Menu
The Goodman Institute Health Blog
  • Home
  • Authors
    • Devon Herrick, Ph.D.
    • John C. Goodman
  • Popular Topics
    • Artificial Intelligence and Healthcare
    • Consumer-Driven Health Care
      • Affordable Care Act
      • Cost of Healthcare
      • COVID-19 and Public Health
      • Doctors & Hospitals
      • Public Insurance
      • Policy & Legislation
    • Direct Primary Care
    • Health Economics & Costs
      • Drug Prices & Regulations
      • Health Insurance
      • Health Reform
    • Medical Tourism
    • Telemedicine
    • Medicare
      • Single-Payer/Medicare-for-All
  • Goodman Institute
  • Contact
The Goodman Institute Health Blog

Category: Drug Prices & Regulations

Doctors Face Conflicts of Interest from Drugmaker Payments

Posted on June 5, 2024June 5, 2024 by Devon Herrick

Patients love free samples. However, there really is nothing truly free in our health care system. That free drug sample is an expensive branded medication when it comes time to refill your prescription. Generic drugs are not available as free samples. Only branded drugs that drugmakers are trying to promote are.

+

The War on Poverty Bred Dependency, including Hospitals, Clinics, Doctors, Drugmakers, etc.

Posted on June 4, 2024June 4, 2024 by Devon Herrick

Whenever there are societal problems there are always ambitious politicians who seek to fill a need. If you assume the desire to alleviate poverty and inequity is solely the purview of Western democracies, you would be wrong. Just study political economy and you will find that despots often use poverty and inequity to seize power and maintain it.

+

Monday Links

Posted on June 3, 2024June 3, 2024 by John C. Goodman
  • Epidemiologists estimate that Plasmodium, the parasite transmitted through the female mosquito vector, has claimed the lives of 5 percent of the humans who’ve ever existed. Even today, it kills someone under the age of five every two minutes.
  • Scott Sumner: industrial policy has never worked.
  • Myth exposed: Mama Cass didn’t die by choking on a ham sandwich.
  • Henderson: Economists are less selfish than the average person.
  • In 2023, food stamp benefits did not cover the cost of a meal in 99 percent of counties.
  • Intermittent fasting works for me. But a NEJM study says it is no better than counting calories.
+

Saturday Links

Posted on June 1, 2024June 1, 2024 by John C. Goodman
  • Teens who use cannabis face 11 times the odds for a psychotic episode compared to teens who abstain from the drug, new Canadian research contends.
  • The fertility rates in some countries (e.g., South Korea). Are below 1.0. That is less that one birth for every two adults.
  • Why the unwinding of the (Covid-related) expansion of Medicaid didn’t cause an increase in uninsurance:  Nearly half of the 5.9 million people who were projected to become uninsured … already thought they were uninsured.” in a 2022 survey.
  • Homelessness is bad for your health.
  • Whether worker pay has kept up with productivity depends on how you measure “worker pay” and how you measure “productivity.” Is this a joke?
  • GPT4 passes the restaurant review Turing test. Observers can’t tell whether the reviewer was human or not.
  • How CMS wants to regulate your access to drugs.
+
  • Previous
  • 1
  • …
  • 103
  • 104
  • 105
  • 106
  • 107
  • 108
  • 109
  • …
  • 221
  • Next

For many years, our health care blog was the only free enterprise health policy blog on the internet. Then, when the NCPA closed its doors, the health blog stopped as well.

During this five-year hiatus no one else has come forward to claim the space. So, my colleagues and I have decided to restart the blog in connection with the Goodman Institute. We invite you and others to use this forum to share your views.

John C. Goodman,

Visit www.goodmaninstitute.org

Subscribe via Email

Enter your email address to subscribe to this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

Join 40 other subscribers

Popular Topics

©2026 The Goodman Institute Health Blog | Website by Lexicom