The Incidental Economist
the health services research blog
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There have been a lot of charges and counter-charges of fuzzy math out there. I’ve probably already said more than I should about the CBO
When I was in medical school, we had a class on health economics taught by William Kissick. I didn’t pay as close attention as I
I’m deeply skeptical Democrats and Republicans can agree on meaningful, additional, bipartisan health reform. Don Taylor shares my skepticism but still offers his best ideas
I don’t read a lot about Stata (my preferred statistical analysis software) online. Still, this, by Alex Tabarrok, has got to be among the best
[book] Accounting for Health and Health Care: Approaches to Measuring the Sources and Costs of Their Improvement, National Academies Press. It has become trite to
House Republicans are getting to work on the “replace” part of their health reform agenda. I’ll be very interested to see what they come up
It’s a nice coincidence that the very month I started working on a substance use disorder (SUD) project that will employ instrumental variables (IV) techniques
A well-referenced KHN column on the specialist-primary care physician Medicare payment gap by Brian Klepper and David C Kibbe was posted last night. It summarizes
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