joshuago’s health-care Bookmarks

12 FEB 2010
[Slate] How Insurers Reject You

BlueCross BlueShield of Texas' blueprint for denying health policies.

01 FEB 2010
[SF Chronicle] More exercise better in long run, study finds

There's no known point at which more aerobic exercise will start to be detrimental, which means that we should just go ahead and do as much exercise as we can.

04 NOV 2009
Some Vaguely Heretical Thoughts on Health-Care Reform: Rational Irrationality : The New Yorker

Both in terms of the political calculus of the Democratic Party, and in terms of making the United States a more equitable society, expanding health-care coverage now and worrying later about its long-term consequences is an eminently defensible strategy. One might even claim that some subterfuge is historically necessary to get great reforms enacted. But as an economics reporter and commentator, I feel obliged to put on my green eyeshade and count the dollars.

10 OCT 2009
[VentureBeat] Fresh from Health 2.0: two dozen of the most innovative new health apps

Health 2.0 is about putting consumers back in the driver’s seat of their own care and giving tools to doctors and providers to make this happen. The online platform is arguably not the best tool for gathering the kind of detailed life stream data that truly drives behavior change. The mobile platform is much better suited for both data gathering and trending.

23 SEP 2009
A Shot in the Arm - Jonathan Gruber

Universal health insurance, far from suppressing entrepreneurship, could be a boon to it. The main reason for this is a phenomenon known as "job lock." Job lock refers to the fact that workers are often unwilling to leave a current job that provides health insurance for another position that might not, even if they would be more productive in that other position.

11 SEP 2009
[The New York Times] Big Food vs. Big Insurance

Our success in bringing health care costs under control ultimately depends on whether Washington can summon the political will to take on and reform a second, even more powerful industry: the food industry.

07 SEP 2009
[WSJ] Facing a Scourge of Killer Clots

Medical experts say the incidence of DVT followed by pulmonary embolism, which is fatal about 30% of the time, is increasing in the hospital. That's because many patients are older, more obese, and are undergoing more complicated and invasive surgeries.

07 SEP 2009
[The Economist] The politics of death

Health reformers always smash up against two unpalatable truths. We are all going to die. And the demand for interventions that might postpone that day far outstrips the supply.

06 SEP 2009
[The Atlantic] How American Health Care Killed My Father

A wasteful insurance system; distorted incentives; a bias toward treatment; moral hazard; hidden costs and a lack of transparency; curbed competition; service to the wrong customer. These are the problems at the foundation of our health-care system, resulting in a slow rot and requiring more and more money just to keep the system from collapsing.

06 SEP 2009
[The New Yorker] Annals of Medicine: The Checklist

If a new drug were as effective at saving lives as Peter Pronovost’s checklist, there would be a nationwide marketing campaign urging doctors to use it.