As the dismantling of public health programs & agencies continues, worth remembering:
1) SNAP reduces childhood obesity www.nber.org/system/files...
2) LIHEAP helps people become more energy-secure onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1... & reduces evictions www.sciencedirect.com/science/arti...
02.04.2025 14:52 —
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Much appreciated. Unfortunately, nothing since January has been a "heart" situation
02.04.2025 13:47 —
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Thanks so much Miranda
01.04.2025 13:09 —
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This morning, I was notified that I was being terminated from ASPE due to the ongoing reductions in force in HHS. It's sad to end this chapter, having worked on so many important projects.
I'll be looking for new roles; please give me a shout if anything comes your way!
01.04.2025 12:53 —
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Not even mildly! Mostly understanding why some PDE records can look odd
18.03.2025 14:00 —
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A big benefit of working with federal contractors responsible for data munging is that you learn a LOT about how data is generated. This is especially useful with some big claims datasets. Knowing the process of how a row is created is invaluable.
18.03.2025 11:36 —
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Veterans Health Administration Benefit Value Has Little Effect on Reliance
Relying on veteran survey responses and novel actuarial data, the authors examine the relationship between benefit value and reliance on the Veterans Health Administration.
🚨New Paper 🚨
In AJMC, Alli Dorneo, Steve Pizer, Christine Yee and I examine relationship btwn MA benefit value relative to VHA & reliance on VHA services.
Tl;dr higher MA value increases MA enrollment, but cond. on MA, no change in reliance
www.ajmc.com/view/veteran...
27.02.2025 13:05 —
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Thank you!
12.01.2025 14:13 —
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Health Affairs Scholar
Proud to officially be an associate editor at
Health Affairs Scholar as of this month!
If you have policy-relevant papers across a wide range of health policy areas (e.g., MA, drug pricing, Medicaid), consider submitting to HAS!
www.healthaffairs.org/health-affai...
12.01.2025 13:35 —
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Really awesome to see some of the work I've done at ASPE cited in the Economic Report of the President
www.whitehouse.gov/cea/written-...
aspe.hhs.gov/reports/expa...
10.01.2025 23:30 —
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At least in Medicare! Though I don't think anyone still has a good explanation for it.
24.12.2024 19:29 —
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Something often unappreciated: (without googling) by how much % did Traditional Medicare per capita spending grow from 2010 to 2019?
24.12.2024 18:30 —
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Hi #econsky
👩⚕️👨⚕️ I would like to organize a session on the labor market of health care workers at the 2025 @ashecon.bsky.social conference
I need one more paper (abstract) that fit this theme!
If this is you, respond here or email me so we can connect!
08.12.2024 10:40 —
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It's not communist enough, obviously
07.12.2024 14:57 —
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Timeline cleanse!
07.12.2024 14:54 —
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Second time in a few months that I've been confused for another bald white guy at work. Time for Minoxidil?
04.12.2024 15:20 —
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A thread about being wrong:
5 years ago, we wrote a paper about how how newly enfranchised 16-year-olds vote in Austria. But we were wrong.
This year, @elisabethgraf.bsky.social, @schnizzl.bsky.social, Sylvia Kritzinger and I are setting the record straight: authors.elsevier.com/c/1juT5xRaZk...
21.11.2024 18:00 —
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Question for the health policy folks here:
Next semester, I'm teaching for the first time an MPH course on The Politics of US Health Policy. Does anyone have:
A) A reasonably up-to-date syllabus for such a course that I could see, or
B) An article (or articles) they'd like me to assign?
Thanks!
02.12.2024 18:45 —
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It was an absolute gut punch. I still remember the only time I met him in person as a lowly RA. Had such a great conversation, and he seemed genuinely interested in talking and hearing what I thought.
27.11.2024 23:09 —
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Bill was a smart and talented researcher, but more importantly, just a good human being.
27.11.2024 22:11 —
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It'll generally affect PDPs more than MA-PDs because MA-PDs tend to have more generous benefits. My thinking is that'll make that generosity difference smaller. The study did assume that people get a standalone PDP if they don't get MA-PD.
26.11.2024 18:15 —
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I'd bet that with the 2k oop cap in Part D going into effect next year and the end of partial LIS, the MA OOP savings may start looking different.
26.11.2024 17:53 —
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Yea, OOP strictly defined is almost certainly lower with Medigap. Premiums is where you end up seeing a difference (also not sure if other analyses usually include Part D OOP or not)
26.11.2024 17:51 —
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There have been some estimates from industry showing that MA has lower total OOP+Premium spend on avg. Take with a grain of salt obviously, but I'd bet that's likely right. Though not a massive difference.
26.11.2024 17:42 —
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That's the key point. This is TM with no supplemental insurance vs MA. Though one point Vabson made on Twitter was that on average, the Medigap premium should basically equal the OOP savings from Medigap.
26.11.2024 17:40 —
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Paging health economists #EconSky 📉📈! If you have a paper on caregiving (elderly and disabled) and are intending to go to#ASHEcon2025 @ashecon.bsky.social, please ping me as I am looking for a third paper for my student's session.
25.11.2024 15:11 —
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