The first part is to go back and think about the puzzle of why we have Medicare and Medicaid in the crazy way we do. It defies logic, and as my grandmother would have said, what is this meshuga\u27as (craziness) ? You have Medicare Part A, which is a trust fund based upon payroll tax, and if you are over 65, then you are in. Part B is an insurance model, where the beneficiary pays some premium and it is therefore voluntary. Both are administered and financed exclusively by the federal government with uniform eligibility, requirements and benefits
Ohioans Without Health Insurance: How Big A Problem? Are There Solutions?, was the INAUGURAL Confere...
Whether or not one believes that the Medicare Prescription Drug, Improvement, and Modernization Act ...
In this lively and creative debate, Professors David Hyman and Jill Horwitz argue about the virtues ...
The first part is to go back and think about the puzzle of why we have Medicare and Medicaid in the ...
An exploration of the law of Medicare and Medicaid, fifty years in, will be viewed by some as asking...
It is a pleasure to be here this morning and to give you some opening comments about what is obvious...
Fragmentation has aptly described the United States\u27 historically decentralized, disjointed, and ...
In the fifty years since Medicare was enacted, Congress has not, with two exceptions in the 1970s, e...
Ted Ruger and Dan Gorenstein look at challenges to the Affordable Care Act, and what this means for ...
There is probably no constitutional duty on the government to provide medical care; for the Court re...
“Health care is a right, not a privilege”: on the official celebration of the 50th anniversary of Me...
This paper is a contribution to the symposium entitled Scalpel to Gavel: Exploring the Modern State ...
The author introduces keynote speaker Randall R. Bovbjerg at the Inaugural Conference of the Law and...
This year, the newly elected leader of the free world termed healthcare “an unbelievably complex sub...
Over its nearly sixty years, Medicare’s reach in terms of beneficiary groups and benefits has remain...
Ohioans Without Health Insurance: How Big A Problem? Are There Solutions?, was the INAUGURAL Confere...
Whether or not one believes that the Medicare Prescription Drug, Improvement, and Modernization Act ...
In this lively and creative debate, Professors David Hyman and Jill Horwitz argue about the virtues ...
The first part is to go back and think about the puzzle of why we have Medicare and Medicaid in the ...
An exploration of the law of Medicare and Medicaid, fifty years in, will be viewed by some as asking...
It is a pleasure to be here this morning and to give you some opening comments about what is obvious...
Fragmentation has aptly described the United States\u27 historically decentralized, disjointed, and ...
In the fifty years since Medicare was enacted, Congress has not, with two exceptions in the 1970s, e...
Ted Ruger and Dan Gorenstein look at challenges to the Affordable Care Act, and what this means for ...
There is probably no constitutional duty on the government to provide medical care; for the Court re...
“Health care is a right, not a privilege”: on the official celebration of the 50th anniversary of Me...
This paper is a contribution to the symposium entitled Scalpel to Gavel: Exploring the Modern State ...
The author introduces keynote speaker Randall R. Bovbjerg at the Inaugural Conference of the Law and...
This year, the newly elected leader of the free world termed healthcare “an unbelievably complex sub...
Over its nearly sixty years, Medicare’s reach in terms of beneficiary groups and benefits has remain...
Ohioans Without Health Insurance: How Big A Problem? Are There Solutions?, was the INAUGURAL Confere...
Whether or not one believes that the Medicare Prescription Drug, Improvement, and Modernization Act ...
In this lively and creative debate, Professors David Hyman and Jill Horwitz argue about the virtues ...