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Category: News and Events

Friday Links

Posted on July 22, 2022July 25, 2022 by John C. Goodman
  • AMA encourages doctors to learn health economics. They even have their own online course. Haven’t checked it out, but I suspect it is more sociology than economics.
  • Amazon wants to be your doctor.
  • Déjà vu: Monkeypox testing looks like the Covid testing fiasco all over again.
  • “probably half of all Covid infections have happened this calendar year — and it’s only July.”
  • Insulin bill in the Senate looks like a done deal.
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Thursday Links

Posted on July 21, 2022July 25, 2022 by John C. Goodman
  • Fauci isn’t retiring after all.
  • CBO: taxpayers would save billions of dollars and the number of people with health insurance would remain the same if the (Obamacare) extended subsidies are allowed to expire in December.
  • The other side of waste: More spending leads to better health outcomes.
  • Cato: Day Light Savings Time transition has been linked to increased risks of car accidents, heart attacks, and depressive symptoms in studies.
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The Downside of Telemedicine: Tele-Fraud

Posted on July 20, 2022 by Devon Herrick

The Justice Department announced criminal charges in a $1.2 billion telemedicine fraud scheme committed by numerous individuals across the United States. In  some cases the owners of clinical labs are accused of paying kickbacks to marketers, who in turn paid bribes to telemedicine companies in return for physician orders.

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Concentrated Health Care Markets

Posted on July 20, 2022 by John C. Goodman

Michael Cannon at Cato writes:

By 2017, in most markets, a single hospital system had more than a 50 percent market share of discharges. In 2016, markets for specialist physicians exhibited what federal antitrust authorities consider a high degree of concentration in 65 percent of metropolitan areas. Markets for primary‐care physicians exhibited high concentration in 39 percent of metropolitan areas…. In 2016, 57 percent of health insurance markets exhibited high concentration; in 2018, 75 percent did.

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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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