The latest from the Oregon Medicaid Experiment: Impacts on labor force and public program participation
Prior TIE coverage of the Oregon Medicaid Experiment is here, and the new NBER working paper on labor force and public program effects is here.
Prior TIE coverage of the Oregon Medicaid Experiment is here, and the new NBER working paper on labor force and public program effects is here.
Costly tests that once would have required physicians to submit multiple collection vials and specimens can now be ordered with the Pap smear simply by
First-week glitches were easy to brush off. Now that we’re rounding into the third week, the glitch narrative is turning toward back-end (insurer) problems that
In 2011, Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) actuaries made two predictions about the implications of Affordable Care Act (ACA) cuts to the prices
There’s nothing about the income verification measures that passed Wednesday night that will change Obamacare, aside from a few staff members at Health and Human
Michele Ybarra and Kimberly Mitchell have a paper in JAMA Pediatrics reporting that 9% of US adolescents have perpetrated sexual violence in their lifetime (see commentary by Amanda Hess here).
I’ve said this before, but it bears repeating. Evidence based guidelines are necessary, but not sufficient. A recent research letter in JAMA is a good
High-end cost estimate of healthcare.gov infrastructure: $600 million*. Estimated economic losses from 15 days of shutdown: $24 billion. That’s forty-fold more, and I’m being conservative.
As I reported earlier, income verification requirements are already quite demanding — far more demanding than verification requirements for tax benefits received by other Americans such
Nice JAMA Viewpoint on shared decision making: The growing emphasis on patient-centered care is increasing the demand on physicians’ time and effort to more fully
Speaking of our anathema to rational management of health care technology, we’re doing a terrible job of it with back pain treatment. John Mafi and
In dentists’ and doctors’ offices, hearing aid centers and pain clinics, American health care is forging a lucrative alliance with American finance. A growing number