Obamacare and October 1st: Healthcare Triage #1
I’m excited to announce my involvement in a new YouTube channel, Healthcare Triage. It’s going to be an ongoing series about health care, research, and
I’m excited to announce my involvement in a new YouTube channel, Healthcare Triage. It’s going to be an ongoing series about health care, research, and
Yeah, I know. The government is set to shut down on Tuesday—by non-coincidence the very day health insurance exchanges open for business for ObamaCare. And
I’ve been on the road, reading various depressing polemics on potential “rate shock” facing young adults who are now uninsured or buying coverage on the
Via DameCatoe and more at the link: @afrakt
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
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
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 Changing Role of Government in Financing Health Care: An International Perspective by Mark Stabile and Sarah Thomson (National Bureau of Economic Research) This paper
Last week, Harold wrote some great posts about the work of Sendihl Mullainathan and Eldar Shafir on poverty, thinking, and behavior. I want to comment on
Forthcoming in the Journal of Health Economics, Geir Godager reanalyzes data from a study by Heike Hennig-Schmidt, Reinhard Selten, and Daniel Wiesen, about which I blogged
I tweeted this morning: Is it just me, or does every news story read like reporters never knew health insurance was expensive? Or had deductibles
One of these things is not like the others: That’s a figure from Amitabh Chandra, Jonathan Holmes, and Jonathan Skinner (PDF). The authors explain: In the