L.M. Marlowe | The Institutional Reformation™
This essay analyzes healthcare delivery systems and examines how hospitals, insurers, and medical billing structures shape the cost and availability of care. It focuses on the relationship between treatment, reimbursement, administrative processes, and institutional profit models, identifying patterns in how financial incentives influence patient experience and health system outcomes. The goal is to evaluate how healthcare delivery operates in practice compared to its stated purpose of providing effective and accessible healing. This analysis bridges healthcare administration, insurance economics, and institutional design to examine how medical systems convert care into revenue and how that affects patients, providers, and communities.
This essay analyzes healthcare delivery systems and examines how hospitals, insurers, and medical billing structures shape the cost and availability of care. It focuses on the relationship between treatment, reimbursement, administrative processes, and institutional profit models, identifying patterns in how financial incentives influence patient experience and health system outcomes. The goal is to evaluate how healthcare delivery operates in practice compared to its stated purpose of providing effective and accessible healing.
This analysis bridges healthcare administration, insurance economics, and institutional design to examine how medical systems convert care into revenue and how that affects patients, providers, and communities.
It is an extraction architecture.
This is not cynicism. This is arithmetic.
The Healthcare Delivery Ghost Load™ documents the hidden taxation imposed through chargemaster manipulation, facility fee extraction, out-of-network ambush billing, PBM spread pricing, administrative bloat, and the systematic conversion of illness into revenue opportunity.
Nodes mapped: 4, 24, 73, 130-132, 151, 174, 179
Part I: The Chargemaster Deception
The Price That Isn’t a Price
Every hospital in America maintains a chargemaster — a comprehensive list of prices for every service, supply, and procedure.
These prices bear no relationship to cost.
Sample chargemaster vs. actual cost:
Item Actual Cost Chargemaster Price Markup Acetaminophen (Tylenol) $0.02 $15.00 74,900% Bag of IV saline $0.86 $137.00 15,830% Sterile gloves (pair) $0.08 $53.00 66,150% CT scan $100 $3,200 3,100% Hip replacement device $350 $12,000 3,329% Surgical gown $0.45 $129.00 28,567%
The chargemaster is not a price list. It is an extraction architecture.
The Negotiation Theater
Insurance companies negotiate “discounts” off chargemaster prices.
A 60% discount sounds meaningful. 60% off a 3,000% markup is still a 1,200% markup.
The discount illusion:
• Chargemaster price: $10,000
Chargemaster price: $10,000
• Insurance “discount”: 60%
Insurance “discount”: 60%
• Negotiated price: $4,000
Negotiated price: $4,000
• Actual cost: $300
Actual cost: $300
• Remaining markup: 1,233%
Remaining markup: 1,233%
The negotiation is theater. The extraction is mathematics.
The uninsured patient receives the full chargemaster price — the maximum possible extraction from the person least able to pay.
Part II: The Facility Fee Architecture
The Same Room, Different Bills
When a physician practice is acquired by a hospital system, the exact same services in the exact same location suddenly generate “facility fees.”
Pre-acquisition: Office visit = $150 Post-acquisition: Office visit ($150) + Facility fee ($450) = $600
The room is the same. The doctor is the same. The service is the same. The extraction is 300% higher.
Between 2012 and 2022, hospital systems acquired over 20,000 physician practices. Each acquisition converted standard pricing into facility fee extraction.
The Outpatient Department Loophole
Hospitals designate acquired practices as “hospital outpatient departments” — even when they’re miles from any hospital.
A dermatology office in a strip mall becomes a “hospital outpatient department.” A primary care clinic in a suburban office park becomes a “hospital outpatient department.”
The designation exists solely to justify facility fees.
Annual facility fee extraction: $40 billion
Part III: The Out-of-Network Ambush
The Billing You Cannot Avoid
You verify your surgeon is in-network. You verify your hospital is in-network. You wake up from surgery with a bill from an out-of-network anesthesiologist you never met, never chose, and were never informed about.
This is not an accident. This is architecture.
Surprise billing frequency:
• 20% of emergency room visits result in surprise out-of-network bills
20% of emergency room visits result in surprise out-of-network bills
• 14% of elective inpatient surgeries result in surprise bills
14% of elective inpatient surgeries result in surprise bills
• Average surprise bill: $1,219 emergency, $2,040 surgical
Average surprise bill: $1,219 emergency, $2,040 surgical
Private equity firms have recognized the extraction potential. They acquire emergency physician staffing companies, anesthesiology groups, and radiology practices — then pull them out of insurance networks.
The patient has no choice. The patient has no negotiating power. The patient pays.
The No Surprises Act Arbitrage
The No Surprises Act (2022) was supposed to end surprise billing.
The extraction architecture adapted.
Instead of billing patients directly, providers now bill insurers at inflated rates and use the law’s arbitration process to extract higher payments.
