| Dr.
David Gratzer |
| Dr.
David Gratzer is a Manhattan Institute Center for Medical Progress
Senior Fellow, physician, and writer. Gratzer's research interests
include Medicare and Medicaid, drug importation, drug price controls
and FDA reform. |
Medical Reform
Prescription Drug Policy
Covering the Uninsured |
| Paul
Howard |
| Paul
Howard is a Senior Fellow and the Director of the Manhattan Institute's
Center for Medical Progress. Howard's research interests include FDA
reform, Medicare and Medicaid policy initiatives, drug importation,
and drug price controls. |
FDA Regulation
Medical Innovation
Consumer Driven Health Care |
| |
|
The Center for Medical
Progress is dedicated to articulating the importance of medical
progress and the connection between free-market institutions and making
medical progress both possible and widely available throughout the world.
We encourage the development of market-based policy alternatives to sustain
medical progress and promote medical innovation. The Center for Medical
Progress also publishes www.MedicalProgressToday.com,
a web magazine devoted to chronicling the connections among private sector
investment, biomedical innovation, market friendly public policies, and
medical progress.
The Center for Medical Progress produces a variety of publications and
hosts regular forums on issues of concern to medical progress and health
care policy. For more information, please contact CMP director Paul Howard
at communications@manhattan-institute.org.
ISSUE AREAS:
Medicare/Medicaid
Articles
| Events
Consumer
Driven Health Care
Articles
| Events
FDA
Reform
Articles
| Reports | Events
Drug
Importation/Price Controls
Articles
| Reports
Medicare/Medicaid
Medicare and Medicaid are the nation's two largest entitlement programs.
They are also facing multi-trillion dollar deficits in coming decades
as expenditures dwarf tax revenues. While some have advocated that the
U.S. adopt a Canadian-style "single-payer" health care system to reign
in costs, the Manhattan Institute recognizes that price controls and rationing
will only exacerbate the health care challenges facing our nation, not
solve them. Reforming these programs means opening Medicare and Medicaid
to private insurance markets and putting consumers, not bureaucrats, in
control of their own health care spending through health savings accounts
and targeted vouchers. Empowered consumers make rational, cost-effective
choices without dampening the market incentives driving health care innovation.
Select Articles about Medicare/Medicaid:
- Medicare
cuts and other D.C. fairy tales: Obama's so-called 'savings' are pure
political fantasy David Gratzer, New York Daily News
- Some
Inconvenient Truths About Medicare and the New 'Public Plan' Regina
Herzlinger and Robert Book, RealClearPolitics.com
- Regulation,
not size, is health care's biggest problem David Gratzer, Washington
Examiner
- The Reaper Is
Cheaper Paul Howard, City Journal Online (This article is
also linked on HotAir.com)
- Medical
Drama, Paul Howard, New York Post
- Democrats'
Health Plan Not So Harmless, Benjamin Zycher, Investor's Business
Daily
- Time
to Rechristen SCHIP, David Gratzer, City Journal Online
- The
free lunch never dies, Benjamin Zycher, The Hill
- Free
Lunch Eternal, Benjamin Zycher, National Review Online
- False
Accounting And Free Lunches Under A Single-Payer Health System,
Benjamin Zycher, Investor's Business Daily
- Congress
is Full of SCHIP, Paul Howard, National Review Online
Select Reports about Medicare/Medicaid:
Select Events about Medicare/Medicaid:
- Comparing Public and Private Health Insurance: Would
a Single-Payer System Save Enough to Cover the Uninsured?, October
17, 2007, New York City
Speaker: Benjamin Zycher, Senior Fellow, Manhattan Institute
for Policy Research
Discussant: June O'Neill, Wollman Distinguished Professor of
Economics and Finance, Baruch College, Director, Congressional Budget
Office (1995-1999)
Moderator: Howard Husock, Vice President of Programs, Manhattan
Institute for Policy Research
Consumer
Driven Health Care
Third-party payment plans allow some consumers to use services without
ever paying the full cost of health care utilization, while others pay
for benefits they don't need. The result is a system where health care
costs spiral out of control and consumer choice is limited to "one-size-fits-all"
medicine. The CMP wants to change this system by making it a true market:
putting consumers in charge of their own routine health care spending;
reserving insurance for truly catastrophic injuries; and creating a national
market for health insurance that encourages customized insurance plans
and pricing competition.
