Monday, January 28, 2019

Humana Overlords Enrich Themselves

Strange Tony,

Christmas and the New Year saw Humana board members and senior executives enriching themselves with stock awards.  While bounty overflowed at the king's table nothing trickled down to my hospice coworkers.  Benefits deteriorated significantly in the health insurance arena.  The multi-year pattern of nonexistent pay raises continued as overlords lathered themselves with stock options.

Two paid holidays disappeared for 2019 and time-and-a-half holiday pay turned into regular pay.  I'm not sure where executives will put the riches taken from employee pockets.

Humana CEO Bruce Broussard may have spent it in Davos, Switzerland where a hamburger costs $75.  The cost of hamburger meals for Broussard's entourage likely exceeds the company's 401k match for the average Kindred at Home employee. 

Broussard is smart enough to do the math.  What will smart Kindred Hospice employees do under unbalanced, incompetent, mendacious management? KAH executives are focused solely on doing our new owners' bidding.  They want more.  I'm not sure there's anything left to extract from staff.  

Anonymous (from executive enriching Kindred Hospice)

Friday, January 25, 2019

Broussard Broke Our Hospice/Kindred at Home


Strange Tony,

Funny you characterized Humana CEO Bruce Broussard as an overlord.  CNBC interviewed Broussard from the Annual Overlord - World Economic Forum meeting in Davos, Switzerland. 

Healthcare is clearly broken as people avoid care due to absurdly high deductibles.  I joined this group in 2019 after Humana and two financial rapscallion partners purchased Kindred at Home last summer.


Broussard mentioned acquisitions from Davos Billionaire Boys' Club.  He cited Humana's home strategy, the rationale for buying our hospice and our newest overlord, Curo Health Services.  Nothing good has happened for patients, physicians or staff under Humana/Curo.  The company shifted millions away from people to paying interest and installing value destroying technology.

Time is spent trying to correct "garbage in - garbage out" systems that purport to document patient care, order supplies, pay people for hours worked and miles driven.  Our accuracy rate must be close to zero.  Everything requires a workaround or redo.

Hospice staff are breaking their necks and backs trying to serve patients and their families.  It gets more difficult every day.  No leader at any level in our company has asked office staff or clinicians how things are going.  They must be with Bruce Broussard's entourage in Davos.  Someone has to mix the beverages.

Anonymous (from down and out Kindred at Home)

Wednesday, January 23, 2019

Protect us Lord from Our Overlords



Anonymous,

I was going through comments from Kindred employees and ran across this:

"Cut to a few years later and we were bought by ..... More of the same.  Just a slightly further away sociopath in charge. 
Branches will have the same story about their managers as you do for yours.  They're incompetent at best, destructive at worst. But as long as they make numbers and run the business line, nobody will change anything.

Tons of bullying and cliques up and down the corporate chain, lots of infighting and competition, over the same scrap.  If only they realized that the fight wasn't with each other, but with the overlords."

I thought you might appreciate this comment given the turmoil you and your peers are experiencing at the hands of new Overlord Humana.  Retirement remains highly satisfying.  No overlords or their investor partners.  I pray God opens their hearts in order to free you and your co-workers. 

Strange Tony

Saturday, January 5, 2019

Humana Loads Scale onto Kindred Hospice


Strange Tony,

David Gruber, MD, MBA wrote in HomeCareMag.com

The hospice industry has been consolidating for many years. The largest 100 competitors account for “only” 42.4 percent of hospice providers.

However, the hospice market is changing. Scale is becoming increasingly important to fund information technology (IT) and other infrastructure requirements. 
Note the author did not cite scale as necessary to give employee raises, maintain decent benefit levels or offer a reasonable retirement benefit.  Kindred Hospice offers a 1% retirement match for employees who contribute 4% of their pay to their 401(k).  Humana offers a 125% match up to 6% of their employees annual pay.  Humana's retirement match is 5x better than Kindred at Home's.  Nothing has trickled down to Kindred Hospice employees since our hostile takeover by Humana, WCAS and TPG Capital.

Gruber also failed to mention the quality of information technology funded.  Our new Curo technology is horrific.  It forces nurses to answer non-applicable clinical questions, giving them no ability to skip the question or select "does not apply."  They must put down the least wrong answer in order to move on.  When they reach the end of the visit note the computer program asks the nurse why it took them so long?  Maybe it's because Curo turned a nurse visit into an SAT exam, please select the most correct answer. 

Scale is also a crusty buildup from for-profit corporations' misplaced priorities.  Humana-Curo gunked up our nearly all of our hospice's processes, trashing customer service levels. Humana and Curo imposed massive amounts of scale onto our local hospice, all which is non-value added.  Home health is scheduled.  Hospice happens, turning the best laid plans into shredded paper.

In addition to ineffective and inefficient computer systems our staff must now devote significant time and energy in order to be paid fairly for time worked and miles driven.  Several longtime nurses stated they don't have the fight, interest or ability to deal with new payroll-mileage methods.

Meanwhile delusional local management is caught in a self congratulatory loop over how well things are going.  It seems the invasive Humana-Curo scale clogged their carotid artery, reducing oxygen to their brain.  I don't know how the scale only focused on managers' and regional executives' brains.  Staff and our talented physicians have enough arterial flow to accurately perceive damage done by Humana-Curo scale.  However, it is raising blood pressure and causing major headaches for the aware.

Our hospice has been consolidated many times and no acquisition has gone as badly as Humana-Curo.  I am sure the financial rapscallions that own 60% of Kindred at Home are mostly responsible for the carnage, however Humana put down enough cash to have a major say.  Humana's cash investment could've bought nearly all of Kindred Healthcare's equity.  Instead Humana ended up with a fraction of half the company for their $800 million in cash.

I don't understand why Humana's Board approved the deal.  Kindred Healthcare offloaded nearly all their debt onto their former Kindred at Home division.  Former Kindred CEO Ben Breier is ecstatic over his much lighter debt burden, courtesy of Humana.

Dedicated to ensuring that every business decision we make reflects a commitment to improving the health and well being of our members, associates, the communities we serve and our planet.--Humana's mission statement

Financial rapscallions WCAS and TPG Capital partnered with Humana CEO Bruce Broussard, a former CEO for WCAS affiliate U.S. Oncology.  Together new owners are contorting the face of hospice.  That's what greed on a massive scale does.  Our patients, their families, my coworkers and our community suffer for what Humana's business decision has done to our hospice.

Anonymous

Tuesday, January 1, 2019

Kindred at Home's Declining Online Reputation

Strange Tony,

Kindred at Home's new owners seem not to care at all about employees despite offering language like this:

"The impact of sharing your concerns is crucial to the future experience of other employees."
I saw zero impact of employee survey feedback before senior executives dropped it like an offensive waste product.  Many employees shared their concern about going years without raises, also no impact.

The hope that partial Humana ownership would help employees has evaporated at our hospice site.  There is a trend line to observe.


We've returned to the endurance days where employees come to work solely for their love of hospice.  The challenge is providing good hospice service within bad corporate systems that show no appreciation for experienced, dedicated staff.  Humana's buyout delivered our darkest days since our hospice founding.

Anonymous