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The Goodman Institute Health Blog

Category: Saturday Links

Saturday Links

Posted on August 31, 2024August 30, 2024 by John C. Goodman
  • What the classical thinkers thought about mental health.
  • More than 300 hospitals are deploying or preparing to dispatch paramedics, nurse practitioners and other medical staff to treat patients at home instead of in hospital settings, a service widely referred to as hospital at home. They get paid the same hospital-stay rate.  (WSJ)
  • George Halvorson calls MedPac report “fake news.”
  • More on diet and dementia. Study: an anti-inflammatory diet reduced the risk of developing dementia by 31 percent.
  • 450 agents and brokers suspended for enrolling and switching people in exchange plans without their consent.
  • Is RFK Jr right? Is a surge in chronic diseases, cancer, neurodevelopmental disorders, metabolic syndrome, and Alzheimer’s disease caused by Big Sugar, Big Ag, Big Pharma, and the cabal of government sycophants who do the bidding of their corporate sugar daddies?
  • “Social capital” for individuals increases with market income and decreases with government transfer payments.
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Saturday Links

Posted on August 24, 2024August 24, 2024 by John C. Goodman
  • Henderson: the case for immigration.
  • Why inequality can be a good thing.
  • Chronically ill patients with high deductible health plans are highly sensitive to out-of-pocket costs for telemedicine.
  • Harris would add $1.7 trillion to federal spending. And that doesn’t include Medicare for All.
  • When drug companies assist patients in paying for their drugs, should that assistance count toward the patient’s insurance plan deductibles and coinsurance?
  • Unintended consequences: Could the IRA bill lead to increased  enrollment in Medicare Advantage plans?
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Saturday Links

Posted on August 17, 2024August 16, 2024 by John C. Goodman
  • “The projected $4.7 billion spent on migrant services in FY 2025 either eclipses or approximates what New York City will spend on core public services such as sanitation and the fire department.”
  • Organ transplants: “While most organs are delivered successfully, some organs are delayed in transit, lose viability, and have to be thrown away. Some just get lost, too.”
  • What’s wrong with the IRA bill:  “Electricity prices have skyrocketed by 30% since 2021, rising 13 times faster than in the previous seven years. Meanwhile, gas prices have more than doubled since Biden took office. Rising energy costs have also been a major driver of food inflation, forcing Americans to spend over 11% of their disposable income on food—the highest percentage in three decades.”   (Recommended)
  • More than four years since the advent of Covid, public authorities keep pushing health practices contrary to medical and scientific knowledge.
  • Goldman Sachs estimates that taxpayers will shell out a staggering $1.2 trillion—over three times the initial prediction—to fund the IRA’s green energy subsidies.
  • Biden exaggerates the benefit of price negotiations for 10 drugs: “overall numbers tied to the amount Medicare actually pays for drugs that show discounts of roughly 22% on the 10 drugs collectively, compared to what the program paid last year. That’s more modest than the exaggerated discounts based on list prices that show price reductions of up to 79%.” And patients only pay a small fraction of the 22%. (STAT: gated)
  • Charles River Laboratories, a top research contractor that helps drug makers with clinical trials, warns that pharmaceutical companies are slashing research and development owing to the IRA’s drug price controls. (WSJ)
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Saturday Links

Posted on August 10, 2024August 9, 2024 by John C. Goodman
  • Large randomized controlled trial (RCT) backs up traditional economic theory of minimum wage laws: fewer people are hired and there are fewer hours worked.
  • RTC for guaranteed basic income: recipients worked less — household income decreased by 20 cents for every dollar they received.
  • RCT providing $1,000 a month to homeless people: reduction in homelessness was not much different from the control group.
  • Best explanation I have seen for why Imane Khelif of Algeria should not have been in women’s Olympic boxing.
  • AAF pans the FTC report on PBMs.
  • The new ability to conduct surgeries remotely with robots could be a boon to patients who live in under-doctored areas.
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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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