Learning
Register for free to join our community of investors and share your ideas. You will also get access to streaming quotes, interactive charts, trades, portfolio, live options flow and more tools.
Register for free to join our community of investors and share your ideas. You will also get access to streaming quotes, interactive charts, trades, portfolio, live options flow and more tools.
Meaningful Use Creates Predictable IT Talent Squeeze
So, here’s some news that won’t surprise anyone who hasn’t had their head under a rock for the past few years.
According to a recent piece in PC World, the inevitable health IT talent shortage is hitting hospitals hard, driven not only by EMR adoption but also the need to comply with Meaningful Use standards.
As most of you probably know, four of six key deadlines for MU Stage 1 will arrive over the next several months.
Staff-hungry hospital CIOs are shaking their heads, with many afraid that they won’t meet MU goals in time even if they hire consulting talent. After all, not only are they competing with other hospitals, vendors are scooping up some of their prime candidates as well.
So how did we get into this mess? After all, it’s not as if nobody saw this coming. The thing is, it seems nobody did enough to deal with it, either.
For example, the government has spent $120 million in community college grants for health IT training. These programs should turn out 7,000 grads between 2013 to 2020.
But that’s a drop in the bucket compared to the 50,000 health IT staffers hospitals will need to meet MU deadlines — not by 2020, but right now.
Eventually, of course, supply will catch up with demand, particularly as EMR installations start to stabilize. The question is, just when will that happen?
Let’s hope that federal policymakers are thinking hard about this gap. The carrot-and-stick approach embodied by MU may be motivating, but it doesn’t do one thing about the labor shortage.
http://www.hospitalemrandehr.com/2011/06/27/meaningful-use-creates-predictable-it-talent-squeeze/
Boston Children’s Creates Special Adolescent PHR
Creating PHRs for adolescents is trickier than preparing them for adults. While childrens’ and adolescents’ PHRs are usually controlled by parents, there are some areas in which teens have a right to privacy, including any discussions about sexually transmitted diseases, reproductive health, substance abuse and mental health information.
At Boston Children’s Hospital, they’re grappling with the problem of a creating a PHR which protects the adolescent’s right to privacy and confidentiality of such information without sealing parents out of areas which are public. This is a difficult problem, given that confidential information is generally seeded throughout EMRs, writes the hospital’s Fabienne Bourgeois.
To address the complex problem of giving adolescents appropriate access to their PHRs, BCH has developed a custom-built portal to meet both hospital and adolescent patient needs, Bourgeios says.
Adolescent patients and parents access the portal separately, through linked accounts. Parents have sole access until the child turns 13, at which point both get access. At 18 years, the patient becomes the sole owner of the portal account, and unless other constraints exist, the parent link is deactivated, she notes.
Within the portal, sensitive content has been identified and tagged, such as pregnancy-related labs, genetic results, confidential appointments, and possibly sensitive problems and medication. Right now this data is filtered from both parent and adolescent accounts, but in the future it will flow only to the adolescent account. “This solution does take a lot of time and effort, but best replicates current clinical practice,” Bourgeious notes.
This is quite an interesting project. It’s good to see researchers taking on unique privacy challenges involved in treating adolescents. Any efforts which engage a population in their own health and make them confident their privacy will be protected are to be commended.
http://www.hospitalemrandehr.com/2013/05/22/boston-childrens-creates-special-adolescent-phr/?utm_source=Hospital+EMR+and+EHR&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=e412c65674-RSS_EMAIL_CAMPAIGN&utm_content=Yahoo%21+Mail&utm_term=0_179ad21ba4-e412c65674-60795937
Florida Providers to Use HIE-based Patient Look-Up Service
http://www.healthcare-informatics.com/news-item/florida-providers-use-hie-based-patient-look-service
The Florida Health Exchange (HIE) has facilitated a service that will now allow providers to query medical records of participating healthcare organizations for individual patient data, and two large organizations have announced their participation. The providers, Strategic Health Intelligence of Pensacola and Atlantic Coast Health Information Exchange of Miramar, are using what’s called the Florida Health Information Exchange Patient Look-Up Service.
The two providers are the first to use it, and represent more than 2.5 million patient combined. The service was developed by Harris Healthcare Solutions, a Washington-based healthcare IT vendor, and aims to enhance communications between hospitals, physicians and other providers; while reducing orders for duplicate tests, procedures, and medications.
In total, the Florida HIE expects to will include up to 20 participating entities across the state by June of next year. It will also look to connect with providers outside the state through the nationwide eHealth Exchange.
