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Dana P. Goldman
Researcher at University of Southern California
Publications - 381
Citations - 16877
Dana P. Goldman is an academic researcher from University of Southern California. The author has contributed to research in topics: Health care & Population. The author has an hindex of 62, co-authored 377 publications receiving 15247 citations. Previous affiliations of Dana P. Goldman include George Washington University & Dana Corporation.
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How much savings can we wring from Medicare
TL;DR: As the newly formed congressional “super committee” seeks an additional $1.5 trillion in debt savings over the next 10 years, a logical target of reform is the Medicare program, which accounts for about 15% of federal spending and more of its projected growth.
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The Relationship between Commercial Health Care Prices and Medicare Spending and Utilization.
John A. Romley,B A Sarah Axeen,Darius N. Lakdawalla,Michael E. Chernew,Jay Bhattacharya,Dana P. Goldman +5 more
TL;DR: Commercial health care prices are negatively associated with Medicare spending across regions, and providers may respond to low commercial prices by shifting service volume into Medicare.
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Robot-Assisted Surgery For Kidney Cancer Increased Access To A Procedure That Can Reduce Mortality And Renal Failure
TL;DR: The value of the benefits of robot-assisted minimally invasive surgery to patients, in terms of quality-adjusted life-years gained, outweighed the health care and surgical costs to patients and payers by a ratio of five to one.
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The changing face of pharmacy benefit design.
TL;DR: The consensus of fifteen pharmacy benefit design experts whom they interviewed is that multi-tier pharmacy benefit packages that use differential copayments to steer beneficiaries toward low-cost drugs will become more prevalent and that the techniques these plans use to promote low- cost drugs will intensify.
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Criminal Prosecution and Human Immunodeficiency Virus–Related Risky Behavior
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examined the consequences of prosecuting people who are human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) positive and expose others to the infection and showed that the effect of such prosecutions on the spread of HIV is a priori ambiguous.