Health care reform: More chatter or change ahead?
If interest in the movie "Sicko" is any indication, insurance woes are moving to the forefront of public concerns. Will we soon see real reform that gives the 45-million Americans with no insurance coverage a safety net?
Health care coverage for all: Hits, misses and possible fixes
As more and more states begin targeting insurance reform, the costs and problems they face become increasing evident. Still, the current system of health-insurance coverage in the U.S.
Disease outbreak and bioterrorism: The ultimate supply chain test
In the event of a disease outbreak or bioterrorist attack, public health officials must make decisions about how to allocate finite medical resources — decisions that impact the spread of the disease and the number of lives lost.
Biologic drugs a good buy in U.S.
The soaring cost of prescription drugs is a major concern in the United States, but drugs in one important category — biopharmaceuticals, or drugs produced through biotechnology — actually do not cost more in the United States. Michael F.
Video: Complexity, divisiveness cloud health care reform prognosis
The healthcare system in the United States has been slowly collapsing over the past 30 years, according to Bradford Kirkman-Liff, professor of health policy and biotechnology at the W. P. Carey School of Business.
Video: U.S. health care costs impacted by technology innovations, drug research investments
Much of the increase in the price of healthcare in the United States can be traced back to technology advances that improve patient outcomes, but are expensive to develop and implement.
Two heads are better than one: Multi-physician practices improve heart patients' outcomes
Although single-physician practices still are dominant in the United States, multi-physician practices tend to provide better care for people who suffer heart attacks.
Keep it to yourself? The costly stigma of mental illness
Sixteen years after the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) passed, workers with mental illness still face a disheartening choice: keep their health problems a secret at work, or risk being shunned, passed over, paid up to one-third less, or even fired, according to a new study conducted by the
Boomers to challenge limitations of health care system
The airline industry provides a gloomy metaphor for health care, according to Brandeis University economist Stuart Altman, who spoke at a W. P. Carey School of Business symposium recently.
Biodesign Institute studies customized prescription technology
Only a handful of the nation's medical schools now teach molecular science, but soon doctors without this education will be on the road to obsolescence. Scientists are looking deep into the genetic code to find an answer in the molecules to the riddles of disease diagnoses and treatment.