Packing heat
I think this is cool (and no disrespect to Walmart or its customers). @afrakt
I think this is cool (and no disrespect to Walmart or its customers). @afrakt
I can’t seem to find any actual reports about the insurance numbers (which is fishy). Thank goodness for Twitter. Here’s the tweet I discussed before
Paul Fronstin and Christopher Roebuck (PDF) have a follow-up to their consumer-directed health plan (CDHP) paper with Martín Sepúlveda, about which I wrote last month. I
Obviously, I’ve got a an interest in this that goes beyond professional: Insurance rates in Indiana will increase 72 percent for those with individual plans
I think I need to make a macro for this: I’ve been skeptical about menu labeling, not because I think the idea is bad, but because I‘m unconvinced that
The writers on The Incidental Economist received a report this week from Paul Caron, a law professor at Pepperdine University. Using Google Analytics, Caron finds
Sarah Kliff and Ezra Klein wrote, How many younger people are needed each year to hold down premiums depends on how many people sign up
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 Three Languages of Politics, by Arnold Kling, is a worthwhile and quick read, a $1.99 e-book on Amazon. His thesis is that progressives (or
Just out. Watch all the way to the end, then comment. Fair? Sufficiently complete? Clear? Confusing? @afrakt
Ezra Klein and Sarah Kliff just posted a worthwhile long-read on implementation of the Affordable Care Act (ACA). One part at the end caught my
In his inaugural editorial in Inquiry (2007), Alan Moneheit documented the shift in arguments over the last century for universal coverage. In my latest post on the AcademyHealth blog,