- 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?
Category: Monday Links
Monday Links
- Study: “we estimate that workers with week-long Covid-19 absences are 7 percentage points less likely to be in the labor force one year later compared to otherwise-similar workers who do not miss a week of work for health reasons.”
- Why do academics want to ignore the importance of family structure?
- Mike Kim, owner of Grubb’s Pharmacy in Washington, DC, told STAT News in 2017 that he routinely ships medication for Alzheimer’s disease and other forms of dementia to members on Capitol Hill through a contract he has with the Office of the Attending Physician of the United States Congress.
- In 2023, US gross domestic product (GDP) hit $200,000 per household.
- Why so many kids from rich families get into elite colleges.
- A slew of speculations on why Medicare spending has slowed. (NYT)
Monday Links
- The food stamp program doubled in size during th pandemic, yet its 42 million recipients have less healthy diets and are more obese than other Americans.
- The typical Medicare beneficiary has access to around 40 Medicare Advantage plans. (WSJ)
- Medicaid in NY: volatile budget swings.
- GOP answer to drug shortages: exempt generics from the 340b discounts until the shortage is over. (gated)
- The case for drinking. HT: David Henderson
Monday Links
- Oregon hospital threatens to refuse Medicare Advantage patients.
- Ten drugs, mostly used to treat rare diseases cost over $700,000 annually.
- How Big Pharma makes its money: AbbVie blanketed Humira, the best-selling drug in history, with 165 peripheral patents, to deter any possible competition.
- Medicine without doctors: The past several years have seen hundreds of laws proposing to expand non doctor medical professionals’ work, the AMA has spent millions of dollars fighting back. (Washington Post)