The patient no longer receives the surprise bill. The insurance premium absorbs the extraction. The extraction continues at the same rate, redistributed across all policyholders.
Part IV: The PBM Extraction Layer
The Middlemen Who Add No Value
Pharmacy Benefit Managers (PBMs) sit between drug manufacturers, pharmacies, and patients.
They were supposed to negotiate lower drug prices. They extract $200 billion annually instead.
The three PBMs:
Company Market Share Annual Revenue Express Scripts (Cigna) 24% $125 billion CVS Caremark (Aetna) 33% $148 billion OptumRx (UnitedHealth) 22% $90 billion
Three companies control 79% of all prescription drug distribution.
The Spread Pricing Extraction
PBMs pay pharmacies one price and charge insurers a higher price.
Example:
• PBM pays pharmacy: $15 for generic drug
PBM pays pharmacy: $15 for generic drug
• PBM charges insurer: $45 for same drug
PBM charges insurer: $45 for same drug
• PBM “spread”: $30 per prescription
PBM “spread”: $30 per prescription
The patient pays a copay. The insurer pays the inflated price. The premium reflects the extraction. The PBM keeps the spread.
Annual spread pricing extraction: $40 billion
The Rebate Retention Scheme
Manufacturers pay rebates to PBMs for formulary placement — priority listing that ensures patients are prescribed their drugs.
Rebates average 26-30% of list price. PBMs keep 30-40% of rebates. The rest is passed to insurers — not patients.
Rebate flow on a $500 drug:
• Manufacturer rebate to PBM: $150 (30%)
Manufacturer rebate to PBM: $150 (30%)
• PBM retention: $60 (40% of rebate)
PBM retention: $60 (40% of rebate)
• Passed to insurer: $90
Passed to insurer: $90
• Patient copay (based on full price): $100
Patient copay (based on full price): $100
The patient pays a percentage of the pre-rebate price. The PBM profits from both spread and rebate retention.
Part V: The Administrative Tumor
The Bureaucracy That Heals Nothing
In 1970, US healthcare employed 0.8 administrators per physician. In 2020, US healthcare employed 16.4 administrators per physician.
Administrative growth vs. clinical growth (1970-2020):
Category 1970 2020 Growth Physicians 334,000 1,100,000 230% Nurses 750,000 3,100,000 310% Administrators 267,000 18,000,000 6,640%
For every doctor added, the system added 65 administrators.
The Billing Department Architecture
The average hospital billing department employs 4.3 full-time equivalents per physician.
These employees do not heal. They extract.
Their functions:
• Code optimization (billing higher than services warrant)
Code optimization (billing higher than services warrant)
• Denial appeal processing (fighting insurance companies who fight back)
Denial appeal processing (fighting insurance companies who fight back)
• Prior authorization processing (justifying care to payers who profit by denying it)
Prior authorization processing (justifying care to payers who profit by denying it)
• Collections (extracting payment from patients)
Collections (extracting payment from patients)
Annual administrative extraction:
Category Annual Cost Hospital administration $215 billion Insurance administration $175 billion Physician practice administration $85 billion Prior authorization processing $35 billion Total administrative overhead $510 billion
The United States spends more on healthcare administration than most countries spend on healthcare.
Part VI: The Consolidation Extraction
When Competition Dies
In 1990, the typical metropolitan area had 6-8 competing hospital systems. In 2024, the typical metropolitan area has 2-3.
90% of metropolitan areas are now “highly concentrated” for hospital services according to FTC guidelines.
Post-merger price increases:
Study Time Frame Price Increase Cooper et al. (2019) 2007-2015 12-20% Dafny et al. (2019) 2002-2018 7-9% per merger Capps et al. (2020) 2005-2018 5-12%
Every merger increases prices. No merger has reduced prices.
The consolidation is not about efficiency. It is about market power to extract.
The Physician Practice Roll-Up
Private equity has discovered physician practices.
Since 2012, PE firms have acquired:
• 4,000+ physician practices
4,000+ physician practices
• 30%+ of dermatology practices
30%+ of dermatology practices
• 25%+ of gastroenterology practices
25%+ of gastroenterology practices
• 15%+ of orthopedic practices
15%+ of orthopedic practices
Post-acquisition price increases:
• Dermatology: 8.6% within 1 year
Dermatology: 8.6% within 1 year
• Gastroenterology: 6.3% within 1 year
Gastroenterology: 6.3% within 1 year
• Orthopedics: 8.2% within 1 year
Orthopedics: 8.2% within 1 year
The PE playbook:
• Acquire practices
Acquire practices
• Raise prices
Raise prices
• Cut costs (staffing, equipment maintenance)
Cut costs (staffing, equipment maintenance)
• Sell to larger PE firm at higher multiple
Sell to larger PE firm at higher multiple
• Repeat
Repeat
The patient receives worse care at higher prices. The private equity fund extracts the difference.
