Seeking review paper on effects of competition among private Medicare plans (a bleg)
This is an odd bleg because I know a lot of the literature on the effects of competition* among private Medicare plans (Parts C and/or
This is an odd bleg because I know a lot of the literature on the effects of competition* among private Medicare plans (Parts C and/or
On Saturday afternoon August 27, I wrote this overview of the National Flood Insurance Program. A few round up links that I will add to
My highly refined radar for policy-relevant facts is pulling in a new signal. OK, I admit, the radar has another name: Sarah Kliff. She reports
I’m reading John McDonough’s Inside National Health Reform. In it, he quotes Representative Jim Cooper (D-TN) during an April 2008 meeting in Minnesota. I feel
When you’re a resident, you spend a huge amount of time with a small number of people. You get to know them very, very well.
Is health reform like the civil rights movement? That’s what Jay Angoff, special adviser to HHS Secretary Kathleen Sebelius, suggested, reports Lachlan Markay (Politico). Austin’s comment:
I wrote an overview post on the National Flood Insurance Program (NFIP) that is linked below; read that first. While that program is important in
A reader writes in to the blog: My brother, an ICU physician, has observed anecdotally an apparent correlation between family wealth and propensity for insisting
This is a TIE-U post associated with Jonathan Oberlander’s Political Dynamics and Policy Dilemmas (UNC’s HPM 757, Fall 2011). For other posts in this series, see the
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