Select Articles about Consumer Driven Health Care:
- ObamaCare's
HSA Promiseand Peril, Paul Howard, Townhall.com
- The
'Consumer Protection' Racket David Gratzer, The Weekly Standard
- Data
shows health savings accounts cut premiums, Benjamin Zycher, Washington
Examiner
- The
case for the McCain health care plan, David Gratzer and Paul Howard,
Dallas Morning News
- Memo
to McCain: Talk About Health Care, David Gratzer, Arizona Republic
- Both
Parties Prescribe Bad Medicine In The Form Of Insurance Mandates,
David Gratzer and Paul Howard, Investor's Business Daily
- Mandates
Are Not the Answer, David Gratzer, City Journal Online
- America,
Insure Thyself, Regina Herzlinger, WashingtonPost.com
- The
holes in universal health care plan, David Gratzer, Newark Star-Ledger
- Running
for the Exits, Regina Herzlinger, National Review Online
- Dust
Off Last Year's Health Reform For This Year's State Of The Union,
David Gratzer, Investor's Business Daily
- Foreign
Health Affairs, Regina Herzlinger, Wall Street Journal
Select Reports about Consumer Driven Health Care:
Select Events on Consumer Driven Health Care:
- Reforming Our Health Care System, November
1, 2007, New York City
Speakers: Richard A. Epstein, J.D. Visiting Scholar, Manhattan
Institute's Center for Legal Policy James Parker Hall Distinguished
Service Professor of Law, University of Chicago Peter and Kirstin Bedford
Senior Fellow, Hoover Institution, Theodore R. Marmor, Ph.D.
Professor Emeritus of Public Policy and Management, Yale School of Management
Adjunct Professor Emeritus, Yale Law School
- Who Killed Health Care? America's $2 Trillion Problemand
the Consumer-Driven Cure, June 5, 2007, New York City
Speaker: Regina E. Herzlinger, Senior Fellow, Manhattan Institute
- Health Care: Does the Free Market Apply?,
February 15, 2007, New York City
Participants: Dr. David Gratzer, Senior fellow at the Manhattan
Institute Center for Medical Progress, Daniel Callahan, Senior
fellow at the Hastings Center
Moderator: Brian Lehrer, Host of WNYC's "The Brian Lehrer Show"
(Click here
for video)
FDA
Reform and Medical Innovation
The discovery of rare side effects from drugs like Vioxx and Celebrex
has politicians and the media clamoring for larger, longer, and more expensive
clinical trials by the Food and Drug Administration. But there is no evidence
that reliance on additional "one-size-fits-all" clinical trials will make
prescription drugs safer. Moreover, it will cost more lives due
to slowed access to new medicines. The CMP's prescription for reform is
more science, not more regulation. Science-driven FDA reform can help
improve drug safety, streamline drug development and accelerate the adoption
of personalized medicine. To achieve these goals, the Manhattan Institute
has formed a 21st Century FDA Task Force composed of leading experts that
will develop a platform for FDA reform that will help the agency meet
health care challenges in the 21st century using cutting-edge science
and market-friendly policies.