“Securely sharing patient data through the Patient Look-Up service will lead to better quality healthcare for Florida’s citizens and reduce administrative costs for providers,” Vishal Agrawal, president of Harris Healthcare Solutions, said in a statement. “By improving access to important information when and where it’s needed, Harris is enabling health care providers to reduce costs and improve health care outcomes for patients by giving providers the most up-to-date and complete medical record possible at the point of care.”
Consumer Groups, EHR Vendors Talk Back to GOP Senators
http://www.healthdatamanagement.com/news/ehr-electronic-health-records-meaningful-use-senate-46170-1.html
Fourteen consumer organizations in a joint letter advise six Republican members of the U.S. Senate to not seek to pause or delay the electronic health records meaningful use program.
“Meaningful use is just beginning to pay off--and it is only in its first, and by design, most basic stage,” the organizations say. They argue that transforming the nation’s health information backbone on a dime is not possible, and that Congress was wise in creating a strategic and quickly phased approach in 2009 that should continue to be followed.
The consumer groups, members of the Consumer Partnership for eHealth or the Campaign for Better Care, acknowledge the senators’ concerns with meaningful use but say stopping for re-examination is not the answer.
Routine assessment and improvements of the program are necessary, but Stages 2 and 3 should remain on schedule or be accelerated, according to the consumer organizations. The groups also argue that dramatic progress had been made in four years on interoperability and that delaying meaningful use would postpone cost savings while impeding improve access and care quality.
“Many of our best, evidence-based ideas to change the way we pay for and deliver care hinge on the availability and seamless exchange of health information to introduce efficiencies and cost savings, and to provide the kind of care that improves patients’ health. They require measuring and rewarding value and quality over volume. But we simply cannot measure health outcomes or efficiency without EHRs and the structured evidence they make available.” The consumer letter is available here.
In addition, a coalition of electronic health records vendors takes issue with the GOP senators’ contention that the meaningful use program lacks a clear path toward systems interoperability.
“Although nationwide exchange of health information has not yet been fully achieved, Stages 1 and 2 of the EHR Incentive Program and ongoing industry efforts have made significant advances toward broad interoperability,” according to a letter to the senators from the HIMSS Electronic Health Record Association. “In fact, interoperability among health I.T. systems exists widely today within healthcare organizations. And with growing numbers of health information exchanges and the availability of newer models of exchange (e.g., the Direct protocol and Integrating the Healthcare Enterprise document management profiles), interoperability is rapidly increasing among provider organizations.”
The Republican senators recently called for a pause in the meaningful use program to re-examine its strategies. Apart from interoperability concerns, they also worry that EHRs are not saving money and may be contributing to fraud, lack adequate security, and question if EHRs are sustainable after grant funds and incentive payments run out.
The emergence of accountable care organizations and other new care delivery and payment models, along with enhanced requirements in Stage 2, are increasing demand for interoperable data exchange across providers, the vendors note in their letter. “The business case for the needed investment is becoming clearer at the very time that EHR capabilities are being enhanced to support such exchange.”
The vendors dispute that use of EHRs have led to inappropriate or inaccurate coding, and contend there is evidence that EHRs can save money through use of clinical decision support and other capabilities. The complete comment letter is available here.
Morning LS & all, lol... I just heard about this Tumbler 2 days ago & still really do not know what it is. My time has come & gone but I believe I was smart enough to recognize the value I think MMRF will have on societies around the world. I heard a week or so ago that FB was losing users now in the 18 to 30 year old range.
I do not normally kiss & tell but I predicted a month or 2 ago this would be @ a $0.10 by 7/4. But should it drop 1 more time I am cocked & loaded to purchase 1 last time.
GLTYA, everybody stay safe!
Yes I know RC4, don't mind you or FJ74 correcting me. The men & women who now serve & have served our great country not only have my respect & admiration... they have my love for they also watch over my 6:00 O'Clock. See ya on the board tomorrow, goodnight! B
Nice post Pilot, I was talking with my older sister this morning telling her that I believed the GP doctor would eventually die out. She finally bought stock 2 weeks ago.
Afternoon RC4, you did catch FJ74 earlier post of all the law suit cases being moved to 1 judges court? He validates 1 suit in MMRF favor & this is going to shoot up lock a rocket. I'm not a dreamer but I can not help from snoozing... lol... & of course FJ74 just likes that he used to be a MARINE.
Samseaborn1 no worries, now I have forgotton it. GLTY!
