The 'Pro-Worker' GOP Is Anti-Worker
The New Right talks a big populist game, but their policies hurt the people they're supposed to help.
The New Right talks a big populist game, but their policies hurt the people they're supposed to help.
Sen. Rand Paul writes that repealing the Robinson-Patman Act would help bust inflation.
A Biden administration ploy could give the federal government control over drug prices.
The Reason Sindex tracks the price of vice: smoking, drinking, snacking, traveling, and more.
Injury claims for COVID vaccines are subject to a different process than other vaccines.
When the government is systematically interfering with medical decisions, a non-opioid alternative may not actually increase treatment options.
Three major pharmacy chains admitted to encouraging staff to hand prescription records over to law enforcement without a warrant, and without a legal review.
Medicare's new price-setting process for drug purchases is better than its current one if the result is lower government spending.
Americans will be sicker and deader in the long run than they otherwise would have been.
Mixing other drugs with xylazine is driven by the economics of prohibition.
If so, the network failed to enforce the supposed rule before and after cancelling its top-rated host.
Prosecutors could end up with a trove of patient-level data regarding highly personal drugs like Viagra, abortion pills, and more.
Litigation over abortion drugs turns disagreements about individual rights into a bureaucratic tussle.
Thanks to onerous regulations, life-saving drugs are more expensive and harder to get.
"I know either way he will use it against me.... And after the fact, I know he will try to act like he has some right to the decision," said the woman in text messages to her friends named as defendants in the suit.
Each year, the DEA sets production limits for certain drugs, including some ingredients in common amphetamine pills like Adderall.
The advent of effective new weight loss drugs offers hope for millions of overweight people.
Since the Federal Trade Commission didn't sue in time, the deal went through. But will FTC Chair Lina Khan keep trying to attack Amazon for its bigness?
Over 88 percent of opioid overdose deaths now involve either heroin or fentanyl. Targeting prescriptions is not an efficient way to address mortality.
And increase total health care costs to boot.
It's best to avoid sparking up a doobie on a spaceship, but there are other ways to consume substances in the cosmos.
Despite experts recommending that birth control be sold over the counter, the U.S. still treats the pill like it's 1960.
Limiting the supply of a controlled substance does not remove demand. Users simply look elsewhere, including more unsavory sources.
Paralyzing caution reveals the risks of vague anti-abortion legislation.
If approved, the drug could increase access to effective birth control.
Time for a new Operation Warp Speed?
The new company uses a simple approach to provide lifesaving drugs to consumers at radically discounted prices.
Doctors Adriane Fugh-Berman and Jeffrey Singer debate the harms of prescription opioids
The new Hulu miniseries promotes pernicious misconceptions about opioids, addiction, and pain treatment.
Both rulings emphasized that opioids have legitimate medical uses and concluded that drug companies could not be held responsible for abuse of their products.
The plan would reduce supply while increasing demand, resulting in harmful shortages.
The role of the state is to protect rights and guard against fraud, not to prevent people from making risky choices.
Technological breakthroughs mean we'll never again have to suffer with disasters like the novel coronavirus—if politicians will get out of the way.
Psychiatrist Sally Satel on her eye-opening year at a clinic in Ironton, Ohio
Billionaires may well have enabled our greatest (only?) policy successes in 2020.
"Economists are accustomed to thinking about tradeoffs," says economist and Nobel laureate Alvin Roth. "It appears that at least in some parts of the ethics community, they are not."
The Trump administration's "economic nationalist" agenda is little more than a cronyist attempt at propping up domestic companies with taxpayer cash.
The Food and Drug Administration now says there is no evidence that any country attempted to cut off America's essential pharmaceuticals.
A member of the five-month-old company's board has been touting bogus stats about America's supposed dependency on Chinese-made drugs.
Stocks rise steeply on good news about mRNA vaccines.
None have yet emerged that can clearly stem the tide of the ongoing pandemic.
The science is unsettled, and a new warning label would probably just confuse people.
The Right to Try movement, which recently became federal law, allows doctors to prescribe experimental treatments that haven't been approved for sale by regulators.
When and wherever public health conflicted with personal freedom, Gottlieb advocated for the former.
Plus: Tumblr porn filters catch company's own examples of permitted content and how the GOP learned to love bailouts.
"Our vision for a new, more transparent drug-pricing system does not rely on voluntary action," says HHS Secretary Alex Azar.
Plus: Parkour robots, price transparency for drugs, and Hillary Clinton defending Bill over the Lewinsky affair