Health Care
			Commentary				
			
		The Secret To Reducing Health Costs May Be At The Shopping Mall
			Americans spend a lot on health care. Last year, the average household’s tab was $5,000, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. That figure has gone up more than 13% since 2015 — and is about $600 more than the average person’s expenditures on groceries. Fortunately, it’s possible for the average ...		
					
					
			
																				
			Sally C. Pipes		
				
																						
			December 7, 2018		
				
					
			Commentary				
			
		We Don’t Need A (New) Ban Of Human Gene Therapy
			Animal products used in or on humans have been an invaluable part of medical practice for almost a century. Examples include animal insulins to treat diabetes and pig heart valves transplanted into humans. A related medical breakthrough was just published on Dec. 5 in the journal “Nature”: Genetically modified pig ...		
					
					
			
																				
			Henry Miller, M.S., M.D.		
				
																						
			December 6, 2018		
				
					
			Commentary				
			
		Private companies are the best stewards of public funds for healthcare
			Iowa saved $126 million in fiscal year 2018 by privatizing its management of Medicaid, according to a November report from the state auditor. These savings shouldn’t be a surprise. Private companies are better at managing public funds than the government because they have an incentive to cut costs: It affects their bottom ...		
					
					
			
																				
			Sally C. Pipes		
				
																						
			December 5, 2018		
				
					
			Commentary				
			
		Assisted Suicide for Alzheimer’s Patients Raises Incredibly Difficult Issues
			By Josh Bloom and Henry I. Miller, M.S., M.D. Medical ethics can be thorny even with relatively benign topics. But physician-assisted suicide to achieve “death with dignity’ is especially fraught. It raises issues of personal beliefs, religion, human rights, end-of-life-care, informed consent, the law and euthanasia. This subject was brought ...		
					
					
			
																				
			Pacific Research Institute		
				
																						
			December 2, 2018		
				
					
			Business & Economics				
			
		Redefining Presidential Failure As Success
			While success still has many fathers, failure is no longer an orphan. President Obama’s recent speeches and rallies demonstrate that, now, failure is simply redefined as success. The costs from this revisionism is high. Creating false narratives encourage policies that will harm economic prosperity and impose large economic hardships on ...		
					
					
			
																				
			Wayne Winegarden		
				
																						
			November 30, 2018		
				
					
			Commentary				
			
		Medicaid work requirements are helping, and this state shows it
			A group of Arkansas Medicaid beneficiaries is suing the federal government. They claim the Trump administration’s decision to allow Arkansas to impose work requirements on all able-bodied adult Medicaid recipients restricts their access to healthcare. That’s nonsense. The requirement that able-bodied adult recipients spend 80 hours a month working, training for a job, ...		
					
					
			
																				
			Sally C. Pipes		
				
																						
			November 26, 2018		
				
					
			Commentary				
			
		Junk Science Has Become a Profitable Industry. Who Will Stop It?
			By S. Stanley Young and Henry I. Miller, M.S., M.D. Should we believe the headline, “Drinking four cups of coffee daily lowers risk of death”? How about, “Mouthwash May Trigger Diabetes. . .”? Should we really eat more, not less, fat? And what should we make of data that suggest people with spouses live ...		
					
					
			
																				
			Pacific Research Institute		
				
																						
			November 26, 2018		
				
					
			Commentary				
			
		Medicare for All Lost Big Time in the Midterms
			Democrats won big during the midterm elections earlier this month. As of this writing, they appear to have picked up 39 seats in the House of Representatives. But Medicare for All — the rallying cry for much of the far left — lost big time. Voters outside liberal enclaves rejected ...		
					
					
			
																				
			Sally C. Pipes		
				
																						
			November 26, 2018		
				
					
			Commentary				
			
		Florida voters rejected Medicare for All in the midterms. Thank goodness.
			This month, Democrats took the House of Representatives. But many of the party’s most progressive candidates outside deep-blue coastal enclaves fell short at the polls. Voters in Nebraska, Wisconsin, Pennsylvania, Kansas, Florida, and Maryland all rejected Democratic candidates who campaigned on Medicare for All. And thank goodness. The idea polled ...		
					
