The missing well-being
Aaron has a post on the new JAMA article by Christopher Murray and a host of colleagues on “The State of US Health, 1990-2010.” Aaron is amazed
Aaron has a post on the new JAMA article by Christopher Murray and a host of colleagues on “The State of US Health, 1990-2010.” Aaron is amazed
I’ve written about the woodwork problem before. But now there’s data! I talk about it , nd what it means for states, in my latest
There’s a ridiculously fantastic manuscript over at JAMA that you should go read right now. “The State of US Health, 1990-2010: Burden of Diseases, Injuries, and
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 don’t have a sunny nature. That’s me to the right, at the beach with my dog. I recently shared my despair at the failure
An article linked by Tyler Cowen suggests that Medicare forbids posting of surgery center prices. I don’t think it’s true. CMS is moving towards pricing
What does ACA implementation have in common with that of Medicare Part D? And how does that relate to a potentially self-fulfilling prophesy of doom
With one exception, I’m excusing myself from blogging, tweeting, and email for the day so I can write a paper. It might spill over into
I can think of a few heads I’d like to replace. It’s almost possible! First, both patients must be in the same operating theater. Then
This one is pretty much common sense, but it bears highlighting. “Exempting Schoolchildren From Immunizations: States With Few Barriers Had Highest Rates Of Nonmedical Exemptions“:
The following is a guest post by Nicholas Bagley, University of Michigan Assistant Professor of Law. Say you’re a health clinic in a large state with