Health Reform History
Did you miss (or do you miss) health reform? If not that which occurred over the past year, maybe you didn’t notice the many efforts
Did you miss (or do you miss) health reform? If not that which occurred over the past year, maybe you didn’t notice the many efforts
With the fight over health insurance rate increases continuing in Massachusetts, Marketplace’s Nancy Marshall Genzer examines the extent to which the Massachusetts experience is generalizable.
Reading List is now a regular feature, with it’s own tag (click to see prior lists). Here’s some literature on topics of interest collected over
Yeah, that title is a bit bizarre, but I have no other way to describe stuff like this (italics mine): The Heritage Foundation’s latest world
Gene Steuerle of the Tax Policy Center writes, It appears that the new law will make it beneficial for many employers to drop their insurance
First off, sorry for the absence. I was on vacation with the family. If you followed me on Twitter, you’d know that already. A number
My attention to Massachusetts’ individual mandate and the extent of “gaming”* thereof raises another issue, one on which I haven’t yet explicitly focused. The reason
I’m not yet sure if filling the Medicare Part D donut hole as the Affordable Care Act does by 2020 is a good use of
Apparently there are no studies that report the selection effects of gaming the Massachusetts individual mandate. This is according to Amy Lischko, Tufts University Assistant
I believe randomized experiments are often to be preferred over observational studies. I just don’t believe that is always so, and in at least one
Today Kay Lazar reported in the Boston Globe that thousands of Massachusetts residents are purchasing health insurance only when it is needed and dropping it
Great White Snark provides a totally necessary and welcome diagram (h/t Rebecca Hersh). Since I prefer intelligence overall, think obsession has good, secondary value and