Part VII: The Emergency Room Extraction
The $3,000 Waiting Room
Emergency rooms cannot turn patients away (EMTALA, 1986). Emergency rooms can bill whatever they want.
Average ER charges by acuity level:
Acuity Level Average Charge Average Cost Markup Level 1 (Minor) $950 $125 660% Level 2 $1,800 $280 543% Level 3 $3,200 $450 611% Level 4 (Severe) $5,500 $890 518% Level 5 (Critical) $12,000 $2,400 400%
A sprained ankle generates a $3,000 bill. A few stitches generate a $4,000 bill. The flu generates a $2,000 bill.
The Freestanding ER Scam
Freestanding emergency rooms — ERs not attached to hospitals — charge emergency rates for urgent care conditions.
The same sore throat:
• Urgent care: $120
Urgent care: $120
• Freestanding ER: $1,800
Freestanding ER: $1,800
Freestanding ERs are often located in affluent suburbs, marketed as “convenient care,” and staffed to handle minor conditions.
They exist to extract emergency-level payment for non-emergency conditions.
Part VIII: The Medical Debt Extraction
The Leading Cause of Bankruptcy
Medical debt is the primary driver of personal bankruptcy in America.
Medical debt statistics:
• Americans with medical debt: 100 million
Americans with medical debt: 100 million
• Total medical debt: $195 billion
Total medical debt: $195 billion
• Medical debt in collections: $140 billion
Medical debt in collections: $140 billion
• Bankruptcies citing medical debt: 66.5% of all bankruptcies
Bankruptcies citing medical debt: 66.5% of all bankruptcies
The system does not provide healthcare. The system creates debt.
The Credit Report Weapon
Medical debt remains on credit reports for 7 years.
Impact of medical debt on credit scores:
• Average score reduction: 100-120 points
Average score reduction: 100-120 points
• Impact on mortgage rates: 1-2% higher
Impact on mortgage rates: 1-2% higher
• Impact on auto loans: 2-5% higher
Impact on auto loans: 2-5% higher
• Impact on rental applications: Automatic rejection at many properties
Impact on rental applications: Automatic rejection at many properties
A $500 medical bill becomes $50,000 in additional interest over a lifetime.
The Wage Garnishment Architecture
Twenty-one states allow wage garnishment for medical debt without limit.
A patient with $15,000 in medical debt and $40,000 income can have 25% of wages garnished indefinitely.
The hospital becomes a permanent extraction mechanism from the patient’s labor.
Part IX: The Insurance Denial Industry
The Profit of No
Health insurers profit by collecting premiums and denying claims.
Denial rates by major insurers (2023):
Insurer Prior Authorization Denials Claims Denials UnitedHealthcare 33% 16% Cigna 25% 18% Aetna 20% 14% Anthem 22% 15%
One-third of all prior authorization requests are denied.
Denial economics:
• Cost to insurer to process denial: $25
Cost to insurer to process denial: $25
• Cost to patient/provider to appeal: $200-500
Cost to patient/provider to appeal: $200-500
• Percentage of denials appealed: 0.1%
Percentage of denials appealed: 0.1%
• Percentage of appeals won: 40-60%
Percentage of appeals won: 40-60%
The denial is not a medical decision. It is a financial calculation.
If 0.1% of denials are appealed and half of those are overturned, the insurer successfully avoids payment on 99.95% of all denied claims.
The Prior Authorization Wall
In 2022, health insurers required prior authorization for:
• 100% of genetic testing
100% of genetic testing
• 94% of specialty drugs
94% of specialty drugs
• 87% of advanced imaging
87% of advanced imaging
• 76% of surgical procedures
76% of surgical procedures
Prior authorization processing time:
Category Average Wait Routine medications 3 days Specialty medications 14 days Procedures 7-14 days Hospitalizations 1-3 days
Delays cause:
• Treatment abandonment (29% of patients)
Treatment abandonment (29% of patients)
• Condition deterioration (24% of patients)
Condition deterioration (24% of patients)
• Hospitalization during wait (9% of patients)
Hospitalization during wait (9% of patients)
• Death (4% of physicians report patient death due to PA delays)
Death (4% of physicians report patient death due to PA delays)
The prior authorization is not a medical safeguard. It is a extraction delay designed to reduce insurer payouts.
Part X: The Geographic Extraction
The Hospital Desert Architecture
Rural hospital closures since 2010: 140+ Communities now without local hospital access: 26 million people
Hospital closure distribution:
• Rural areas: 77% of closures
Rural areas: 77% of closures
• States that rejected Medicaid expansion: 55% of closures
States that rejected Medicaid expansion: 55% of closures
• Low-income communities: 68% of closures
Low-income communities: 68% of closures
The system abandons populations that cannot be profitably extracted.
