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   | | Health Care Reform |  | | Story of the Week | September 26, 2007 | | Should we focus our health care spending on “bricks and mortar” or technology?...Or both? | In this week’s show I look at the growing influx of development dollars into health care. Where is it all coming from? Certainly not the usual places – the medical community, government programs and the like… No, the new money is coming from the private sector – businesses such as Philips and Intel. This week I compare two options for spending in the future as we seek to improve our health care system: One route is traditional bricks and mortar – as evidenced by the news from Grand Rapids, Michigan, recently of a mammoth $1 billion healthcare infrastructure investment there. The other route is innovative medical technology development for the home – the kind that Philips is aggressively pursuing with products such as home defibrillators. Watch my video (embedded in this blog post) or read this week’s transcript to learn more about trends in health care spending and development. Then tell me how YOU feel about this question. What’s the best way to spend our health care dollars? Should we give the Intels and the Philips of the world a bigger role in helping shape our health care future? Post a comment or a video in response here. Mike Magee | | |
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|  I think we should have health care paid for by the government for everyone. It doesn't have to be elaborate, but a socialized medical system like Canada has."  Hard for the insured, too  Keep health care private!  Work to stay healthy  Testing is important  Please keep it affordable  Everybody deserves a chance  | Dr. Tom Linden's Health Blog | | |  Without the Wilderness, There Can Be No Wilderness Medicine Change in Policy at FDA May Result in Improved Drug Safety Leaving the Emergency Room Ain’t Nobody’s Fault But Mine Chastened and More Sober, Harry and Louise Return Seek to Become, Not to Acquire Yearning for Universal Coverage Is Not Universal Is America's Health Care System Failing? Probiotics: Hope or Hype? |
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