The boomers are coming but don't panic yet
Health Affairs Blog, March 7, 2008
The good people in the Office of the Actuary at the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services take great pains every year to summarize and explain their health spending forecast without spin or exaggeration. The editors of Health Affairs are perennially grateful to them for taking an approach that helps the journal fulfill its mission of providing clear and objective analysis to inform debates on health policy. Thus, it is perennially disappointing to see how casually the careful CMS analysis is inevitably overlooked to fit the doomsday scenarios anticipated by pundits and politicos, and how quickly the policy discourse prompted by the forecast deteriorates into the rote repetition of preconceived interpretations.
Most Viewed
Most Emailed
- Urologists 'Outraged' Over PSA Test Challenge
- New Facebook Page Gathers Stories of Medical Harm
- Luxury Hospital Facilities Put Patient Experience First
- Five Hospitals Share Three Secrets to Improve Knee Surgery Outcomes
- Heartland Health Joins Mayo Clinic Network
- Health Insurance Exchanges Put Defined Benefits to the Test
- Beleaguered Fairview Health CEO to Retire in July
- How Rivals Built an ACO
- Challenging Physicians to Help Improve the ED
- Appalachian, Urban Health Challenges Remarkably Similar

