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

Friday, August 21, 2009

Friday Afternoon Linkfest: Required Reading

1. Warren Buffett gives a warning on U.S. debt.

2. Warning: China reduces holdings of U.S. government debt.

3. Andy Xie: New Bubble Threatens a V-Shaped Rebound.

4. 1 in 8 US Mortgages Falling Behind.

5. Barry Ritholtz on the latest existing home sales numbers.

6. FDIC is bankrupt. Read it here. Even though the FDIC is bankrupt it will not run out of money because Congress will most likely bailout the FDIC. Read it here.

7. Mexico decriminalizes small-scale drug possession. Glenn Greenwald on the drug decriminalization in Portugal. Read and watch here.

8. What Would Jesus Do? Ask Obama. The president's troubling use of religion to sell health care reform.

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Sunday, August 16, 2009

What's Scary About Health Care Reform?


Steve Chapman wrote a great column on health care today. Read the whole article here.

Some excerpts from the article below:

Plenty of people think the existing system is in need of repair. But when they hear about expensive plans that require a more powerful and intrusive federal government, they fear that what is best in our approach to medicine may get smashed in the process.
...
One big reason our life expectancy lags is that Americans have an unusual tendency to perish in homicides or accidents. We are 12 times more likely than the Japanese to be murdered and nearly twice as likely to be killed in auto wrecks.

In their 2006 book, "The Business of Health," economists Robert L. Ohsfeldt and John E. Schneider set out to determine where the U.S. would rank in life span among developed nations if homicides and accidents are factored out. Their answer? First place.
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Some of those foreign systems are great, as long as you don't get sick. Samuel Preston and Jessica Ho of the Population Studies Center at the University of Pennsylvania examined survival rates for lung, breast, prostate, colon and rectum cancers in 18 countries and found that Americans fared best.

The U.S. also excelled on other measures, such as surviving heart attacks for more than a year. Why? Because our doctors and patients don't take no for an answer. The researchers attribute the results to "wider screening and more aggressive treatment." Another factor is that we get quicker access to new cancer drugs than anyone else.
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The challenge in this country is to extend coverage to the uninsured without degrading quality for everyone. With a little caution and humility, the president and Congress can find ways to achieve that goal. But first, they need to put down the hammer.


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