- Just 3% of all Covid vaccine doses went to Africa, which has one-fifth of the world’s population. (NYT)
- VA health record system: Errors delay medication and treatment, endangering more than 40,000 patients.
- Paul Krugman in 2006: The VA “has been able to take the lead in electronic record-keeping and other innovations that reduce costs.”
- Kaiser study: Value of the tax exemption for nonprofit hospitals: $28.1 billion. Value of charity care: $16.0 Billion.
- Dylan Matthews: against work requirements for Medicaid.
Category: Monday Links
Monday Links
- Charles Murray on the case for marriage: The unvarying finding, whether measured by arrest records, substance abuse, educational attainment, employment, income, or emotional well-being, is that, on average, children growing up with married birth parents fare better than children growing up in any alternative arrangement.
- How did we go from believing that alcohol has no health benefits to the view that it explains why the French are healthier to the view that the safest level of drinking is not a single drop?
- Study: poverty increases the odds of mortality. But couldn’t there be a third factor(s) that causes people to be non-poor and healthier?
Monday Links
- Humans living in the Bronze Age used hallucinogens.
- AEI: work requirements for welfare benefits actually work.
- AI is assisting doctors, not replacing them. It produces better diagnoses and helps avoid prescription errors. (WSJ)
- Anti-Covid measures didn’t keep people from getting Covid; but they did almost wipe out the flu. (WSJ)
- Health Affairs study: From 21–61 percent of enrollees in ACA plans paid for preventive services that are supposed to be free.
Monday Links
- Trustees: Social Security to run out in 2033; Medicare runs out in 2031.
- The earth’s population just passed 8 billion. Why some scholars think that’s good.
- Awards for dysfunction in health care.
- Judge: Obamacare preventive medicine freebies are out: Five things to know. Why the mandates were a waste of money anyway.
- What preventive procedures would patients pay for with their own money?