A defence of policy blogging
In a recent post about policy blogging, I asked So, health policy bloggers: If Reid, Boehner, and McConnell can’t sway public opinion, despite the audiences
In a recent post about policy blogging, I asked So, health policy bloggers: If Reid, Boehner, and McConnell can’t sway public opinion, despite the audiences
The following chart is from a the JAMA paper The State of US Health, 1990-2010 Burden of Diseases, Injuries, and Risk Factors, by an estimated 145
Remember when people got really upset because the ACA was going to pay doctors to ask patients intrusive questions about domestic violence? This is why.
When the bill was about to become a law, a lot of talking points were established. But it’s now three and a half years later,
Marc Siegel has an editorial in USA Today praising President Bush’s physicians and hitting the Affordable Care Act: It was only knowing the concerning results
I angered many of you by saying that diet soda is safe. I further angered some of you by parsing a study that was being
Via Twitter: @afrakt Are there any comparisons of performance and costs of for-profit hospitals vs. not-for-profit? — Daniel Burke (@eldano1) August 17, 2013 Sure! It’s
We reprise some of the points of our recent blogging on the health reform proposal unveiled at the American Enterprise Institute a couple of weeks
This question was posed to me on Twitter today, with the stipulation that I keep it to people still living. It still being broad, I’m
Expanded coverage for substance use disorders is an important, largely-unnoticed features of the Affordable Care Act. ACA will (eventually) cover most of the uninsured. It
I feel like I’m being drafted over and over to defend soda. You’re all killing me. But after yesterday’s column on diet soda, I can’t