Showing posts with label healthcare. Show all posts
Showing posts with label healthcare. Show all posts

Saturday, October 27, 2018

Bob Hugin, healthcare moderate?

I doubt it. The Republican candidate for Bob Menendez's New Jersey Senate seat, the past finance chair for Trump's New Jersey campaign, makes moderate noises about healthcare under cover of technocratic blather like paying for value and providing "health care, not sick care.". Someone needs to look beneath the hood and get him on the record as to what extent he'd support Republican healthcare priorities. In the North Jersey Record, I've posed some healthcare questions for him.

Hope you'll take a look: 3 healthcare questions for Bob Hugin

P.S. A more detailed look, with more background and a question about VA care, is here on the blog.

Sunday, April 10, 2016

My healthcare credo to date

As an amateur healthcare student, every now and then I like to pause and take stock of the convictions I've picked up by osmosis -- by deciding, consciously and unconsciously, what (and whom) to credit in what I read and hear. Here's a short set of hypotheses (and suspicions).

1. The single most important means of healthcare cost control is uniform or at least coordinated pricing: single payer, all-payer, or, maybe in the U.S., private as a fixed percentage of public. The U.S.'s  unique every-payer-for-itself system is the main reason Americans pay far more per procedure than citizens of any other developed country.

2. The evils of market consolidation are likely to outstrip the virtues of coordinated care.

3. Which treatments and drugs are covered by insurance, and to what level (ideally by all payers in concert, and. by Medicare and Medicaid in our current system) should be informed by outcomes research and price/benefit calculations.

4. The wisest words ever spoken by a public health official: "We cover everybody, but not everything."*

Saturday, July 13, 2013

"Government-run healthcare," Singapore style

In his long rhetorical war against the Affordable Care Act, Avik Roy likes to hold up Singapore's healthcare system as a shining counter-example. He quite rightly points out that Singapore spends far less on healthcare than the U.S. (4% of GDP vs. 18% for the U.S.), and with better outcomes. How do they do it? Roy -- while acknowledging one aspect of the government's heavy hand --  credits free-market magic:
The key to the Singapore system is mandatory health savings accounts: again, something that libertarians and many conservatives wouldn't like. Matt Miller of the Center for American Progress describes Singapore as "further to the left and further to the right" than the American system--something that could also be said of Switzerland.