From Evan Harris <[email protected]>
Subject COVID is refuting the case for Medicare for All
Date May 17, 2021 5:44 PM
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PRI's Focus on Health Care

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COVID is refuting the case for Medicare for All

HeraldNet | Sally C. Pipes
May 16, 2021

Low-income people have indeed suffered disproportionately amid the pandemic. It would seem intuitive that a guarantee of government health coverage would help them. But look at the outcomes posted by patients on Medicaid, the government health insurance program for the poor. Nationwide, Medicaid covers more than 70 million people.
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The Biosimilar Opportunity: Quarterly Update No.3 – May 2021

PRI Center for Medical Economics and Innovation | Wayne Winegarden
May 17, 2021

In October 2019, the Center for Medical Economics and Innovation at the Pacific Research Institute released its second study documenting the savings potential enabled by biosimilars. Biosimilars are medicines manufactured in, or derived from, biological sources that are developed to be similar to FDA-approved reference products. Biosimilars are approved to compete in nine biologic drug classes in the U.S., and are available in seven of these drug classes currently.

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Insuring more Americans’ health shouldn’t require big government spending

Orlando Sentinel | Sally C. Pipes
May 17, 2021

These more generous subsidies are an extraordinarily expensive solution to a largely non-existent problem. About 28.9 million U.S. residents don’t have health insurance, according to new data from the Kaiser Family Foundation. That sounds like a lot.

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Private practices just became an endangered species

The Washington Examiner | Sally C. Pipes
May 14, 2021

But the bigger these provider groups get, the more leverage they have with insurance companies to insist on higher payment rates. Prices for physician services increase by nearly 15% after a practice is acquired by a hospital, according to a 2018 study in the Journal of Health Economics.
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Sally Pipes Quoted About Price Transparency in Managed Healthcare Executive Magazine, "How the New Price Transparency Rules are Affecting Stakeholders"

Managed Healthcare Executive | Deborah Abrams Kaplan
May 13, 2021

Although the hospital price transparency final rule took effect in January, it will take time for it to get its sea legs, whether that means 100% hospital compliance, inspiring patients to use it for their own healthcare decisions or for hospitals to reevaluate their pricing based on their competition. Eventually, though, “I think it will open up the market and, hopefully, reduce the cost of healthcare,” says Sally Pipes, president of the Pacific Research Institute.
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