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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 5 Costs of Health Care, Insurance and Drugs Experts.
Timothy McBride

Associate Dean for Public Health

McBride

Tim McBride has been active in testifying before Congress and consulting with important policy constituencies on Medicare, insurance and rural health policy issues. He is a member of the Rural Policy Research Institute Health Panel that provides expert advice on rural health issues to the U.S. Congress ...


Expertise: Health insurance, universal health care, public health, Medicare policy, health economics, gerontology and Social Security, state health policy, …

Direct contact: 314-935-4356 / tmcbride@wustl.edu


William Peck

Alan A. and Edith L. Wolff Distinguished Professor of Medicine

William Peck
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


William A. Peck

Alan A. and Edith L. Wolff Distinguished Professor of Medicine

William A. Peck

Both Obama/Biden and McCain/Palin argue that the country needs to get more value for its healthcare dollars, but they differ on what changes would be most effective. Peck, an internist who has treated many patients, is a nationally recognized leader in health care. He served for 14 years as dean of ...


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

Media assistance: (314) 286-0109 / arbanasc@wustl.edu


Edward Lawlor

Dean and the William E. Gordon Professor

Lawlor
Lawlor
Download

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@wustl.edu


Jackson Nickerson

Frahm Family Professor of Organization and Strategy

Jackson Nickerson
Jackson Nickerson
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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 5 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 45.  - Show More
Holiday cheer or holiday hunger?

Nearly half of all U.S. children will use food stamps, says poverty expert

Nov. 2, 2009 -- Holidays and tables full of delicious food usually go hand in hand, but for nearly half of the children in the United States, this is not guaranteed. "49 percent of all U.S. children will be in a household that uses food stamps at some point during their childhood," says Mark R. Rank, Ph.D., poverty expert at the George Warren Brown School of Social Work at Washington University in St. Louis. "Food stamp use is a clear sign of poverty and food insecurity, two of the most detrimental economic conditions affecting a child's health." Rank's study, "Estimating the Risk of Food Stamp Use and Impoverishment During Childhood," is published in the current issue of the Archives of Pediatrics & Adolescent Medicine. Video available.


Major milestone in the health care debate

Expert discusses the next steps for health care reform in the U.S.

Oct. 16, 2009 -- With health care legislation now up for debate in both the House and the Senate, comprehensive health care reform is closer than ever, says Timothy McBride, Ph.D., health economist and associate dean of public health at the George Warren Brown School of Social Work at Washington University in St. Louis. McBride says that there is still much work to be done with health care reform and contentious issues remain. Among those are the public option, how the legislation will be financed, the generosity of the coverage, Medicare Advantage reforms and whether there will be mandates for employers to offer coverage. (Video available)


Census Bureau to release health insurance numbers Sept. 10

Discrediting official uninsured estimates only minimizes the real health care problem, says health economist

Sept. 3, 2009 --
McBride
The health reform debate to date has been characterized by a lot of confusion and misinformation. "The conclusion that most of the uninsured either are voluntarily uninsured or do not need assistance is erroneous," says Timothy McBride, Ph.D., leading health economist and associate dean of public health at the George Warren Brown School of Social Work at Washington University in St. Louis. The Census Bureau will announce the official health insurance estimates on Thursday, Sept. 10. According to McBride, because of the economic downturn, the number of uninsured may top 50 million.



Showing Costs of Health Care, Insurance and Drugs Stories 1 through 3 of 45.  - Show More

Related News Clips:

Showing Costs of Health Care, Insurance and Drugs Clips 1 through 5 of 36.  - Show More
Show More Costs of Health Care, Insurance and Drugs Clips
U.S. Census Bureau data on the medically uninsured simply can't be denied
Los Angeles Times

Sept. 17, 2009 -- Michael Hiltzik says the medically uninsured iin America have become a political football. Opponents and supporters of healthcare reform toss assertions about them back and forth.
The report, which says 46.3 million people lacked coverage as of the end of 2008, makes the case for reform stronger than ever by punching holes in arguments that minimize the plight of the uninsured.
Includes comments by WUSTL social work and public health professor Timothy McBride.


Save the Whales! Abolish Patents!
Huffingtonpost.com

Sept. 16, 2009 -- WUSTL economics professor David Levine says abolishing 'intellectual property' won't solve all social ills, but it would be a big step in the right direction for solving a range of problems from the high cost of health care, to innovating our way out of the current recession. In a series of posts with his co-author, WUSTL economics professor Michele Boldrin, they will be posting here about green technology, entertainment, free speech, multinationals, and innovation over the next weeks.


Elusive price tag for universal health coverage
MSNBC.com

Sept. 10, 2009 -- How much is it going to cost to provide health care for all Americans? Until the details are complete, the only honest answer is: no one knows, reports John Schoen. "We know that the underinsured tend to be healthier," said Timothy McBride, associate dean for WUSTL's public health. "So if they were to get insured they would not be as expensive as the rest of us."


Medical Imaging Under The Gun In Health-Reform Push
The Wall Street Journal and 5 others

Aug. 14, 2009 -- Health-reform moves proposed by the White House and pursued in Congress have largely steered clear of direct hits to the medical-technology sector, with one big exception: medical imaging.
Such proposals follow years of rapid growth for medical scanning that has provoked questions about overuse.
William Peck, who directs WUSTL's Center for Health Policy, suggests the House legislation needs to get at the causes of overuse, such as doctors hedging against the threat of malpractice suits.


Should states' rights trump the fed?
CNN American Morning

July 31, 2009 -- Should states' rights trump the fed? It seems to be a trend across the country. At least 20 states have introduced resolutions reasserting states' rights because they think that federal government is way too involved in what states do with things like taxes and health care and education. WUSTL law professor David Law comments.



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westerhousej@wustl.edu

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Revised:

Wednesday, July 6, 2005


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