Hell, Good Luck To All of Us.
Boardies... stay safe!
Thank you FJ74 for posting something pertant to MMRGlobal & not all this back & forth that seams to be taking place these days.
Let me ask because if it has been mentioned I have missed it... when does MMRF go to court again against SCM?
Should EMRs Help Patients Retrieve Medical Records?
May 21, 2013 08:15 am | By: Anne Zieger
As often as not, patients who need to retrieve paper medical records from hospitals go through a painful process, one which is not much easier than it was before EMRs were introduced in hospitals.
I found this out myself recently when I attempted to retrieve a medical record for one of my children from a large hospital in my metro area. I started by reaching out to the health information management department — where it took three separate calls before I connected with a staff member. Then I was informed that the despite the paper-free hospital environment, I would have to wait two weeks before I could lay hands on the medical record, as the staff was swamped.
This would have struck me as comical if it wasn’t such an unfortunate situation. Without HIEs in place universally across the hospital world, wouldn’t it make sense if the EMR helped produce the paper copies of records needed everywhere in a universal fashion?
Yes, I realize that EMRs are optimized for care during the hospital visit, and such is necessary to get the job done. That being said, I could easily see using some of the technology hospitals already have in place to make EMR records retrievable by caregivers and patients.
After all, at least some hospitals already have kiosks in place that allow patients to pay bills. Couldn’t a modification of such kiosk allow patients to pay for their records fees, order the records for a given patient, sign electronically to give permission for such a printout and get the records into the mail on the back end — if not straight into their hands?
Sure, I know HIPAA issues arise when you’re trying to automate the dispensing of private health information, but at least until HIEs are everywhere, it’s a problem that needs to be handled. After all, the reality is that patients need to carry print records all over the place to get decent care. What’s the point of urging patients to engage with their medical records data if simply retrieving hard copies of them is such an awkward chore?
I know there was some debate about this in meaningful use. Hopefully once the future stages of meaningful use are in place, getting your records from the EHR will be a much faster process than it is today.
Everyone, I would click on the link & check out the related articles. Bone
http://www.hospitalemrandehr.com/2013/05/21/should-emrs-help-patients-retrieve-medical-records/?utm_source=Hospital+EMR+and+EHR&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=3fd2dd4c3c-RSS_EMAIL_CAMPAIGN&utm_content=Yahoo%21+Mail&utm_term=0_179ad21ba4-3fd2dd4c3c-60795937
Related posts:
1.Patients Accessing Online Medical Records Use More Services
2.What Do Patients Need From EMRs?
3.Medical Device Makers Still Working To Connect With EMRs
Morning Pilot, I here ya. I posted that because it was talking about MU which is the part of all this healthcare that you & I are invested in for the long haul. I also will say that this is anything new, they have been trying to get MU postponed for some time now. Pilot, be sure to read my next post to follow this 1. An article I just read this morning before I logged on here.
Coalition to Senate: Time to ‘Re-do’ Meaningful Use
http://www.healthdatamanagement.com/news/ehr-electronic-health-records-meaningful-use-senate-46164-1.html
The electronic health records meaningful use programs has not improved the quality and efficiency of care and needs to be redone, a small coalition of industry leaders say in a letter to six Republican members of the Senate.
Unless the program is revamped, the Healthcare Innovation Council, led by outsource consultancy Anthelio urges a halt to meaningful use and that remaining funds for financial incentives be spent on providers who demonstrate meaningful use “through whatever means they choose.”
The coalition questions if the nation is getting its money’s work from meaningful use. “Why are we, as both health care providers and as consumers of health care (as well as taxpayers), not seeing noticeable improvements in quality, coordination, continuity and improved process from providers who have implemented EHRs? Instead, what we are seeing is a massive disruption of providers’ patient care focus as they chase ‘meaningful use’ dollars; increased burdens on physicians, nurses and clinicians since EHRs as currently designed report more, not less, of their time and effort; and an unprecedentedly huge expenditure by providers on EHR hardware and software at a time when providers are under severe financial pressures.”
Congress’ intent in establishing the meaningful use program was to improve care, but what the industry got was a program with a focus to “just get EHRs up and running” without regard to how they affect patient care, the coalition argues.
