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dimanche 26 juin 2016
Private Profit and the Public's Health: Which is More Important?
By Unknown 14:44
Bike Listening Tour, Calvin Coolidge, emergency medical services, Kaiser Foundation, KCI, Lynn Tilton, Medicaid, New York Times, Paul Gordon, private equity, Sly James, TPP No comments
Health care is pretty complicated, and insurance coverage is even harder to understand.This is the message that comes through clearly from the interviews being done by Dr. Paul Gordon and recorded on his blog, https://bikelisteningtour.wordpress.com. Dr. Gordon is taking a unique sabbatical, riding his bicycle across the country from Washington (DC) to Washington (state), interviewing regular people, mostly in cafés and such, about their take on...
samedi 18 juin 2016
Serving others or self-serving? All generations have both kinds of people
By Unknown 07:17
Bulldoc, JayDoc, millennials, mission trips, Paul Taylor, Sanders, self-centered, social conscious, The Next America No comments
The current generation of young adults, commonly called “millennials”, is often criticized for being self-centered, “spoiled”, the product of “helicopter parents”, showing the signs of having grown up in a culture where “everyone was a winner”. On the other hand, studies also show them to be the most socially conscious, idealistic, and optimistic generation in a long time (despite the evidence that things are not going so well for them, and little...
dimanche 29 mai 2016
The US health and social service system is evil
By Unknown 05:57
Bernie Sanders, evil, health system, Medicare, retiremen, Social Security No comments
I have often written about how our health system is “deeply flawed”, but I realize that there are many ways in which this is a grand understatement. I initially intended to call this piece “health insurance companies are evil”, but realized that this singled out but one player. I mean, insurance companies are at least as evil as other parts of the health and social services sector, but naming only one part both does a disservice to that part, which...
vendredi 13 mai 2016
Good Enough for Government Work: Quality, Cost, and Gaming the System
The entire text of the "Good Enough for Government Work: Quality, Cost, and Gaming the System", the 23rd Odegaard Lecture from the 27th Primary Health Care Acces Conference, is available now as a Google Doc at this link: https://docs.google.com/document/d/17oc3H5qHxA8eoYEwiQ5s5hUulvzo1JaSWldsu41nSDU/editThe link will continue to be available on the right side of this blog pa...
dimanche 1 mai 2016
Good enough for government work: Quality, Cost, and Gaming the System (Part 4 of 4)
By Unknown 11:54
ACOs, Aetna, Anthem, CCOs, Cost, equity, Everybody In, Government Work, Jail, Mental Hospital, Michael Hiltzik, Quentin Young, SEPs, the Atlantic No comments

This is the fourth and final part of the 23rd Charles Odegaard Lecture, "Good enough for government work:Quality, cost and gaming the system. I will put the entire talk up as an attachment soon.Is this really true? Aren’t some of our costs “our fault”, or at least “their fault”, that is other people? What about those folks who are “gaming the system”, by holding out on buying...
dimanche 24 avril 2016
“Good enough for Government Work”: Quality, cost, and gaming the system, Part 3 (of 4 parts)
By Unknown 07:39
Bernie Sanders, Commonwealth Fund, Flint, Medicare, Mid-Staffordshire, Mona Hanna-Atisha, quality, Racism, Shrkeli, Triple Aim, Turing, VA, Valeant No comments

This is part three of the Charles Odegaard Lecture, delivered at the 27th National Conference on Primary Health Care Access, April 6, 2016The VA is an example of how quality can be and is compromised when public sector funding is cut. In the area of public health, it can have an even greater impact, and no fewer apologists. When, under cost-cutting mandates from the state...
dimanche 17 avril 2016
“Good enough for Government Work”: Quality, cost, and gaming the system, Part 2 (of 4 parts)
This is part two of the Charles Odegaard Lecture, delivered at the 27th National Conference on Primary Health Care Access, April 6, 2016We have all heard the business mantra “do more with less”, which, on the face of it, is either absurd or, perhaps, a very cynical indictment of how much is currently being “wasted”, waste being differently defined depending upon the point the user wishes to make. I, for example, would consider “waste” to be money...
vendredi 8 avril 2016
“Good enough for Government Work”: Quality, cost, and gaming the system, Part 1 (of 4 parts)
By Unknown 19:03
M. Gregg Bloche, Mid-Staffordshire, national health service, Paul Starr, politicians, Suzanne Gordon, UK, US, VA Scandal No comments

This is part one of the Charles Odegaard Lecture, delivered at the 27th National Conference on Primary Health Care Access, April 6, 2016“The dream of reason did not take power into account”.--Paul Starr, "The Social Transformation of American Medicine", 1982In 2008, the British Healthcare Commission began an investigation into conditions at Stafford Hospital, run by the Mid-Staffordshire...
dimanche 28 février 2016
Who is gaming the system? Surprise, it's the corporations!
By Unknown 05:54
ACA, Clinton, DeLong, economics, gaming the system, Hiltzik, insurance companies, Kaiser Health News, Medicaid Expansion, MedPage Today, RAND study, RomneyCare, Rovner, Sanders, SEPs, skin in the game No comments
I recently participated in a panel discussion following a presentation on the impact of the Affordable Care Act (“Obamacare”) by UC-Berkeley economist J. Bradford DeLong. Unsurprisingly, Dr. DeLong, who worked in the federal government as Deputy Assistant Secretary of the Treasury for Economic Policy in the early years of the Clinton administration, during an earlier attempt to pass comprehensive health reform, took an economic point of view. He...
dimanche 14 février 2016
Life expectancy, socialism, and the determinants of health
By Unknown 10:44
Bernie Sanders, Bosworth, Brookings Institute, Elizabeth Bradley, Gloria Steinem, Kathleen Parker, Life expectancy, Sabrina Tavernise, social determinants, socialism No comments
“Socialism,”writes Washington Post columnist Kathleen Parker on February 9, “has always appealed to the young, the cure for which isn’t age but responsibility. This usually comes in the form of taxes and children, both of which involve working and sacrificing for the benefit of others, the extent of which forms the axis upon which all politics turns.” Parker is discussing...
dimanche 24 janvier 2016
Flint, lead, medical heroes, O-rings and guns
By Unknown 07:27
Boisjoly, engineers, Flint, guns, Kansas, lead, Mona Hanna-Atisha, Morton Thiokol, O-rings, PTB, Public health, water No comments

In January, 1986, 73 seconds after lift-off, the space shuttle Challenger exploded, killing all 7 astronauts on board, including one of the first civilians to go up, New Hampshire teacher Christa McAuliffe. It was a disaster; indeed the words are now paired so that we always say “Challenger disaster”. The cause was a flaw in the design of the solid rocket boosters (“SRB”s)...