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Thoughts?
Biologics operate like the medonc chemo model.I find rheumies to be..dare I say..a pretty worthless speciality. They can only offer biologics, and many patients don’t want it. I also find it ridiculous that they have a 2 month waiting list. How do they make money? Are they all hospital employed SOS ******?
one of the issues pointed out is that each individual study has a different dosage, different ways of harvesting, and sometimes different ways of giving the treatment. in addition, every patient's PRP will be different in terms of efficacy (which we have no control over). they are saying that it is impossible to make a recommendation because there is no standard.
in a way, they are correct.
set a standard dose for every PRP at a specific site. do randomized double blind prospective studies of that dose against placebo. establish a standard for injectionists to give. you can test that standard dose against higher or lower doses.
Maybe it will get covered. But only in the HOPD so the SOS will squeeze out the lysate.But that's not the way Regen works. It's autologous...your body is the factory.
The truth of the matter is that insurance will never cover Regen because it's a square peg and our health care system is a round hole. That's fine. Poor people and pensioners will continue to get steroids until their arms and legs fall off and people with other forms of financing for health care will have options to treatments not covered by insurance. Doing "science" will never fix that. It's not a scientific problem. And, that's okay...
Big difference is that people are used to paying out of pocket for vet bills. A $500 vet bill is common, but if you suggest a $500 cash PRP, then people often get upset, though somehow many of them spend that much money on their dogs with no hesitation.the animals who have had PRP from vets over the past 20+ years must be malingering too....personally im fine with so many naysayers
Fixed itthe animals who have had PRP from vets over the past 20+ years must be malingering too....personally im fine with so many neighsayers
Big difference is that people are used to paying out of pocket for vet bills. A $500 vet bill is common, but if you suggest a $500 cash PRP, then people often get upset, though somehow many of them spend that much money on their dogs with no hesitation.
I thought that deal was only for Ivermectin?Have you tried "buy one, get one free" for your patients and their pets?