Members contend that strong clinician involvement in redesigning EHRs will help the technology mirror the way care actually is delivered, engage patients more and make care transitions safer. Members of the Healthcare Innovation Council include:
Robert Burns, PhD, MBA, chair of the Health Care Management Department at Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania, Director of the Wharton Center for Health Management and Economics; Hud Connery, MHA, CEO of iVantage, a healthcare data analytics company; Kevin Hickey, founder and principal with HES Advisors, a consultancy to healthcare growth companies; Julie Klapstein, former founding CEO and Vice Chair of Availity, a health information network; Rick Kneipper, CEO (Interim), Chief Strategy and Innovation Officer, and Co-Founder of Anthelio Healthcare Solutions; Jack Lord, MD, former COO of University of Miami Health System; former SVP and Chief Innovation Officer, Humana Inc.; and former COO, American Hospital Association; John McConnell, MD, CEO, Wake Forest Baptist Medical Center; EVP for Health Affairs, Wake Forest University; Professor of Urology, Wake Forest University School of Medicine; Sharon Riley, former CEO of University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center University Hospitals; former COO of Anne Arundel Medical Center; and MaryAnn Stump, RN, MBA, former SVP, Chief Strategy and Innovation Officer, Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Minnesota; Chair, External Advisory Board, Yale College of Nursing; Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Executive Nurse Fellow National Advisory Board. The Council was formed by Anthelio Healthcare Solutions Inc. in 2011.
Hello Health launches patient-facing iPhone app
By: Jonah Comstock | May 20, 2013
Myca Health subsidiary and “patient platform management” company Hello Health has taken its emphasis on patient engagement mobile, with the company’s first iPhone app.
The app, called PortalConnect, enables patients whose physicians use the Hello Health EHR to update and access their own personal health record (PHR). Using the app, they can enter and review their medical information, send and receive secure messages from their doctors, revisit appointment notes, review and print lab results, and schedule appointments. Currently the app is available in both English and Spanish.
The Hello Health PortalConnect app was quietly added to the AppStore in January, but the company is only now publicizing the launch. Most of the features of the app were already available previously on Hello Health’s online patient portal. The online portal has a subscription fee of $48 per year or $4 per month, which also includes video visits. The new app is free to download, but can’t be used without a Hello Health subscription. Correction: An older version of this story listed an outdated pricing model for Hello Health.
Hello Health markets its patient portal to providers as a way to meet Meaningful Use guidelines for patient engagement with its’ EHRs. The company has raised $21.5 million, with $11.5 million coming in last November from First Generation Capital since its founding. Hello Health powers the employer clinic practices at Qualcomm and Apple among other large, self-insured employers.
Despite its ties to Apple, Hello Health says it will be releasing its app for Android as well in the future. The company also plans to release a provider-facing version of the app.
http://mobihealthnews.com/22473/hello-health-launches-patient-facing-iphone-app/
Protect Yourself Against Medical Identity Theft by Gerris Willis FBN (Fox Business Network). I believe this is on tonight's show. Bone
http://www.foxbusiness.com/on-air/willis-report/blog/2013/05/21/protect-yourself-against-medical-identity-theft
I’m a big fan of keeping my personal information personal. But when it comes to your medical information, maintaining privacy is difficult, if not impossible. That’s because your information isn’t just held by your doctor, hospital and insurer, it’s also a commodity bought and sold by marketers, data base companies and even retailers.
In fact, on the black market, your medical records are more valuable than your social security number. According to Dr. Deborah Peel of the Patient Privacy Rights Clearinghouse, it costs just 50 cents to a dollar to buy a social security number, but $14 to $24 to buy someone’s private medical details. Smart identify thieves are leaving the dumpster diving behind and focusing on medical identity theft because they prefer the deeper pockets of insurers to consumers.
A typical identity theft involves the looting of your insurance information by a thief who then makes false claims for drugs or medical services. The mess that creates can plague a victim for years to come. It’s no surprise then that when the state of California suggested having ex-felons sign up people for healthcare exchanges under Obamacare , privacy advocates fought against the proposal.
And, don’t think it can’t happen to you. Medical identity theft is a big and growing problem– as much as half of the $80 billion a year in health care fraud, as estimated by the FBI. The World Privacy Forum’s Pam Dixon says the FBI concedes that drug dealers have switched careers to medical fraudsters because the risk of being caught is so low.
Victims may never find out their medical identity has been stolen until they get an explanation of benefits letter from their insurer describing services they’ve never received. If that happens to you, get a complete copy of your health records, which are essential to figuring out your case.
By law, one must be provided access to your records. Contact all health care providers, hospitals, pharmacies, and even labs and insurers to get the details. Typically, your personal information may be mixed up with the fraudster’s. Covered entities have 30 days to respond.
