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lunedì 20 giugno 2016

3 Why People Disagree About Health Policy ----- Priceless: Curing the Healthcare Crisis (Independent Studies in Political Economy) by John C. Goodman

Why People Disagree About Health PolicyRead more at location 795
Note: X' ti interessa sapere se sono assicurato sulla salute e non se sono assicurato sulla vita? Prevenire l' opportunismo? X' nn può essere qs la risposta Considera: un povero USA riceve + servizi sanitari di un povero canadese (sistema universalistico) Chi difende l' universalismo ama i processi + che i risultati Edit
Note: 3@@@@@@@@@@@@@ Edit
How Much Should Individual Preferences Matter?Read more at location 807
Note: TITOLO PREFERENZE Edit
Health Insurance Versus HealthcareRead more at location 907
Note: TITOLO Edit
Do you care whether I have life insurance?Read more at location 909
Note: LA DOMANDA Edit
Most of us basically don't care whether people insure to protect their own assets (at least we don't care enough to try to make them insure). But we do care about decisions that could create external costs for the rest of us.Read more at location 914
Note: RISPOSTA Edit
Implicitly, we have a social contract that socializes the downside of certain risks. If we leave the upside to individual choice, we have privatized the gains and socialized the losses. When people don't bear the social cost of their risk-taking, they will take more risksRead more at location 922
Note: PRIVATIZZATI GLIBUTILI SOCIALIZZATI I COSTI Edit
Another way to think about the problem is in terms of the opportunity to become a “free rider” on other peoples' generosity.Read more at location 924
Note: FREE RIDING Edit
How does all of this apply to health? Considering the extensive interest in insuring the uninsured, you would expect an exhaustive literature. But aside from Robin Hanson's thesis that healthcare is different,14 there is virtually nowhere you can go to find a rational, well-thought-out, consistent analysis of why you should care whether or not I have health insurance.Read more at location 928
Note: PERCHÈ BISOGNA ASSICURARSI? NESSUNO RISPONDE (TRANNE HANSON) Edit
Of course, the extra taxes the uninsured pay tend to go to Washington, while uncompensated care tends to be delivered locally.Read more at location 934
Note: CENTRO E PRRIFERIA Edit
People who have, say, $1 million or more in assets—and that's about 1 in every 30 people—can afford to pay their own medical bills without insurance.Read more at location 936
Note: 1/30 PAGHEREBBEXANCHE SENZA ASS. Edit
People who cannot afford health insurance anyway are not willful free riders. They are not making choices that impose new costs on others.Read more at location 938
Note: NN CI SONO PROBLEMI DI OPPORTUNISMO Edit
What is the best way to get healthcare to people with low incomes and few assets? Not Medicaid or state-run Children's Health Insurance PlansRead more at location 940
Note: PER DARE AI POVERI Edit
Why are so many people in health policy obsessed with health insurance, while remaining almost indifferent about the actual delivery of healthcare?Read more at location 947
Note: PREOCCUPATI DRLLA COPRRTURA MA NN DELLE CURE RICEVUTE Edit
Process Versus ResultsRead more at location 948
Note: TITOLO. PROCESSI VS RISULTATI Edit
uninsured Americans get as much as or more preventive care than insured CanadiansRead more at location 953
Note: NON ASSICURATO MA PIÙ CURATO Edit
low-income whites in the United States are in better health than low-income whites in Canada,Read more at location 954
Note: POVERI USA E CANADESI Edit
Have I ever convinced anyone to change his mind with such arguments? What I discovered after many frustrating conversations was that people who like the way healthcare is organized in Canada do not like it because of any particular result it achieves. They like it because they like the process.Read more at location 958
Note: LA COSA NN SEMBRA INTERESSARE Edit
Institutionalized AltruismRead more at location 963
Note: TITOLO Edit
Romanticizing Health ReformRead more at location 971
Note: TITOLO Edit

2 How Healthcare Is Different -------- Priceless: Curing the Healthcare Crisis (Independent Studies in Political Economy) by John C. Goodman

2   How Healthcare Is DifferentRead more at location 345
Note: Relazione lasca tra costi sanitari e salute. Relazione forte tra altri fattori (status, ambiente, clima...) e salute Edit
Note: 2@@@@@@@@@@@@@ Edit
COMPLEX SYSTEMS, by definition, are systems that are too complex for any single individualRead more at location 347
Note: NN BASTA UN INTELLIGENZA Edit
if we don't know anything about nuclear power plants, most of us wouldn't walk into one and start pushing buttons.Read more at location 350
Note: CENTRALE NUCLEARE Edit
The late Nobel laureate economist, Friedrich Hayek, called the hubris of people who want to tinker with systems they do not understand the “fatal conceit.”Read more at location 353
Note: ABUSO FATALE Edit
suppose you are choosing to live in one of two cities, and City A spends twice as much on medical care per citizen as City B. City A has more doctors, more medical equipment, more hospital beds; and doctors in that city do more things. Would your life expectancy be longer if you choose to live in City A rather than City B? Probably not.Read more at location 695
Note: SALUTE E SPESA Edit
large variations in healthcare spending apparently have little, if any impact on overall population mortality. George Mason University economist Robin Hanson summarizes the literature this way:31 [H]ealth policy experts know that we see at best only weak aggregate relations between health and medicine, in contrast to apparently strong aggregate relations between health and many other factors, such as exercise, diet, sleep, smoking, pollution, climate, and social status…. For example, [one study] found large and significant lifespan effects: a three year loss for smoking, a six year gain for rural living, a ten year loss for being underweight, and about fifteen year losses each for low income and low physical activityRead more at location 698
Note: HANSON: COSA CONTA Edit
Who Spends Most of the Healthcare Dollars?Read more at location 707
Note: TITOLO Edit