicare rules, coverage rules, Medicare law, Affordable Care Act, healthcare legislation, bipartisan healthcare, healthcare politics, lobbying, insurance lobby, political donations, campaign contributions, Medicare privatization, government healthcare, single payer, public option, healthcare reform, universal healthcare, international healthcare, healthcare systems, comparative healthcare, healthcare economics, health policy analysis, Medicare future, Medicare sustainability, Medicare Trust Fund, Medicare insolvency, Social Security, retirement benefits, retirement planning, financial planning seniors, estate planning, elder law, senior legal issues, patient rights, informed consent, shared decision making, patient education, health literacy, Medicare literacy, understanding insurance, insurance 101, health insurance basics, insurance jargon, medical terminology, healthcare navigation, care coordination, case management, utilization management, discharge planning, transitions of care, patient experience, customer satisfaction, healthcare complaints, Medicare complaints, filing complaints, ombudsman, SHIP counseling, State Health Insurance Assistance, Medicare counseling, free Medicare help, nonprofit healthcare, consumer advocacy, watchdog, investigative journalism, podcast healthcare, healthcare podcast, medical podcast, senior podcast, retirement podcast, aging podcast, Medicare podcast, insurance podcast, policy podcast, explaining healthcare, healthcare education, patient stories, real healthcare stories, healthcare system problems, fixing healthcare, improving Medicare, Medicare solutions, practical Medicare advice</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>No</itunes:explicit>
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