Health Reform Mandates: House/Employer
Having already written about the Senate health reform bill’s employer and individual mandates and subsidies, I now turn to the House bill, which is mercifully
Having already written about the Senate health reform bill’s employer and individual mandates and subsidies, I now turn to the House bill, which is mercifully
This post is one in a series on the employer and individual mandate provisions of the House and Senate health reform bills (all listed under the “health insurance
With this and several subsequent posts I’ll be digging into the employer and individual mandate provisions of the House and Senate health reform bills (all will
The U.S. Preventive Services Task Force (USPSTF) new mammogram recommendations include biennial screening for women between the ages of 50 and 74. Prior recommendations were for
Few things in life are certain: death, taxes, and for parents of small children, sleeplessness. Parental sleep deprivation is a right of passage—passage from childless
As we all obsess over CBO scores and the cost of reform, it’s important to remember that the CBO only cares about federal expenditures. That’s
I had not one, but two school functions for my kids this morning. I just got to work. This means, of course, that everyone has
I don’t need to write a post on the difference between marginal and average income tax rates. There are already perfectly good explanations available elsewhere
The NYT editorial board comes out against the White House deal with pharma. As a refresher, pharma agreed to support reform if it got promises
God made mud. God got lonesome. So God said to some of the mud, “Sit up!” “See all I’ve made,” said God, “the hills, the
We had an excellent call on Stand Up! with Pete Dominick today where an oncologist wanted to counter some of what I said about the
Remember that post about survival rates versus mortality rates? The one where I talked about mammography? If the amount of email I get about a