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Posts Tagged ‘congress’

On January 27, 2008, U.S. Representative John Conyers Jr. (D-MI) introduced a new version of a previously unsuccessful bill before Congress that would turn America’s health care system into a socialized, not-for-profit, singer-payer system.  Previous iterations of the bill had few co-sponsors (25 in 2003), and the current version (H.R. 676), has gained a modicum [...]

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Peter Goodman of the New York Times writes an interesting retrospective of free markets entitled “The Free Market: A False Idol After All?“  The article’s basic conclusion is that unfettered free markets (unhampered by regulation)…systems merely based upon ideology, cannot stand without some basic rules of government.  And I don’t disagree.  In the short run, [...]

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There’s a really cool show on BBC America called “Top Gear.” It’s a witty, irreverent, brutally honest car show hosted by three dry-witted Brits: Jeremy Clarkson (blog here), Richard Hammond, and James May. Last season they road tested the new Mercedes S-Class (video clip). The S-Class is the big, expensive standard example [...]

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Two posts ago, I attacked Medicare. In my last post, I pointed out how budget cuts have all but destroyed the effectiveness of the U.S. Food & Drug Administration. In this post, I’m going to talk about the U.S. Department of Agriculture, in another chapter about what happens when citizens entrust their health [...]

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In my last post I took a jab at Medicare for its embarrassingly compromised medical reimbursement policies. Today’s victim is the Food and Drug Administration (FDA). A NY Times article reports that an investigation of the FDA by its own “F.D.A. Science Board” finds it in “a crisis.”
More specifically: it’s desperately short of [...]

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Just about anyone who doesn’t work directly for the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, and has experience in health care, could not argue that Medicare’s reimbursement formularies adequately reimburse hospitals and doctors – AND keep a straight face.  Medicare reimbursement, the bane of many hospitals’ existence, began, like many government programs, with a [...]

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A Wall Street Journal article today discusses the crusade of Dr. Arthur Matas, a Canadian-born transplant surgeon who is arguing that people should be able to sell a kidney to someone who needs it, in a government-regulated market. The ethical implications of commoditising human organs are very complex, and there are arguments on both sides. [...]

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The U.S. Senate voted 64-to-30, approving the new child health bill, a week after Congress approved it. This proposed modification to the State Children’s Health Insurance Program (S-CHIP) would insure an additional $4mm uninsured, low-income children, in addition to the $6mm with coverage under the current 10-year old program. Both houses expect a Presidential Veto, [...]

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