- Aaron Carroll: there is no scientific reason to avoid artificial sweeteners. But there are good reasons for many people to reduce your intake of sugar.
- House votes today on personal and portable health insurance (funded by an employer) – essentially codifying a Trump executive order.
- The House also will vote to codify a Trump executive order on Association Health Plans that has been stymied by the courts.
- Incentives matter: Lionel Messi could play soccer anywhere, but the lack of a state income tax helped draw him to Florida.
- Why veterans need private doctor alternatives to the VA.
Category: Doctors & Hospitals
Tuesday Links
- Every generation thinks people were nicer in the past. But it’s not true.
- Evidence that colonoscopies aren’t worth it.
- Claim: Frenemies can be hazardous to your health. (NYT)
- Claim: Doctors are suffering from “moral injury.” (NYT)
- Biden claim: “real income for the bottom half of earners is up by 3.4% since I took office.” Reality: real income for the bottom 25% has fallen 2.3%, while the second income quartile has fallen 3.9%.
Drug Company: Doctors Should Treat Obesity Like a Disease, Not a Moral Failing
Excess weight and obesity are major public health concerns. Roughly four-in-ten adult Americans are obese, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Nearly one-third (30.7) of adults are overweight but don’t reach the level of obesity. That suggests more than two-thirds of adults carry too much weight.
This disproportionally affects certain historically marginalized groups. According to the CDC, about 49.9% of non-Hispanic Black adults have obesity. This is followed by Hispanic people at 45.6%, non-Hispanic white people at 41.4%, and non-Hispanic Asian individuals at 16.1%.
Monday Links
- Chinese military had deep ties to Wuhan lab suspected of COVID-19 outbreak.
- The case for more competition in Medicare.
- A deep dive into the statistically weak case for veganism.
- 2022 was a record year for the number of solar energy projects that were rejected by rural communities in the United States.
- One good thing that came out of the Vietnam war (and about the only good thing I can think of): our best malaria drug.
- Medicare sets price for 10,000 doctor services. What happens when the prices are wrong? Doctors and hospitals have perverse incentives to over provide services with high reimbursement rates and under provide services with low rates.