Wednesday, February 28, 2007



Unfortunately, I have been forced into a terrible situation. I am a mother of two children. In 2006 I could only afford health insurance for myself and one child. Now in 2007 I can't afford any medical insurance for my children. ...
Source: bayneofblog.blogspot.com

Hospital News
But I ve been following the medical news lately, and it appears that my definition is wrong. Along with health insurance companies who refuse to insure the people who need them (that is, sick people), come hospitals who treat sick ...
Source: www.assertivepatient.com

On to EROP
Many economists would justify the existence of Medicare (and its government provision of health insurance for the elderly and disabled) with three potential explanations. The first potential explanation is that many people may lack ...
Source: gecon.blogspot.com

Medical Tourism Scares the Bejesus Out of Insurance Industry
People seeking medical care at prices that are far below those charged in the United States are not tourists; they are smart consumers tired of getting raped by the insurance companies at the expense of their own health. ...
Source: www.seniorcitizen.com

GASTON: Is Medicare Advantage for You?
No matter what Medicare health insurance option beneficiaries choose, they will continue to pay the Medicare Part B premium. The four types of MA plans each work differently and are as follows: 1. Medicare Health Maintenance ...
Source: gaston.ces.ncsu.edu

Holman Jenkins On Health Care
It pays the affluent to buy more medical care than they would if they were spending their own money. It prompts them to launder our health spending through an insurance bureaucracy, creating endless paperwork. ...
Source: voluntaryxchange.typepad.com

The Century Forum
The general consensus of the debate was that the US should abandon employer provided insurance in the long-run; most Westernized countries in Europe (with the exception of Germany) do not base health insurance around the employer. ...
Source: healthcare-economist.com

Amy Finkelstein: The Costs and Benefits of Universal Health Insurance
This table shows that medical spending is very skewed: If you order people according to their spending on health care, the top 10% of spenders account for 72% of all spending and the top 1% of spenders account for 30% of all spending. ...
Source: economistsview.typepad.com

0 Comments:

Post a Comment

<< Home