					
			
																				
			Sally C. Pipes		
				
																						
			November 25, 2018		
				
					
			Commentary				
			
		Voters Swallowed The Medicaid Snake Oil
			Voters in Idaho, Nebraska, and Utah just approved ballot referendums to expand Medicaid. The three solidly red states will soon add 300,000 beneficiaries to the joint state-federal insurance program for low-income Americans. These voters doubtless had good intentions. They wanted to help vulnerable residents in their states gain access to health ...		
					
					
			
																				
			Sally C. Pipes		
				
																						
			November 23, 2018		
				
					The Secret To Reducing Health Costs May Be At The Shopping Mall
			Americans spend a lot on health care. Last year, the average household’s tab was $5,000, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. That figure has gone up more than 13% since 2015 — and is about $600 more than the average person’s expenditures on groceries. Fortunately, it’s possible for the average ...		
					We Don’t Need A (New) Ban Of Human Gene Therapy
			Animal products used in or on humans have been an invaluable part of medical practice for almost a century. Examples include animal insulins to treat diabetes and pig heart valves transplanted into humans. A related medical breakthrough was just published on Dec. 5 in the journal “Nature”: Genetically modified pig ...		
					Private companies are the best stewards of public funds for healthcare
			Iowa saved $126 million in fiscal year 2018 by privatizing its management of Medicaid, according to a November report from the state auditor. These savings shouldn’t be a surprise. Private companies are better at managing public funds than the government because they have an incentive to cut costs: It affects their bottom ...		
					Assisted Suicide for Alzheimer’s Patients Raises Incredibly Difficult Issues
			By Josh Bloom and Henry I. Miller, M.S., M.D. Medical ethics can be thorny even with relatively benign topics. But physician-assisted suicide to achieve “death with dignity’ is especially fraught. It raises issues of personal beliefs, religion, human rights, end-of-life-care, informed consent, the law and euthanasia. This subject was brought ...		
					Redefining Presidential Failure As Success
			While success still has many fathers, failure is no longer an orphan. President Obama’s recent speeches and rallies demonstrate that, now, failure is simply redefined as success. The costs from this revisionism is high. Creating false narratives encourage policies that will harm economic prosperity and impose large economic hardships on ...		
					Medicaid work requirements are helping, and this state shows it
			A group of Arkansas Medicaid beneficiaries is suing the federal government. They claim the Trump administration’s decision to allow Arkansas to impose work requirements on all able-bodied adult Medicaid recipients restricts their access to healthcare. That’s nonsense. The requirement that able-bodied adult recipients spend 80 hours a month working, training for a job, ...		
					Junk Science Has Become a Profitable Industry. Who Will Stop It?
			By S. Stanley Young and Henry I. Miller, M.S., M.D. Should we believe the headline, “Drinking four cups of coffee daily lowers risk of death”? How about, “Mouthwash May Trigger Diabetes. . .”? Should we really eat more, not less, fat? And what should we make of data that suggest people with spouses live ...		
					Medicare for All Lost Big Time in the Midterms
			Democrats won big during the midterm elections earlier this month. As of this writing, they appear to have picked up 39 seats in the House of Representatives. But Medicare for All — the rallying cry for much of the far left — lost big time. Voters outside liberal enclaves rejected ...		
					Florida voters rejected Medicare for All in the midterms. Thank goodness.
			This month, Democrats took the House of Representatives. But many of the party’s most progressive candidates outside deep-blue coastal enclaves fell short at the polls. Voters in Nebraska, Wisconsin, Pennsylvania, Kansas, Florida, and Maryland all rejected Democratic candidates who campaigned on Medicare for All. And thank goodness. The idea polled ...		
					Voters Swallowed The Medicaid Snake Oil
			Voters in Idaho, Nebraska, and Utah just approved ballot referendums to expand Medicaid. The three solidly red states will soon add 300,000 beneficiaries to the joint state-federal insurance program for low-income Americans. These voters doubtless had good intentions. They wanted to help vulnerable residents in their states gain access to health ...