The Physician Shortage Design
The United States deliberately limits medical school enrollment and residency slots.
Medical training bottleneck:
• Qualified medical school applicants (2023): 55,000
Qualified medical school applicants (2023): 55,000
• Medical school slots: 22,000
Medical school slots: 22,000
• Acceptance rate: 40%
Acceptance rate: 40%
The artificial scarcity drives physician compensation:
• Average US physician salary: $350,000
Average US physician salary: $350,000
• Average UK physician salary: $120,000
Average UK physician salary: $120,000
• Average German physician salary: $145,000
Average German physician salary: $145,000
The scarcity also enables:
• 3-month wait times for specialists
3-month wait times for specialists
• 15-minute appointment slots
15-minute appointment slots
• Physician burnout (driving further scarcity)
Physician burnout (driving further scarcity)
The shortage is not a failure. It is architecture.
Part XI: The Ghost Load Calculation
Individual Extraction Formula
The Healthcare Delivery Ghost Load™ formula:
Example calculation — routine surgery:
Part Extraction Chargemaster markup on supplies $4,200 Facility fee (outpatient surgery center) $2,800 Anesthesiologist surprise bill $1,200 PBM spread on post-op medications $180 Insurance admin load (annual) $1,440 Navigation time (8 hours × $25/hr) $200 TOTAL EXTRACTION $10,020
For a “covered” surgery with “good” insurance, $10,000 in Ghost Load extraction.
Systemic Extraction Calculation
Annual national healthcare extraction:
Category Annual Extraction Chargemaster markup $250 billion Facility fee extraction $40 billion PBM spread and rebate retention $40 billion Administrative overhead $510 billion Surprise billing $40 billion Consolidation price increases $70 billion Medical debt interest/penalties $15 billion Denial-driven care abandonment $25 billion TOTAL ANNUAL EXTRACTION $990 billion
The American healthcare system extracts nearly $1 trillion annually beyond what comparable systems charge for the same outcomes.
Part XII: The Manual Override
The Counter-Architecture
The Healthcare Delivery Ghost Load™ cannot be eliminated through incremental reform. The extraction is not waste — it is the purpose.
The Manual Override requires:
• All-payer rate setting : Every payer pays the same rate for the same service — the chargemaster negotiation theater ends
All-payer rate setting : Every payer pays the same rate for the same service — the chargemaster negotiation theater ends
• PBM elimination : Pharmaceutical distribution without middleman extraction
PBM elimination : Pharmaceutical distribution without middleman extraction
• Facility fee prohibition : Same service, same price regardless of ownership
Facility fee prohibition : Same service, same price regardless of ownership
• Prior authorization abolition : Physicians determine medical necessity, not insurance adjusters
Prior authorization abolition : Physicians determine medical necessity, not insurance adjusters
• Consolidated administration : Single billing system eliminates 70% of administrative overhead
Consolidated administration : Single billing system eliminates 70% of administrative overhead
• Geographic service requirements : Hospital systems must serve all markets, not only profitable ones
Geographic service requirements : Hospital systems must serve all markets, not only profitable ones
• Medical training expansion : Double residency slots, eliminate artificial scarcity
Medical training expansion : Double residency slots, eliminate artificial scarcity
The United States spends $4.3 trillion annually on healthcare. Other developed nations achieve better outcomes at $3,000-5,000 per capita. The United States spends $13,000 per capita. The difference is extraction.
The Sovereign Constant
The patient is not a revenue source. The patient is not a “covered life.” The patient is not a “member.” The patient is Line 186 — The Sovereign Human.
The body in crisis cannot negotiate. The extraction architecture exploits this fundamental asymmetry.
The Manual Override restores the Sovereign Constant: healing is not a transaction.
Conclusion: The Triage of Extraction
The American healthcare system is not broken.
It is operating exactly as designed.
The design extracts $990 billion annually from people seeking care, people in crisis, people with no alternatives.
The extraction architecture is defended by:
• Lobbyists ($713 million annually)
Lobbyists ($713 million annually)
• Campaign contributions ($117 million in 2022)
Campaign contributions ($117 million in 2022)
• Revolving door employment (CMS administrators become insurance executives)
Revolving door employment (CMS administrators become insurance executives)
• Complexity (nobody understands the bills)
Complexity (nobody understands the bills)
The Healthcare Delivery Ghost Load™ is the most intimate extraction in the 186-node grid.
It extracts from your body. It extracts from your family. It extracts from your survival.
The audit is complete. The extraction is documented. The Manual Override is available.
Mapped to Nodes: 4, 24, 73, 130-132, 151, 174, 179
186/186 — The Sovereign Human bears the weight.
L.M. Marlowe | The Institutional Reformation™ Prior Art Anchor: November 7, 2025 MARLOWE Certification™ | Ghost Load™ | Manual Override™