Candidates Decry High Drug Prices, But They Have Few Options For Voters
Drug prices rise for a variety of reasons but opportunities for the government to control them is limited.
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Drug prices rise for a variety of reasons but opportunities for the government to control them is limited.
Cost pressures may induce patients to forego needed care, some worry.
A study by the National Academies finds more support is needed for nearly 18 million people giving care to family members 65 and older.
Based on an analysis of insurance company payments, emergency room visits and lab tests were responsible for much of the overall spending.
Researchers at the University of California, San Francisco estimate that hospitals could lose nearly $1,000 per surgery by throwing away opened but unused supplies, such as gloves and sponges.
Consumers Union says Anthem Inc. and Blue Shield of California may be exploiting furor over prescription drug prices. State regulators are looking into the issue.
A closer look shows that industry lobbying was just one factor in EpiPen鈥檚 sales explosion.
A study in Health Affairs concludes that orphan drugs for rare diseases are not having a widespread or deep impact on health care spending.
Four years after a huge push to speed generics to market, the FDA has more than 4,000 generics waiting for approval.
The public spending on health care outpaces the nation.
Research shows exercise-based cardiac rehab programs help heart patients heal faster and live longer. But fewer than a third take part. Time and cost are the main barriers, doctors and patients say.
A guide to help Medicare patients receiving observation care.
In a joint project, the Cleveland Clinic and Case Western Reserve University are banking on a new building to kick start efforts to bring health professionals together by introducing collaboration into medical training.
The report describes steps that states could take to address a number of drug-coverage issues in the commercial insurance market.
The number of hospitalizations for stroke is rising quickly among young people, even as it drops across the U.S. population as a whole.
Researchers at Harvard University examined thousands of studies to determine why drug prices have climbed and what might be done about it.
A year after settling billing disputes with 2,022 hospitals for 68 cents on the dollar, the government has revealed who got paid and how much.
These findings in JAMA Internal Medicine also note the importance of coordinating care and, some experts say, could provide a model for other diseases.聽
MedStar Health is among the hospital systems nationwide that are setting up support systems to help doctors talk openly to patients and their families when treatments go awry.
The legislation would have required drug companies to notify the state and insurers about expensive new treatments or price hikes.
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