Getting the information may be the easiest part of fixing the problem. Your next goal will be to remove information that could impact future treatment. Most of the companies you deal with will NOT be required to work with you. Ask to amend the record, if you can’t get rid of information that doesn’t belong to you. Setting the record straight is important because the wrong information on your health record can harm you. An incorrect blood type or wrong personal case history could impact your care in the future.
For more on how your medical records are being used and abused - tune in tonight to the Willis Report for a special investigation at 6pm ET on the Fox Business Network.
Your Medical Privacy at Risk by Gerri Willis FBN (Fox Business Network)
http://www.foxbusiness.com/on-air/willis-report/blog/2013/05/20/your-medical-privacy-risk
Your health care information including your medical data, history, treatment, even your shopping habits at the pharmacy is the next big frontier in the battle for consumer privacy.
Everything from your prescription data to hospital records and insurance details is being collected not by just your doctor, hospital and insurer, but also by data clearing houses, retail pharmacies, marketing companies and employers.
Even pharmacy loyalty cards-the ones that provide consumers with discounts and coupons- play a role in helping marketers figure out what kinds of health care products to sell to you.
You may have heard the story of the Minneapolis area dad who found out his young daughter was pregnant after Target started sending promotions for baby clothes and furniture to their house. Astute marketers know that young women that buy certain types of vitamins and clothes are probably pregnant. Targeting them early is a competitive advantage. If Target marketers can convince a young pregnant woman to shop at their stores, she may stay for life.
Clearly, the business of buying and selling medical data is big, and medical privacy expert Dr. Deborah Peel told me an individual's health information is even more valuable than their social security number.
“This data is the most valuable personal information about you. More valuable than anything," she says."Many people know that personal information like your social security number is very valuable for identity thieves. It costs somewhere between 50 cents and a dollar to get a social security number, but your medical records can be bought for $14-$24 each online!”
Of course there are federal rules about how much of this information can be shared or even sold.
But much of the medical establishment is either too busy or too disinterested to pay a lot of attention to them. The results of a Health and Human Services audit of 115 health care providers and insurers released May 10, showed that the vast majority of them failed to comply with federal guidelines for privacy. They say they didn't know the rules.
Read more: http://www.foxbusiness.com/on-air/willis-report/blog/2013/05/20/your-medical-privacy-risk#ixzz2TxG9Lkj4
No BSB, I'm the dumb a$$ & confused 1. But I have never claimed to be the sharpest tool in the shed. Got a feeling its going to be a longggg day.
Good Morning BSB & MMRF Boardies, BSB is there a reason why you are posting this old news? I'm just trying to make sure I am not missing anything. Thanks, Bone
Meaningful Use
XLDent software gains EHR certification
By DrBicuspid Staff
May 17, 2013 -- The XLDent MU practice management system is the latest electronic health record (EHR) software package to gain EHR certification.
XLDent MU from Professional Economics Bureau of America was tested and certified under the Drummond Group's Electronic Health Records Office of the National Coordinator Authorized Certification Body (ONC-ACB) program. This means the EHR software was found to be compliant in accordance with the criteria adopted by the secretary of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.
Drummond Group's ONC-ACB certification program certifies that EHRs meet the meaningful use (MU) criteria for either eligible provider or hospital technology. In turn, healthcare providers using the EHR systems of certified vendors are qualified to receive federal stimulus monies upon demonstrating meaningful use of the technology.
XLDent MU version 7.6 is integrated with the XLDent Suite of products, version 12.9 and above.
http://www.drbicuspid.com/index.aspx?Sec=sup&sub=pmt&pag=dis&ItemID=313383&wf=47
Yo Yo Yo, you all might want to read these 2 articles. Though is is not stated or talked about I read into them that the medical record will have to be in control of the patient.
Houston Northwest Medical Center Ranks Highest On Texas Patient Engagement Index
http://www.healthcare-informatics.com/news-item/houston-northwest-medical-center-ranks-highest-texas-patient-engagement-index
Bill Expands Opportunities For Physician Assistants In Missouri
http://www.kcur.org/post/bill-expands-opportunities-physician-assistants-missouri
Good morning T, I did sign the petition regarding Dr. Afridi as BL asked but would you please elaborate on your comment (type of CEO we are dealing with) & spare me from going out & having to listen to the broadcast? I am assuming you were pleased. Have a good weekend & stay safe.
