Health Care

Commentary

Another reason why single-payer would be bad for US

Britain Offers a Cautionary Tale for ‘Medicare for All’

King Charles III’s coronation wasn’t the only historic event Great Britain marked this year. The country’s revered National Health Service is celebrating this summer the 75th anniversary of its founding. It’s a birthday Americans should take note of. The NHS has been an inspiration to generations of American leftists, who ...
Commentary

Read latest about affirmative action

Ending medical-school affirmative action will be a plus for patients

The US Supreme Court effectively prohibited university admissions officers from giving preferential treatment to applicants based on their race this summer. Many medical-school leaders decried the high court’s ruling, claiming the ban will lead to less diversity within their student bodies, a less diverse crop of physicians and worse outcomes ...
Commentary

Cancer Patients Need Private Innovation, Not Gov’t Meddling

President Joe Biden just announced a new effort that he hopes will spur the development of better, more precise cancer surgery technologies. The program is part of his administration’s “Cancer Moonshot,” which aims to halve cancer death rates in the United States by 2047. Ironically, one of the biggest obstacles to achieving ...
Health Care

Read new PRI survey

Americans Satisfied with their Current Health Coverage, Lean Against Single Payer, Finds New PRI Survey

SACRAMENTO – A new national survey commissioned by the nonpartisan Pacific Research Institute, a California-based, free market think tank, finds that, for the second year in a row, an overwhelming majority of Americans are satisfied with their current health coverage. 90 percent of those surveyed said they were satisfied with ...
Commentary

Read the latest on the nation's doctor shortage

Fixing the doctor shortage requires less government, not more

Congress is looking to narrow our nation’s doctor shortage. After introducing legislation that would reform our primary care system, Senate Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions Committee Chairman Bernie Sanders (I-VT) said last month , “Tens of millions of Americans live in communities where they cannot find a doctor while others have to wait months to be ...
Commentary

Greater Immigration Can Alleviate Troubling Skilled Nurse Shortage

Immigration, always a strength for the U.S. economy, has the potential to fill a dangerous and growing labor shortage of skilled nurses. According to nurse.org’s 2023 State of Nursing report, “91% of nurses believe the nursing shortage is getting worse, and 79% report that their units are inadequately staffed.” And it’s not just ...
Commentary

A bipartisan way to improve health coverage, help small businesses

The House of Representatives recently passed a healthcare reform bill along party lines. All 220 Republicans who were present voted “aye,” while all 209 Democrats sounded a unanimous “nay.” Judging by that roll call, you’d think the bill — the CHOICE Arrangement Act — was full of partisan measures. But ...
Blog

Read more about broken 340B program

340B Advocates Strike Back

There are many reasons why government programs fail to deliver on their intentions, regardless of how well meaning they may be. The rhetoric from too many 340B recipients exemplifies a primary obstacle: Reforms that are necessary to correct a program’s glaring flaws or its fundamental unsustainability are demagogued and labeled ...
Commentary

Republican presidential candidates have been silent on healthcare

GOP’s Winning Healthcare Argument Must Be Made Now

The race for the Republican nomination for president is obviously well underway. The first debate is in less than three weeks – in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. The candidates have largely been silent on healthcare. That’s a strategic error. Nine in ten people are concerned about increases in the cost of health ...
Commentary

Read the latest on Medicaid disenrollment

Medicaid Is In Trouble, But Not For The Reasons Democrats Say

State Medicaid programs are in the midst of disenrolling people who are ineligible for benefits. And Democrats think that’s a catastrophe. Some 3.8 million people have lost Medicaid coverage since April, as states resume standard eligibility reviews that had been paused since the onset of the coronavirus pandemic. In a letter to America’s governors, ...
Commentary

Another reason why single-payer would be bad for US

Britain Offers a Cautionary Tale for ‘Medicare for All’

King Charles III’s coronation wasn’t the only historic event Great Britain marked this year. The country’s revered National Health Service is celebrating this summer the 75th anniversary of its founding. It’s a birthday Americans should take note of. The NHS has been an inspiration to generations of American leftists, who ...
Commentary

Read latest about affirmative action

Ending medical-school affirmative action will be a plus for patients

The US Supreme Court effectively prohibited university admissions officers from giving preferential treatment to applicants based on their race this summer. Many medical-school leaders decried the high court’s ruling, claiming the ban will lead to less diversity within their student bodies, a less diverse crop of physicians and worse outcomes ...
Commentary

Cancer Patients Need Private Innovation, Not Gov’t Meddling

President Joe Biden just announced a new effort that he hopes will spur the development of better, more precise cancer surgery technologies. The program is part of his administration’s “Cancer Moonshot,” which aims to halve cancer death rates in the United States by 2047. Ironically, one of the biggest obstacles to achieving ...
Health Care

Read new PRI survey

Americans Satisfied with their Current Health Coverage, Lean Against Single Payer, Finds New PRI Survey

SACRAMENTO – A new national survey commissioned by the nonpartisan Pacific Research Institute, a California-based, free market think tank, finds that, for the second year in a row, an overwhelming majority of Americans are satisfied with their current health coverage. 90 percent of those surveyed said they were satisfied with ...
Commentary

Read the latest on the nation's doctor shortage

Fixing the doctor shortage requires less government, not more

Congress is looking to narrow our nation’s doctor shortage. After introducing legislation that would reform our primary care system, Senate Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions Committee Chairman Bernie Sanders (I-VT) said last month , “Tens of millions of Americans live in communities where they cannot find a doctor while others have to wait months to be ...
Commentary

Greater Immigration Can Alleviate Troubling Skilled Nurse Shortage

Immigration, always a strength for the U.S. economy, has the potential to fill a dangerous and growing labor shortage of skilled nurses. According to nurse.org’s 2023 State of Nursing report, “91% of nurses believe the nursing shortage is getting worse, and 79% report that their units are inadequately staffed.” And it’s not just ...
Commentary

A bipartisan way to improve health coverage, help small businesses

The House of Representatives recently passed a healthcare reform bill along party lines. All 220 Republicans who were present voted “aye,” while all 209 Democrats sounded a unanimous “nay.” Judging by that roll call, you’d think the bill — the CHOICE Arrangement Act — was full of partisan measures. But ...
Blog

Read more about broken 340B program

340B Advocates Strike Back

There are many reasons why government programs fail to deliver on their intentions, regardless of how well meaning they may be. The rhetoric from too many 340B recipients exemplifies a primary obstacle: Reforms that are necessary to correct a program’s glaring flaws or its fundamental unsustainability are demagogued and labeled ...
Commentary

Republican presidential candidates have been silent on healthcare

GOP’s Winning Healthcare Argument Must Be Made Now

The race for the Republican nomination for president is obviously well underway. The first debate is in less than three weeks – in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. The candidates have largely been silent on healthcare. That’s a strategic error. Nine in ten people are concerned about increases in the cost of health ...
Commentary

Read the latest on Medicaid disenrollment

Medicaid Is In Trouble, But Not For The Reasons Democrats Say

State Medicaid programs are in the midst of disenrolling people who are ineligible for benefits. And Democrats think that’s a catastrophe. Some 3.8 million people have lost Medicaid coverage since April, as states resume standard eligibility reviews that had been paused since the onset of the coronavirus pandemic. In a letter to America’s governors, ...
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