In popular culture the notion of an undesirable employment situation having a negative impact on one’s health is common. We have all heard friends and colleagues say, “that job is going to kill me” or “my boss is driving me crazy.” People the world over spend so much time at work that work is often highly associated with self-identity. Research is increasingly finding our popular notions are indeed true. A bad job can kill you, make you feel depressed and sometimes physically ill.
Category: Health Economics & Costs
Friday Links
- Sending money to North Korea is very difficult. Sending DNA sequences for hazardous viruses is easy.
- Rationing by waiting.
- Ivy League admissions: Being in a family in the top 1 percent increases your chance of admission by 34 percent. Being in the top 0.1 percent doubles it.
- Why aren’t there more health care centers of excellence?
- Workers with intellectual disabilities can legally be paid less than the federal minimum wage – in some cases much less.
Nature: Many Clinical Trials Fake Data
Did that drug you just took flunk its clinical trial? How about the course of treatment your doctor just recommended? Of course, you don’t know that because you have faith in the regulatory bodies, academic journals and researchers to be both competent and honest. And, of course, you know nothing of the perverse incentives to…
Wednesday Links
- Lawsuit: Cigna algorithm rejects claims without a doctor even opening a patient’s records.
- Report: CMS’ Medicaid inflation penalty will make generic drug shortages worse.
- Virginia Medicaid paid at least $21.8 million on behalf of 12,054 enrollees after they were already dead.
- An expensive trip: a medically approved, psychedelic renaissance is underway.
- Did Gilead hold a promising HIV drug off the market in order to increase profits? (NYT) Economic theory would say no.
- Australia has “virtually eliminated” HIV transmission in Sydney and elsewhere.