From Health Affairs Today <[email protected]>
Subject The HHS Proposed Rebate Rule And Congressional Scoring; A Medical Student On Addressing Mental Illness Among Medical Trainees; Book Reviews
Date September 13, 2019 6:19 PM
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**The Latest Research, Commentary, and News from Health Affairs**

**Friday, September 13, 2019**

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TODAY ON THE BLOG

CONSIDERING HEALTH SPENDING

The HHS Proposed Rebate Rule And The Problem Of Scoring Proposed
Regulations

By Dan Crippen

Congress should not be constrained in its oversight responsibilities by
the estimate of the fiscal impact of a regulation that has not, and may
never, become final. Read More >>

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IN THE JOURNAL

NARRATIVE MATTERS: HEALTH PROFESSIONS EDUCATION

Students Shouldn't Merely 'Survive' Medical School

By Eli M. Cahan

A medical student reflects on what can be done to address mental illness
among medical trainees.Read More >>

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Listen to the podcast.

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BOOK REVIEWS

Beating The Flu

By Jeanne Ringel

Jeanne Ringel reviews Influenza, by Jeremy Brown, director of the Office
of Emergency Care Research at the National Institutes of Health. Read
More >>

Revisiting Health Justice

By William M. Sage

William Sage reviews Essentials Of Health Justice: A Primer, by
Elizabeth Tobin-Tyler and Joel B. Teitelbaum, finding it, "as much a
reintroduction as an introduction to its subject, refreshing readers'
recognition that America's health reflects not only its health care
system but also its sociolegal heritage." Read More >>

Welcoming Medicine To The Machine

By Dhruv Khullar

Dhruv Khullar reviews Deep Medicine: How Artificial Intelligence Can
Make Healthcare Human Again, by Eric Topol, "an exhaustive tour-de-force
review of the past, present, and future of AI in medicine." Read More >>

A Crisis Behind The Acronyms

By Emily F. Peters

Emily Peters reviews Well: What We Need To Talk About When We Talk About
Health, by Sandro Galea, a physician, epidemiologist, and dean of the
Boston University School of Public Health. Read More >>

Read the September 2019 Table of Contents

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**HEALTH AFFAIRS EVENTS**

PAST EVENT: Health Spending: Moving From Theory to Action

For supplemental content and materials from Wednesday's briefing,
explore these options:

* Download forum slides

(click on Download Event)

* Watch the video
or
listen to the podcast

* Read journal articles and blog posts in our Considering Health
Spending series

Catch up on tweets from the briefing @Health_Affairs with
#healthspending.

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**A CLOSER LOOK**-Cancer

New research published in the Lancet found that deaths from cancer are
now more common than those from cardiovascular disease in some
high-income and middle-income countries. This Health Affairs Blog post

from April of this year says that, as cancer cases continue to rise,
"Thoughtless dissemination of new therapies creates an underclass of
cancer patients who may never benefit from emerging treatments."

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