Hello FJ74, thanks for the detailed report & keeping that ESCAVATOR tuned up. I'd ask if you passed that exam but I can tell you did counsler. Stay safe my friend.
Hello IVB, it would have been better if it was a sale & not an option awarded but I do believe your right... it is incentive.
you passed your exam.
oh you are so right.
I thought I was the only smart ass out here
74 dog gone messages, I have only been away a couple hours. Everybody is getting excited, Think how BL feeling. I told you all a couple of days ago we'd see $0.10 before 7/4/2013. Hell, my phone keeps ringing, there are people out there that think I'm a hero. Nothing is further from the truth. God Bless you all & MMRF.
Well, well well if Tommy/ Tom didn't call this 1 right. Okay people you give credit where credit is due.
God I love this stock, God Bless It, & all of you!
I am tickled that all of you are making money....... Here is my only question??? have we made a good investment???? Ooooo yehhhhhh
PS. where the hell is 3F?????????????
Tz1, this stock has no where to go but up. My family & friends think I am a damn genious. Nothing is further fron the truth. I am just a plain ol'country boy who lives in a real world.
SCC, i do not pick fights nor do I get in pissing matches, but I haven't heard from you lately & your a voice I listen 2.
hell, jump your butt back in grasshopper
BSR says we're making money. do I have a problem with that? bigest problem I have is the Chiefs took a defensive lineman in the 1st round draft pick. now all you good people out there... do not think all of us come straight off the farm here in the midwest.
174 Unread messages. What the sam hell are you good people chatting about???????????
Good Moring MMRF boardies. I see 82 unread messages, someone please spare Tommy/Tom the time in reading them.
We are on our way to 7th heaven.
yes if I were him I would be keeping an I on the Englishman. I have more to say, follow along.
IVB, I not only understand, I like to think I see the larger picture. But I appreciate you taking the concern 2 see I do. Lord God almighty knows I am not the sharpest tool in the shed.
I believe your right. The possiblities here are endless. I keep comparing it to "Windows". I'm in for the long haul, but IVB pointed out to me something I hadn't thought of is that all you investors may want to take the quick cash & go. In this economy & a young couple with family I can see something like that. I hadn't thought of it. Out here school is in session, pay attention to all but primarily the NEWS. People like IVB, & many others out here make me look stupid. Its hard to do but always LISTEN, running at the mouth is easy. Just ask me!
Well, well, well... if that last post of mine didn't stir the pot on the stove.
Okay, I have heard from severalllll of you all... My solution... you all come on over & will talk in my living room. oooohhhhhhhhhhh yeh!
PS. It is BYOB, Go MMRF! I like it, I love it, Don't OWN enough of it.
PSS. You private PM'ers have my envey. I think it was EZ that gave me a 3 month FREE trial & yes it was all good. Days like today I have to watch my 15 free post... because I am in a BS (Better known as babelin) kind of mood.
Not much happenen, but watch out for the end of the week.
My gun is cocked, loaded & ready to go but I'm waiting on $0.02, looking to average down again... LMAO! LMAO! I crack myself up.
yes, I am in (& my Ma) just below $0.03. I got sisters that got in below $0.02. You just keep the heart ticking & the fam will think your a genious. Hll, everybody here that's in gots some smarts about'em
Now on another note to my MMRF boardies. I am damn sick & tired of the problems I am having with the Ihub board. Keep getting kicked off etc... is anyone experiencing this besides me? I think EZ told me once there were problems.
Hell I just typed out a whole monolog that I got kicked out & now you good people are not going to get showered with. Because I am not going to retype it. Not sure I remember it. lol...
But I am tired of the problems I'm having with Ihub. any advice?
I hope you have a damn happy birthday every day with out aging of course. I hope evryone here makes a killing.
When I 1s joined Ihub I made a post that I dreamt of this stock hitting $50.00 pps 1 day. Now you all know the Bone man is crazzzzyyyy.
But that's the problem... the world is made up of strange & goofy people... & you all have the misfortune of knowing 1 of them...
Ooooo yeh, Go MMRF
Morning IVB, why do you think this will be sold off before $3.50. If the patents are valid here in the US & the other countries, why sell the goose that lays the golden eggs? In my head I keep comparing it to Windows, Microsoft & Bill Gates. Who just recently sold 2 1/2 million shares. He did it last week I believe.
Thanks LS for the info, have a good weekend
Xanadu, I don't find myself double posting but I do have troubles from time to time. Generally happens when I invite the Canadians & their bourban (Seagrams 7) into my home. lol...