UCLA Health Sets Up Downtown

By Jennifer M.

Good morning. The building has been undergoing lots of renovations. This morning I noticed the UCLA health flag flying.

This is at 111 East Victoria Street.

Update:
Apparently UCLA health by Cottage is moving to this new location

 

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  1. Isn’t anyone else embarrassed by the rush of UCLA to open offices in affluent areas (Montecito, Santa Barbara, West LA, Malibu, Westlake, Manhatten Beach, etc.) and not in South LA or Oxnard or Santa Maria or Lompoc or Fontana….? This is a publicly funded institution that should be providing services to the public, not just the rich who can afford it.

    • What a great point, thou hast made. One may question, is there a clinic in Compton? The Avenue in the Ventu?? A UCLA in I.V. for students?? Lemme know…New and Old Cuyama, CA ???
      Hmmm. Thanks for pointing out the inadequacies. And, possible regional biases.. Not sure we need L.A, in S.B. so, it’s obviously inevitable, as one may pout and guess, complain, regress, and ultimately regress.
      Globally affluent and strongly financially backed institutions see growth as their main factorgoal, in-order-to their continuing existence. 

  2. Yeah it is interesting. Embarrassing? No. Unfortunate? Yeah. Medicine is largely going that way, even with what you’d think are the “serve-all” academic institutions. Stanford has the same program happening up in the Bay area. It’s been going on for almost 10 years now. They expand into markets where people HAVE insurance. When it comes down to it, these expansions are about business. The more patients you see that have no insurance, the more money you lose. And then you fold up shop or find a better way. Ask a local doctor. Some go concierge. I’m not defending any of this. It’s just the reality. Big picture healthcare problem in the US, but particularly bad in SB, where reimbursements from payers (insurance companies and government programs) are very low, which is backwards since we live in a very expensive place. It is what it is until it gets changed.

  3. In the past, whenever the single payer health debate comes up in this country, the Chicken Littles always start raging about what it’s done to the Canadian (1966) and British (1948) healthcare systems. I don’t ever recall reading/hearing about movements in either county trying to get rid of it.

  4. I use an amazing veterinary medical insurance called Trupanion, started by a vet from Solvang. After your pet has their treatment the vet’s office sends in the claim, it is approved, and you are asked to pay your percentage due. The rest has already been reimbursed to the vet. That’s how medical insurance should operate. But there is no human medical insurance that comes close to that level of efficiency. I have had bills arrive more than a year after treatment, long after you have healed and moved on. As for UCLA, I very much welcome them in the local medical marketplace. Monopolies like Sansum or Cox never have incentive to give best service.

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