Just one article in a wonderful 25th Anniversary perspective for Health Affairs.
From the greatest health economist of them all, What Are The Prospects For Enduring Comprehensive Health Care Reform?.
Just one article in a wonderful 25th Anniversary perspective for Health Affairs.
From the greatest health economist of them all, What Are The Prospects For Enduring Comprehensive Health Care Reform?.
By John Halamka, MD
By David Shaywitz, MD
By Shannon Brownlee and Joe Colucci
By Joshua Archambault
By Jeff Bussgang
By Marya Zilberberg, MD
By Peter W. Carmel
By Aza Raskin
By Rob Lamberts, MD
By Joe Flower
More posts: 2012 Election
More posts: startups
More posts: EHR
More posts: Individual mandate
The Supreme Court Challenge![]() A SPECIAL SECTION Will the Supreme Court overturn the Obama Administration's attempt to reshape the health care industry? THCB's experts address this question and many others around the political fight in Washington over the future of health care. |
Doctor Versus DoctorBy Jim deMaine
By Jim deMaine I felt sad when I went to make rounds in the hospital. One of my patients, a colleague, had been readmitted in poor condition for recurrence of a primary lung sarcoma. I spent a few minutes examining Dennis and chatting. He then, with a quizzical look, said, “Jim, I’m going to have...
What if We Regulated Legal Services Like Health Care?By John R. Graham
By John R. Graham Well, the future of American health care is now controlled by lawyers. That may not be news – doctors, drug makers, and medical-device makers have long complained about the cost of lawsuits. But this different: The future of PPACA is in the hands of the Supreme Court. Hundreds of lawyers billed...
How Obama Botched and Bungled the Health Reform MessageBy Michael Millenson
By Michael L. Millenson While it’s comforting to just blame the GOP for the unhappiness with health reform threatening the president’s re-election, the truth is that Barack Obama repeatedly botched, bungled and bobbled the health reform message. There were three big mistakes: The Passionless Play While Candidate Obama proclaimed a passionate moral commitment to fix...TEDMED 2012![]() A SPECIAL SECTION 1,500 delegates from the worlds of technology, medicine and science gathered in Washington DC this month. Our coverage from the Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts. |
Washington Stuck Fighting Wrong Health-Care BattleBy Peter R. Orszag
By Peter R. Orszag While Washington wonks continue to bicker over health policy, positive change is occurring outside the Beltway. Last week, the Altarum Institute, a research organization based in Ann Arbor, Michigan, reported that the moderation in the growth of health-care costs we have seen over the past few years is continuing: Total health...
Is the Fact that I Am a Woman Considered a Pre-Existing Condition?By Maggie Mahar
By Maggie Mahar The male body has long been considered the “standard” for health care coverage. Having a woman’s body is seen as an expensive anomaly, and women pay dearly for being different. When they buy their own health insurance in the individual market, women must lay out an extra $1 billion a year, simply...
Crossing the LineBy James Salwitz, MD
By James Salwitz, MD Recently a patient with advanced lung cancer was admitted to a local hospital. Pain in his abdomen was diagnosed as a gallbladder infection. Because he had metastatic cancer, in addition to the new problem, the patient and family decided that if things deteriorated he should not be given CPR or put...
Is There a Republican Alternative to ObamaCare?By John Goodman
“GOP to the Uninsured: (Feel Free to) Drop Dead.” So reads the title Michael Millenson post at the Health Care Blog yesterday. It gets worse: [N]o Republican presidential candidate has ever presented a serious plan to cover all the uninsured … The difference between Democrats and this generation of Republicans — unfortunately including even the...
A Safety Checklist for PatientsBy Peter Pronovost, MD
Far too many patients are harmed rather than helped from their interactions with the health care system. While reducing this harm has proven to be devilishly difficult, we have found that checklists help. Checklists help to reduce ambiguity about what to do, to prioritize what is most important, and to clarify the behaviors that are...
Digital DietBy Bob Wachter, MD
It’s been said that losing weight is much harder than kicking cigarettes or alcohol. After all, because one doesn’t need to smoke or drink, the offending substances can simply be kept out of sight (if not out of mind). Dieting, on the other hands, involves changing the way a person does something we all must...

It is a disappointing analysis. I would have thought Fuchs would be more sensitive to the danger of hastily designed reform, danger especially to
the least well-off. Yet he seems to feel that the main danger is just that such reforms will not “have the ingrediants to endure.”
Fuchs also blames “interest groups” for “blocking the will of the people.” Perhaps he should allot some blame to those interest groups who fail to really bring forward what the issues are. A startling number of people seem to believe, for example, that the insurance companies are the sole source of the high costs of health care. Perhaps if they knew more, there would be more pressure for efficient results.