|
|
 |
 | Medical News Releases > News Topics > Medical Science > Health Care Policy >

Costs of Health Care, Insurance and Drugs

The cost of health care, including the price of insurance and drugs, is a major issue millions of Americans deal with each day.
| Faculty Experts: |
Showing 3 Costs of Health Care, Insurance and Drugs Experts.
|
 |
William Peck
 Alan A. and Edith L. Wolff Distinguished Professor of Medicine

 |
| William Peck |
Peck, former dean of the School of Medicine, directs the University's Center for Health Policy. Revolutionary scientific advances promise great improvements in the prevention and diagnosis of disease and the treatment of patients. But major obstacles must be overcome before this enormous potential ...

Expertise: Health care policy, health care costs, disparities in access to care, workforce issues

Media assistance: (314) 286-0120 / westerhousej@wustl.edu

 |
Edward Lawlor
 Dean and the William E. Gordon Professor

Edward Lawlor is a nationally-recognized expert in healthcare policy, particularly in the areas of medical indigence, health-care reform and administration, and policy for the aged and poor.
His groundbreaking work in Medicare policy is recognized for its originality and insightful analysis. Lawlor's ...

Expertise: health care policy, medical indigence, health care reform, health care administration, policy for the aged, policy for poor, Medicare

Direct contact: (314) 935-6693
/
elawlor@gwbmail.wustl.edu

 |
Jackson Nickerson
 Frahm Family Professor of Organization and Strategy

Nickerson's area of expertise includes corporate strategy and policy, economic policy, microeconomics, industrial organization, organizational economics, new institutional economics, intellectual capital management, technology licensing, organizational theory, human resource management, organizational ...

Expertise: business strategy & public policy, intellectual capital management, new institutional economics, organizational economics, organizational theory, technology licensing, corporate strategy and policy, …

Direct contact: (314) 935-6374
/
nickerson@olin.wustl.edu

 |
Showing 3 Costs of Health Care, Insurance and Drugs Experts.
|
 |
| News Stories & Tip Sheets: |
Showing Costs of Health Care, Insurance and Drugs Stories 1 through 3 of 31.
- Show More |
 |
Universal health care - expert available for comment
 Major health care proposals ignore the 'Big Leak,' says health insurance expert

Sept. 18,
2007 -- "Universal health care is getting the attention it deserves, but unfortunately, the proposals receiving the most attention ignore the 'Big Leak,'" the enormous non-benefit costs incurred by health care providers who must match their billions of billings with thousands of differing private health care plans," says Merton C. Bernstein, a founding member of the National Academy of Social Insurance and the Coles Professor of Law Emeritus at Washington University in St. Louis. "Putting everyone under the Medicare umbrella would eliminate that leak," he says. Bernstein is available to discuss current universal health care proposals as well as the Medicare-for-all option.

|
Aspirin, the mighty drug
 Versatility and low cost keep aspirin popular among consumers

July 23,
2007 -- With today's rapid rate of medical advancement, it's hard to imagine that an over-the-counter drug introduced in the 1800s could still be widely popular and effective. But due to its low cost and versatility, millions of Americans still keep a bottle of aspirin in their medicine cabinets.

|
Critical Condition
 WUSTL to host public forum on Medicaid financing, June 8

May 23,
2007 --
 |
| Tommy Thompson, former U.S. Secretary of Health and Human Services, will be among the speakers at a June 8 conference on Medicaid financing. |
Rising healthcare costs and diminishing health insurance coverage will be among critical issues debated by leading medical policy experts as Washington University hosts a daylong public forum on Medicaid financing June 8 in the School of Medicine's Eric P. Newman Education Center. Participants include top administrators from a half dozen major research hospitals and a range of academic, government and think-tank policy experts, including Tommy Thompson, former U.S. Secretary of Health and Human Services.

|
Showing Costs of Health Care, Insurance and Drugs Stories 1 through 3 of 31.
- Show More |
 |
Campus Health's Hidden Costs
U.S. News & World Report online

Feb. 1,
2008 -- Debra Harp, WUSTL's associate director of Student Health Services, comments on mandatory health insurance mandates by universities, including WUSTL.

|
Washington U. studies creation of public health school
St. Louis Business Journal
and 3 others

Dec. 28,
2007 -- WUSTL is exploring the possibility of increasing its involvement in the health of the region by establishing its own school of public health.
As part of a strategic planning process currently under way at the university, WUSTL medical school dean Larry Shapiro and social work dean Edward Lawlor are investigating how the university can expand its focus on public health, according to Rob Wild, assistant to the chancellor.

|
The Cataracts Are Gone -- and So Is the Need for Glasses
U.S. News & World Report

Dec. 17,
2007 -- For the millions of baby boomers who will eventually need cataract surgery, here's some cheering news: New types of implantable lenses promise to restore your youthful vision. Unlike the standard single-power lenses doctors have been implanting for 30 years, the newer multifocal intraocular lenses and accommodating lenses allow patients to see near, far, and in between--and even to shed their glasses.
WUSTL ophthalmology professor Jay Pepose talks about one of the options.

|
Don't ignore your body's warning signs
MSNBC.com

Aug. 1,
2007 -- Article looks at why people tend to dismiss symptoms that can indicate a serious illness.
Research has shown that your personality can affect how you react to medical symptoms too.
A 2005 WUSTL study found that men with low overall anxiety levels were more likely to ignore symptoms of rectal cancer and delay treatment. Those with at least moderate anxiety levels, on the other hand, tended to quickly recognize symptoms such as rectal bleeding as a sign of a serious illness.

|
What's Lacking in 'Sicko'
The New York Times
and 3 others

July 9,
2007 -- WHEN it comes to economic decisions, there are always trade-offs. Gain one thing and you lose something else. This is particularly true in health care, a market in which a scarce good is ridiculously expensive, but needed by everybody.
WUSTL economist Charles Courtemanche looks at the economic points in Michael Moore's movie 'Sicko.'

|
Affiliated with Barnes-Jewish Hospital and St. Louis Children's Hospital, members of BJC HealthCare.
Please contact us and let us know how we can assist you.
Technical problems with this Web site? Email questions or comments.
Please review the WUSTL News & Information copyright/privacy policy.
|  |
|
|  |  |
|