Select Articles about FDA Reform and Medical Innovation:
- 'Caution
Syndrome' Infects The FDA, David Gratzer, Forbes.com
- Borrow
From The HIV Battle Plan To Help Win War Against Cancer Investor's
Business Daily, Tomas Philipson
- Don't
surrender innovation in the name of health care reform Washington
Examiner, Tomas Philipson
- Who Pays
for a Cancer Drug?, Peter W. Huber, Forbes
- Curing
Diversity, Peter W. Huber, City Journal
- The
FDA and drug pre-emption, Tomas Philipson, Chairman, Project FDA,
Washington Times
- Free-Market
Medicine, Paul Howard, National Review Online
• Paul
Howard reads Free-Market Medicine
- Conflicted
doctors, Peter Huber, Forbes
- Overwarning,
Undercuring, Marie Gryphon, City Journal
- Leave
It to the FDA, Jim Copland, WashingtonPost.com
- Health
care innovation, and its enemies, David Gratzer, Baltimore Examiner
- Where
Are the Innovators in Health Care?, Regina Herzlinger, Harvard
Business Alumni Bulletin
- How
The New Medicine Renders Universal Health Care Impossible, Peter
Huber, Investor's Business Daily
- On
Vaccines, Immune to Reason, Paul Howard, WashingtonPost.com
- Should
the federal government negotiate directly with pharmaceutical companies?,
Benjamin Zycher, Medicare Patient Management
- Where
Are the Innovators in Health Care?, Regina Herzlinger, Wall Street
Journal
- A
Story Michael Moore Didn't Tell, Paul Howard, WashingtonPost.com
- FDA
User Fees Is Rx To Speed Drug Approvals, David Gratzer, Investor's
Business Daily
- Pharmaceutical
litigation for all, and safety for none, Paul Howard, Washington
Examiner
- Fear
is Side Effect of Drug Warnings, Paul Howard, RealClearPolitics
- FDA
Must Test Some Biologics' Generic Forms, Paul Howard, Investor's
Business Daily
- Getting
a Handle on Public Health, Paul Howard, The American
- What
policymakers can learn from a $21 billion failure, Paul Howard,
Washington Examiner
Select Reports about FDA Reform and Medical Innovation:
Select Events about FDA Reform and Medical Innovation:
- "The FDA and PDFUA: Timely Review or Unsafe Approval?",
June 23, 2008, Capitol Hill, Washington, DC
Speakers: Tomas Philipson, University of Chicago, and Theresa
Mullin, Food and Drug Administration
Moderator: Paul Howard, Manhattan Institute's Center for Medical
Progress
- New York's Uninsured: Looking Back and Moving Forward,
December 11, 2007, New York City
Panel One: New York's Uninsured: A History of Good Intentions and
Unintended Consequences
James R. Tallon, Jr., President, United Hospital Fund of New
York, Mark Scherzer, Legislative Counsel, New Yorkers for Accessible
Health Coverage, Tarren Bragdon, Health Policy Analyst, Empire
Center for New York State Policy
Moderator: Howard Husock, Vice President, Policy Research, Manhattan
Institute
Panel Two: Public Sector Experiments: Mandates, Medicaid, and Markets
Nina Owcharenko, Senior Policy Analyst, Center for Health Policy
Studies, Heritage Foundation, Jon Kingsdale, Ph.D., Executive
Director, Commonwealth Health Insurance Connector Authority, Len
Nichols, Ph.D., Director, Health Policy Program, New America Foundation,
David Gratzer, Senior Fellow, Manhattan Institute's Center for
Medical Progress
Moderator: Paul Howard, Director, Manhattan Institute's Center
for Medical Progress
Keynote Address: Charles D. Baker, Chief Executive Officer, Harvard
Pilgrim Health Care
Drug
Importation/Price Controls
The U.S. is the world's leader in biopharmaceutical innovation, mainly
because the U.S. does not impose price controls on prescription drugs.
However, the rise of the internet has given individual U.S. consumers
access to drugs in price controlled countries, leading to a growing demand
that policymakers legalize importation on a national level. This policy
would undermine medical innovation, while sending pharmaceutical investment
and innovation now conducted in the U.S. to our rapidly developing competitors
in China and India. The CMP is devoted to cataloguing the benefits of
market driven medical innovation, both in economic and human terms, and
in shifting the debate on drug importation to a question of free trade.
After all, since the entire world benefits from the premium U.S. consumers
pay for drug research and development, U.S. trade negotiators should encourage
rich nations to help bear the full costs of drug development.
Select Articles about Drug Importation/Price Controls:
- Drug
Imports: The Unappreciated Downside, Benjamin Zycher, Investor's
Business Daily
- McCain
is wrong on drugs, David Gratzer, Washington Examiner
- Thai-ing
Up Innovation, Paul Howard, National Review Online
- License
to Ill, Benjamin Zycher, National Review Online
- Canada's
prescription drug supply in danger? Take a pill, David Gratzer,
Globe and Mail
Select Reports about Drug Importation/Price Controls:
|
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| In the Spotlight: |
We Smell A Rat by David R. Henderson, Charles L. Hooper March 8, 2010
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