- Valentine fact of the day: one in four female physicians is married to another physician. It’s called “assortive mating,” and Charles Murray noted some time ago that it is one reason why we are “Coming Apart.” Call it “Cupid’s invisible hand.”
- New York state drops masking rules for hospitals and nursing homes. But facilities can impose their own rules.
- Infant mortality is twice as high among black mothers as among whites and this is true for rich women as well as the poor.
- Climate change subsidies: it helps if you’re rich.
- If the “abortion pill” is banned, there is an off-label use of another drug that will achieve the same result.
- Art Laffer has a new book.
Category: Consumer-Driven Health Care
Mental Health Apps are Spying on You and Selling Your Information
There is a conspiracy of sorts to learn everything possible about you and sell your information to those who may profit from it. That information includes information about your health concerns. The Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA) was supposed to make personal health information confidential. We’ve all likely experienced being told by a doctor’s office staff they can’t receive email because it could possibly violate HIPAA, since a third party may be able to intercept it. (I’m not sure why the fax machine is seemingly exempt.) Yet, despite these precautions there is a thriving business in personal health data.
States with the Most Restrictive Covid Measures Appear to Have Made Things Worse
- States with severe government interventions did not significantly improve health outcomes compared to states with more restrained approaches.
- This may be partly because government interventions appear to have increased excess mortality from non-COVID health conditions.
- Severe government interventions were strongly correlated with worse economic (increased unemployment and decreased GDP) and educational (fewer days of in-person schooling) outcomes.
- The economic and education damage was most severe for lower-income families and children.
Montana Considers Expanding Scope of Practice for Physician Assistants
A few days ago I wrote about that Montana is considering expanding pharmacists’ dispensing authority without a physician’s prescription. The following is what I wrote: