Personalized medicine: Will it bend the cost curve down — or up?
Personalized medicine is expected to revolutionize health care by developing new molecular tools to precisely diagnose and treat the problems of individual patients. But how
Personalized medicine is expected to revolutionize health care by developing new molecular tools to precisely diagnose and treat the problems of individual patients. But how
I am a frequent guest on Stand Up! with Pete Dominick, which airs on Sirius/XM radio, channel 104 from 6-9AM Eastern. It immediately replays on the channel, so
The following chain of logic was suggested to me by an email exchange with Tyler Cowen:* Singapore’s health system works well. Goldhill’s proposed system is
As many of you may have heard, CMS released a ton of data today on prices. What’s it mean? What should we do about it?
Over the past 20 years, hospitals have gradually implemented many safety improvements to reduce the number of hospital-onset central line associated blood stream infections (CLABSIs).
A few commenters have questioned my power calculation on the Oregon Medicaid study, claiming different results. Though I can’t be sure what they are doing wrong
Is this really controversial? Evidently, some of you think it is. I was reading a Viewpoint in JAMA when I stumbled across this (emphasis mine):
Answering some questions about power calculations: 1) What is a power calculation? It’s a calculation that tells you, given sample sizes, assumed baseline risk, and
the health services research blog
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