News Networks
Topics
Stories
People

  • My Networks
  • Popular
  • Recent
  • ABC...XYZ
  • Create New
  • Search
  • Popular
  • Recent
  • Rising Fast
  • ABC...XYZ
  • Popular Today
  • Popular Week
  • Popular Month
  • Rising Fast
  • Hot Discussions
  • My Newsmakers
  • My Followers
  • Recently Active
  • Popular
  • Find
  • Invite Friends
Connect
Sign in using facebook |
Log in |
Sign Up


Hi there. I'm Jason, one of the founders of socialmedian.
socialmedian delivers the news, filtered by your network.
We'd love to have you join in.
You can use facebook connect to sign in.
Connect
OR
Log in 
|
Sign up


Create your socialmedian account
Email
Required

Password
Required

The password must be atleast 6 characters
Username
Required

http://www.socialmedian.com/username
This is same as my twitter ID
Security check

I agree to the terms and conditions and the privacy policy.
Loading...


Already a user? Please Log In
Invalid Login!
Email

Password

Remember me:
Loading...


Forgot Password?

Email:

By
Add News Flash
User-submitted headlines for this story

Loading

0
Clips
Dr. Brent James Could Be Health Care's Saving Grace
Source: Huffington Post
Nov 08, 2009


Dislike
 
0%
 
0%

Like

Summary

The health care debate of 2009 has had so many moving parts that it has sometimes seemed impossible to follow. The crisis behind the debate, though, is about one thing above all: the scattershot nature of American medicine. The fee-for-service payment system -- combined with our own instincts as patients -- encourages ever more testing and treatments. We're not sure which ones make a difference, but we keep on getting them, and costs keep rising.



Any bill that Congress passes this year is unlikely to fix these problems. The lobbying groups for drug companies, device makers, insurers, doctors and hospitals have succeeded, so far, in keeping big, systemic changes out of the bills. And yet the modern history of medicine -- the story that James tells -- nonetheless offers reason for optimism. Medicine has changed before, after all. When it did, government policy played a role. But much of the impetus came from inside the profession. Doctors helped change other doctors.



More on Health







Comments (0)
Add Your Comment
Please enter your Email Id to get a new password
Forgot your password?
Email:

Add something

Snip
News
Site

Instantly Clip News From Any Website
Clip it! on s|m
Or, Enter News Directly Here
Headline:

URL:
(Optional)

Description:
(Optional)

Adding a News...


Add Snip
Adding a Snip...


Now you can import your favorite sites to your socialmedian page
Loading...

Loading...


Is this you?
Stats

Mood
0% Like

0% Dislike

Share this story

Network
Email
Tweet
Share with the News Network
Email ID's
(multiple Email ID's separated by commas)
Message
Also post this message as a public comment
Don't worry. We won't share the name or email address of the person that you sent the story to.
Loading...

Message
119

bit.ly (short) url will be added to the message.
Link to discuss this story on socialmedian

Link to the original story

Twitter ID

Password

Save my twitter password
Tweet will be sent using   (change)
Topics

Health
American
change
Congress
Crisis
government
Health Care
medicine
Show more
Show less
Add Topics

Comma Separated.
Belongs to News Networks

Tech News Matters (Users: 54)
Stories in 24 hours: 864
Government Jobs (Users: 6)
Stories in 24 hours: 110
Your Health and wellness, physical and financial. (Users: 13)
Stories in 24 hours: 127
Health (Users: 117)
Stories in 24 hours: 65
Terry Allison (Users: 1)
Stories in 24 hours: 193
Sustainability Classroom (Users: 8)
Stories in 24 hours: 471
Social Media Philosophy (Users: 130)
Stories in 24 hours: 1143
LGBT NEWS NETWORK (Users: 1)
Stories in 24 hours: 657
Iran and U.S. Politics (Users: 2)
Stories in 24 hours: 180
Health Care News (Users: 35)
Stories in 24 hours: 33
all news (Users: 5)
Stories in 24 hours: 1572
The Military/Veteran Network (Users: 1)
Stories in 24 hours: 158
International Relations - Aj's log (Users: 1)
Stories in 24 hours: 468
India (Users: 20)
Stories in 24 hours: 2111
Dan Wikler, Bioethics (Users: 2)
Stories in 24 hours: 27
U.S. (Users: 2)
Stories in 24 hours: 1060
Election News (Users: 0)
Stories in 24 hours: 360
augmented reality and our futures' (Users: 3)
Stories in 24 hours: 1525
American Foreign Relations Network (Users: 6)
Stories in 24 hours: 590
Polical News (Users: 2)
Stories in 24 hours: 506
MyTrainer JAM - News Network (Users: 5)
Stories in 24 hours: 47
Internet-Marketing (Users: 11)
Stories in 24 hours: 1344
Argyles Economic News (Users: 3)
Stories in 24 hours: 142
The Obama Economic Transition (Users: 5)
Stories in 24 hours: 272
Online Women Magazines (Users: 2)
Stories in 24 hours: 153
James32015 Political News Network (Users: 1)
Stories in 24 hours: 764
Show more
Show less
Register using your Twitter ID and we'll help you easily connect
your accounts and find people you already know.

We constantly make updates and enhancements based on user feedback. Follow socialmedian on Twitter
Help us out and report a bug or suggest a new feature! Check out our blog for regular company updates, notables, and to see what we're currently working on.
Report a Bug
Suggest a Feature


 Sending...
close
socialmedian Inc. 2008 - 2009
About socialmedian    |        |    Terms of Service    |    Privacy Policy