Feds Arrest Telehealth Execs for Overprescribing Adderall
But will the government ever face repercussions for its role in the Adderall shortage?
But will the government ever face repercussions for its role in the Adderall shortage?
Why aren't politicians on both sides more worried than they seem to be?
Lawmakers can take small steps that are uncontroversial and bipartisan to jumpstart the fiscal stability process.
The ongoing rollback of Medicaid is a rare step to reverse the “ratcheting growth” of our social safety net.
The Copenhagen Consensus has long championed a cost-benefit approach for addressing the world's most critical environmental problems.
Those sounding the loudest alarms about possible shutdowns are largely silent when Congress ignores its own budgetary rules. All that seems to matter is that government is metaphorically funded.
The lack of oversight and the general absence of a long-term vision is creating inefficiency, waste, and red ink as far as the eye can see.
Since Congress designed and implemented the last budget process in 1974, only on four occasions have all of the appropriations bills for discretionary spending been passed on time.
At a minimum, the national debt should be smaller than the size of the economy. A committed president just might be able to deliver.
A new Congressional Budget Office report warns of "significant economic and financial consequences" caused by the federal government's reckless borrowing.
Letting third parties pay our bills pushes prices higher and limits our options.
Legislators will increasingly argue over how to spend a diminishing discretionary budget while overall spending simultaneously explodes.
In 1950, there were more than 16 workers for every beneficiary. In 2035, that ratio will be only 2.3 workers per retiree.
Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid are still the chief drivers of our future debt. But Republicans aren't touching them.
The Congressional Budget Office projects that future deficits will explode. But there's a way out.
Assorted observations on yesterday's opinions, what they mean, and what comes next.
By divided votes, the justices entered stayed t the OSHA Emergency Temporary Standard and stayed the lower court injunctions against the mandate that Medicare and Medicaid service providers require their employees to get vaccinated.
The Supreme Court has asked for responses to the federal government's stay request.
The Biden Administration is seeking to stay lower court injunctions against the mandate.
The district court's justification for a nationwide injunction was decidedly lacking.
Now that a federal appeals court has weighed in, the CMS mandate may reach One First Street.
New analysis from the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office shows massive deficit increase as a result of spending bill’s health care provisions.
When everything's a priority, nothing is.
For Biden, "build back better’" apparently means eyes on everything in the economy.
Democrats want to raise the debt ceiling, while Republicans occasionally remember they're against big government spending.
Plus: Steven Horwitz's economic theories, Hawaii cops sued over fatal shooting, and more...
Historian Amity Shlaes talks about the last time a president massively expanded the federal government to help people.
Amity Shlaes's new history of the late 1960s explains the failure of the last time the federal government tried to fix all that was wrong with America.
Restricting a cancer treatment to only hospitals will harm patients.
A new report predicts Medicare spending will rise faster than private health care spending.
"If Kavanaugh was going to deal a major blow to health care rights during his first session on the court, this would have been the case to do it."
The biggest shock from yesterday's midterms was that everything went more or less as expected.
Prescription drugs are getting more and more expensive thanks to the needlessly complex interplay of intellectual property, public funding, and FDA regulation.
Like millions of Americans but with more emojis, the convicted/commuted leaker and would-be senator has views that don't fit neatly into our two-party mold.
Neera Tanden from the Center for American Progress vs. Tarren Bragdon from the Foundation for Government Accountability at the Soho Forum.
The tax was passed in 2013, but did not receive a two-thirds majority from both chambers of the state legislature.
Republicans should start taking liberal health care efforts seriously.
The program desperately needs radical surgery
Liberal attachment to the worst insurance program in the civilized world is mind-boggling.
Ohio could freeze expansion enrollments next year, ignoring the governor's pleas.
Congressional Republicans promise to achieve greater frugality in Medicaid without inflicting more hardship. It's not gonna happen.
The state is spending $37 million a month on recipients potentially not eligible for the program.
They haven't found any that work yet, but Democrats continue running political experiments with expanding government's role in health care.
Under Trump's budget, Medicaid spending would reach the highest level in U.S. history.
The president wants to cut Medicaid but leave Medicare untouched, rewarding supporters at the expense of America's long-term finances.
Look beyond Medicaid to really cut dependence on Planned Parenthood while still ensuring that low-income women have access to medical care.
A live debate at the Soho Forum in New York City.