Perspective
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Election Polls Are More Accurate if They ask Participants How Others Will Vote
Traditional polls ask people whom they would vote for if the election were today, or for the percent chance that they might vote for particular candidates. But asking people about the political preferences of social circles and communities might yield more accurate results.
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Understanding The Latest ACO “Savings”: Curb Your Enthusiasm And Sharpen Your Pencils—Part 2
In this post, the authors lay out key considerations for improving the MSSP over the long haul with the objective of helping get a repeatedly derailed conversation back on track.
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Understanding The Latest ACO “Savings”: Curb Your Enthusiasm And Sharpen Your Pencils—Part 1
Did the MSSP save Medicare $1.2 billion in 2019? No—not even close. Might the true net savings be close to zero? Quite possibly.
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Approving the Pfizer Vaccine Would, Finally, Mark the End of the Beginning
The news from Pfizer suggests we may be at the end of the beginning of the pandemic. We now have even more reason to redouble our pandemic control and mitigation efforts, so that we can limit the disability and death from new infections until vaccines become available.
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The COVID-19 Vaccines Are Coming. Here’s How They Should Be Rolled Out
Well before Operation Warp Speed delivers products en masse, we need to be prepared to distribute them effectively.
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Podcast: Essentially Medicine
Jakub Hlavka discusses numerous approaches to increase access to cell- and gene-therapies and how political will is essential to realize improvements in healthcare on the Essentially Medicine podcast.
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For the Sake of Kidney Patients, Vote No on Proposition 23
As a kidney doctor and health policy researcher, I am appalled that patients have become a bargaining chip in a game that could result in massive dialysis shortages, increased costs, and death.
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Free COVID-19 Vaccines: Not Enough to Guarantee Acceptance, Especially Among Black Americans
The researchers find cost does matter when estimating willingness to get a COVID-19 vaccine, but it isn’t the whole story.
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Surprise Medical Bills Increase Costs for Everyone, Not Just for the People Who Get Them
About 12% of insurers’ U.S. spending on in- and out-of-network medical care goes to six types of providers that commonly submit surprise bills.
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BMJ: What Current and Missing Data Can Teach Us About Medication Errors
The cost of medication errors worldwide exceeds $42 billion, or approximately 5%–6% of all hospitalizations. There are a number of cost-effective strategies that could be deployed to reduce the quantity of adverse drug events.
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