US vs OECD
Something jumped out at me in these two charts from “Health Care Spending: Historical Trends and New Directions,” by Alice Chen and Dana Goldman (NBER, 2015): Yes,
Something jumped out at me in these two charts from “Health Care Spending: Historical Trends and New Directions,” by Alice Chen and Dana Goldman (NBER, 2015): Yes,
I’m off to see family for Thanksgiving. But I left you a piece in The JAMA Forum to read. “OECD Report Offers a Contrast in
There’s a ridiculously fantastic manuscript over at JAMA that you should go read right now. “The State of US Health, 1990-2010: Burden of Diseases, Injuries, and
UPDATE: I removed the second chart, because we’ve noticed there are problems with it. Actually, Austin did, months ago. I’m having a week… This morning,
Before he went on vacation, Austin pointed me to an OECD working paper, entitled “Income-Related Inequalities in Health Service Utilisation in 19 OECD Countries, 2008-2009.”
This blog has a long and detailed record on concern over health care spending. My posts have also acknowledged how difficult I think it will
Don’t let anyone assert (without data) that the aging US population is to blame for our high health care costs. Look at Japan. Despite one of the
Nothing new here. I just need to post this chart because I keep looking for it for reference. My main takeaway is that the US
The following is a guest post by John Nyman, Professor of Health Policy & Management, University of Minnesota School of Public Health. Below is a
This is a FAQ entry. See the main FAQ index for others. National health spending under various scenarios [chart] US vs other nations’ public and private health spending [chart] The
From Kaiser Health News: A forthcoming report from the Congressional Budget Office shows that more than two dozen demonstrations projects launched by Medicare and Medicaid
Andrew Sullivan concluded his most recent post on emergency health care with two questions. [1] In what field of human activity is a free market