Drowning in comments
Aaron is away. He left just after his post on radiologists’ income was linked by Andrew Sullivan. Consequently, comment volume is high, and I’m the only
Aaron is away. He left just after his post on radiologists’ income was linked by Andrew Sullivan. Consequently, comment volume is high, and I’m the only
I began my series on Goldhill’s Catastrophic Care by characterizing the health system as unresponsive to consumers and evidence. I’m on board with the idea that increasing patient cost
Via @mamajoan: The sign was posted at MIT, of course. @afrakt
Chapter 2 of David Goldhill’s Catastrophic Care: How American Health Care Killed My Father–and How We Can Fix It is about the outrageously large and growing amount
The new Journal of Health Politics, Policy, and Law appeared in my mailbox. It includes a useful symposium on the policy and politics of reproductive
Jon Chait beat me to this. I don’t care. I’ve have a ridiculously busy morning, and I want to point it out, too. Liz Cheney
I’m reading David Goldhill’s Catastrophic Care: How American Health Care Killed My Father–and How We Can Fix It. All posts are tagged with Catastrophic Care. This one is
I had a long chat with David Ramsey of the Arkansas Times last night. We helped each other more fully understand how, in theory, the
I chatted about disability policy with Brad Plumer at the Washington Post here. Like many other people I was both impressed and disturbed by Chana
Tennessee didn’t get the approval that Arkansas did to allow federal money to be used to buy private plans for Medicaid-eligible people on the exchanges.
I guess I’ll post some things as I read David Goldhill’s Catastrophic Care: How American Health Care Killed My Father–and How We Can Fix It. I
If you haven’t read the health care chapter (PDF) of the 2013 Economic Report of the President, it’s worth at least a glance. At least look