Welcome to this week’s Health Wonk Review!
By way of introduction, for those who are unclear on the medical humanities, some
As I see it, the key role for a medical humanist – if they wish to be consistent with an ethos of medieval and Renaissance humanists – is to focus on the translation of theory into practice. Humanists eschewed the logic and abstractions that Scholastics privileged, reasoning that they did little to move those outside the cloisters and universities to live virtuously.
This ideal is perhaps most easily exemplified by Erasmus, who, in the humanist tradition, prioritized the study of rhetoric because, as Petrarch put it in citing
A contemporary of Martin Luther’s and a devoted Catholic,
What could be more virtuous than using scholarship and language in the hopes of preventing violence and horror?
Not even his best efforts could prevent the coming storm, but his ideal remains one worth emulating, in my view. Such is the need to translate scholarship into practice, and this is a quintessentially humanist precept.
As such, health policy remains a particular province of interest for me, and one in which I submit the medical humanist may have something to offer. With this said, let us see what rhetoric our interlocutors have prepared for us, and what voices they speak in.
Henry Stern over at InsureBlog challenges some of the claims made in a Reuters article regarding the uninsured, accusing the Commonwealth Fund of political partisanship.
(For the record, I do not necessarily agree with some of Stern’s characterizations. In any case, if it is true that young persons constitute a disproportionate percentage of the uninsured, and if they are desirable subscribers for insurers, this seems a justification for mandates, doesn’t it? I wonder what Stern thinks about mandates. Most contacts I have in the insurance industry are generally opposed to new state insurance mandates).
Amanda Herrington gives due propers to the
Over at Health Access Weblog, Anthony Wright offers a good
N=1, who does us at MH Weblog the pleasure of hanging around and bringing needed commentary, is the first of several Wonks to
On the one hand, this makes sense, because it seems perverse to offer monetary incentives for committing errors. On the other hand, there is the very reasonable fear that hospitals and providers will simply shift the cost of correcting errors onto the patient or the third-party payor. This seems to fit the definition of a true philosophical dilemma – a word we are convinced is thrown around far too much – in which either course will result in something of value being lost.
As N=1 asks, “who will pay for the resources needed to address the errors?
Most likely, it will be the unfortunate patients who suffer the consequences of these errors with hospital-acquired infections, wrong-site surgeries, blood transfusion reactions, fractures from falls, and burns and other types of injuries from faulty hospital equipment and inadequate staffing.”
At his very fine Managed Care Matters blog, Joe Paduda brings early word of some welcome news: health care costs have dipped below double digits. But he advises caution, as all is not what it seems . . .
Brian Klepper, who has been guesting for Matthew Holt at Health Care Blog, has a series of interesting and controversial posts on the role of brokers in health services.
Conferencing and health informatics are on the
A driving force behind the Health Wonk Review writ large, Julie Ferguson from Workers Comp Insider
There is no love lost, apparently,
Jason Shafrin at Healthcare Economist taps in to some of the discussion over P4P by
At the Health Care Renewal blog, a personal favorite and daily read of mine, the inimitable Roy Poses
If you are reading this Review and you are generally not reading Health Affairs Blog, for shame.
Here is a series of posts on the staredown between Congress and the President on SCHIP, featuring the views of
FYI, Frank Pasquale is always worth reading as well
Though readers of this blog note the unhidden and unabashedly liberal sentiments of its primary author, I emulate Erasmus on his requirements for a sermo, which tend to require engagement of interlocutors whose views differ from your own. I learn much by engaging voices who maintain views very different from mine, like those from the Cato Institute, even if I nevertheless disagree with much of the rhetoric.
(again, to emphasize, MH Weblog is committed to joining the general scholarly reclamation of rhetoric, so this is not pejorative)
Michael Cannon
He argues that Cohn dramatically understated the efficacy of the Bush administration’s proposal for a standard health insurance deduction, given CBO’s projection that it would reduce the number of uninsured by 7%.
This seems a reasonable criticism, though there may well be other reasons to criticize the deduction, as Ezra Klein
Cato also features posts over the past week on the
Good lord! Rita Schwab over at MSSPNexus asks with some
I agree that this is a tremendously important potential development in accreditation and compliance. The Joint Commission is actually a private organization, though many mistakenly deem it to be a public authority because of its deeming power. Under
Wow, this would really change the accreditation scene if it was enacted. Don’t underestimate the significance of the potential wealth transfer here.
At The Sentinel Effect, Richard Eskow
Fellow Cardinal David Williams explains
Last, but never least with such a tastefully designed blog, David Harlow at HealthBlawg discusses
Thanks for allowing us to host the Health Wonk Review. Information on upcoming Reviews is always available at the
Great job, Daniel! That's a LOT of entries to go through and organize.
Thank you for hosting, and for including our entry (at the top, no less!).
And you're correct, I have some major issues with mandates (which increase the costs for all while benefitting a few).
Posted by: hgstern | August 23, 2007 at 10:47 AM
Great posting, Daniel - thanks for doing such a super job hosting. And thanks for your kind words, too ;-)
Posted by: Julie Ferguson | August 23, 2007 at 12:29 PM
from HealthBlawg
The latest Health Wonk Review is up at Daniel Goldberg's erudite Medical Humanities Blog, where the discussion ranges from Martin Luther and Erasmus to SCHIP. Added bonus: Daniel's highly evolved design sense
Posted by: aishwarya | April 14, 2008 at 12:55 AM