Sound Medicine – Avastin’s Benefits Overstated for Breast Cancer
Sound Medicine is a radio show produced by the Indiana University School of Medicine and WFYI Public Radio. In the last few years, I’ve become
Sound Medicine is a radio show produced by the Indiana University School of Medicine and WFYI Public Radio. In the last few years, I’ve become
I struggle to understand health care antitrust issues. It’s not for lack of trying. It’s just that I find much writing by lawyers to be
Each time CBO came up with a budget projection for health reform, swords came out. On one side were those who said CBO was being
The answer to the question posed on Friday, “How many stars can we see with our (naked) eyes?” is 2,500, according to the NY Times
How health care is financed really does matter. In a New York Magazine piece published yesterday, Mark Levine documents the troubling state of New York’s
After I finished the 10-part series on health care costs, many of you kept asking for a series on quality. I can’t blame you. After
This is a “Best of Rational Arguments” post. It originally appeared on August 8, 2010.* I was born and raised on the East Coast. I
There is a punchline. Naturally, it is at the end.
In last Sunday’s NY Times Sky Watch, the question “How many stars can we see with our (naked) eyes?” was addressed. Before reading the answer,
As I continue to defend my claim that we can’t blame the high cost of the US health care system entirely on obesity, please don’t
The Impact of Education on Health Knowledge, by Duha Tore Altindag, Colin Cannonier, Naci H. Mocan The theory on the demand for health suggests that