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(Oct. 4) -- If Americans are serious about improving health care, they may need to ask for some serious lifestyle changes from their medical providers: Docs might need to sacrifice the standard Saturday-Sunday weekend to boost patient care and save money. It's a controversial idea, but one that Peter Orszag, a fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations, sees as a worthwhile experiment in the ongoing efforts to patch up our country's flailing health care programs. Writing in today's New York Times, Orszag describes the changes being introduced at New York University's Langone Medical Center ...
Burma is not a good place to get sick. It's a bad place for a lot of things -- basic freedoms, rule of law, taxis (the fleet in Rangoon is about 30 years old and suffering from some seriously gnarly transmission ailments). Still, the government has an abysmal record when it comes to helping the sick: In 2005, UNICEF reported that the government spent a paltry 40 cents a year on health care per citizen (in comparison, the Thai government spent nearly $61 per person). In 2000, Burma's health care system was ranked 190th out of 191 countries by the World Health Organization. It's one thing for ...
(Nov. 16) -- It's federal law: All seriously injured emergency and trauma patients must be given equal lifesaving care, whether or not they can pay for it. But that's not happening, according to a new report. The study, conducted by Children's Hospital Boston research fellow Dr. Heather Rosen and colleagues from three other hospitals, found that uninsured trauma victims ages 18 to 30 are dying at an annual rate 89 percent higher than insured victims with identically severe injuries. As the health reform tornado continues to swirl on Capitol Hill, the data could provide fresh ammunition for ...
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