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The Goodman Institute Health Blog

Category: Medicare

In the Old Days, the Left Disliked Deductibles

Posted on September 29, 2023 by John C. Goodman

View featured chart.

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Friday Links

Posted on September 29, 2023September 29, 2023 by John C. Goodman
  • Kaiser: Insurers deny medical claims more often than you think.
  • Enthoven in Health Affairs: likes our new Medicare book. A “must read.”
  • Tom Miller: why most health policy is déjà vu.
  • Why is mental health declining for young women? (NYT)
  • Are Biden’s regulations the reason for a 20% drop in blood tests for transplant patients?  (WSJ)
  • How can you do a placebo-controlled drug trial if the disease affects only a few dozen people? (WSJ)
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Monday Links

Posted on September 18, 2023September 18, 2023 by John C. Goodman
  • GAO: unemployment insurance fraud during the pandemic as high as $135 billion. (That is roughly $1,350 for every household in America.)
  • Medicare targets cheap, generic, life saving drug for price “negotiation.”  (WSJ)
  • Rich countries get quality medicines; the poor sometimes get poison. But, contra NYT, the solution is markets, not regulation.
  • Court tells the FDA to stop playing doctor. (WSJ)
  • As a percent of income, lower-income people cheat more on their income taxes than higher income people. HT: David Henderson
  • Did the  eradication of hookworms cause modern allergies?
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Saturday Links

Posted on September 16, 2023September 16, 2023 by John C. Goodman
  • Did the Social Sciences Research Network (SSRN) censor a meta study showing that lock downs had no effect on covid?
  • A smart pill — the size of a blueberry! — can be used to automatically detect key biological molecules in the gut that suggest problems, and wirelessly transmit the information in real time.
  • Robin Hansen: World population will peak in about thirty years, and then will likely fall by half every generation or two.
  • How the government sets Medicare prices: it’s “a pattern of combining dated, imprecise cost reports with idiosyncratic and opaque adjustments that were not constructed to guarantee the best outcomes for the dollars spent.”
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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

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