Weep for the radiologists
The comments to the post are now closed. I am sure this will bring me a whole new batch of hate mail, but I can’t
The comments to the post are now closed. I am sure this will bring me a whole new batch of hate mail, but I can’t
The latest estimate, from Donzé and colleagues, is that of 10,731 eligible discharges for adults from Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston, 22.3% were followed
You can download part 2 here. Or, listen after the jump… @aaronecarroll
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
Reducing hospital readmissions requires some investment by hospitals and clinicians of time, effort, and money. As Burke and Coleman write, these are barriers that are
Tyler Cowen has a post up highlighting work from Benjamin Ho and Sita Nataraj Slavov discussing inequality in health care from “an alternative perspective”: The haves are
I don’t have much to add to Ezra Klein’s post on prices. The charts come from the International Federation of Health Plans. Just… wow. Hard to
The underlying assumption is that patients that are coded as sicker in claims and administrative data are always, in fact, sicker. That assumption is wrong.
Ezra Klein reports on some new gadgets to measure and report biomarkers less invasively and more efficiently. He ends with some questions. Will biometric devices in constant
Below is a pre-publication version of a chart that appears in Chris Conover’s The American Health Economy Illustrated. How do individuals with incomes 400% or more
Sometimes I lack the words. From the NYT: Two nights a year, Tennessee holds a health care lottery of sorts, giving the medically desperate a
To an addict, using is almost as necessary as breathing. To a parent of one, worrying is just as urgent. Could you stop breathing? I’ve