Matt Miller on Marketplace

Matt Miller was on NPR’s Marketplace on Tuesday.  Miller was advocating the creation of a government controlled health system.  While his arguments citing the benefits of nationalized health care are compelling, he does not address some of the drawbacks (e.g.: decreased technological innovation in a single payer system, increased risk of corruption, etc.). The most…

Senator Wyden’s Health Care Plan

Yesterday I was invited to a small-group conversation with Senator Ron Wyden regarding the Healthy Americans Act that was recently proposed.  Unfortunately I could not make it the conference, but Senator Wyden’s own Stand Tall for America website gives some (very biased) details and analysis of the plan.  Joe Paduda of Managed Care Matters has…

Drug coated stent: subtitle “Ah, yes — money.”

On Wednesday, The New York Times reported (“What Money Doesn’t Buy in Health Care“) reported on the relative ineffectiveness of drug-coated stents (aka drug-eluting stents). (For more information regarding what is a stent, visit the Angioplasty.org webpage.) On Friday, December 8th, the FDA recommended that “…doctors and patients be given stronger warnings about the dangers…

Euthanasia in Italy

The BBC reports (“Italian man…“) on a court case in which a paralyzed man suffering from muscular dystrophy is requesting that “his artificial respirator turned off and to be given sedatives to ease his pain until he dies.”  Euthanasia is illegal in Italy as it in the United States.  On the other hand, euthanasia and…

For those with a personal blog…

A recent Economist article (see a reprint at the Librarian’s Place blog) chronicles the career of Mena Trott.  Mrs. Trott (along with her husband) founded Six Apart, a company whose blogging enterprises include Typepad, Movable Type and Live Journal.  The most recent and perhaps most profound innovation by the couple at Six Apart is the…

Giants of industry push for electronic medical records

According to the Economist magazine (“Bit by bit“), firms such as Wal-Mart, Pitney Bowes, and Intel are announcing plans to launch an online patient-information service next year with the non-profit firm Omnimedix Institute. The consortium aims to develop Dossia, which—according to the institute—is “a secure, private, independent network for capturing medical information and delivering it…

Legislating your diet

Today, the New York City Board of Health has decided to ban artificial trans fats at city restaurants.  The New York Times (“…Trans Fats“) reports that “Trans fats are believed to be harmful because they contribute to heart disease by raising bad cholesterol and lowering good cholesterol at the same time. Some experts say that…