Health Care Waiting Lists in Britain Growing Longer
The number of English patients forced to wait weeks, sometimes months for treatment is rising fast.
The number of English patients forced to wait weeks, sometimes months for treatment is rising fast.
America’s public health support and pension programs will run out of money much sooner than previously anticipated.
Hospitals in Missouri demanded financial compensation from tobacco companies for treating uninsured patients with smoking related illnesses.
For all the Democrats’ demagoguery, nearly half of all seniors support the House budget committee chairman’s reform effort.
Paul Krugman argues that patients shouldn’t be called “consumers” because medicine is a noble profession.
Richard Ralston fears that illness will be judged the result of criminal negligence under collectivized health care.
One year after Obamacare, it’s clearer than ever that health care needs less government, not more.
Britain’s deputy prime minister promised not to let the profit motive undermine his country’s public health care system.
President Obama has promised to get rid of rules that are “just plain dumb” yet he’s added plenty of those.
Barack Obama’s health reform law is projected to cost $1.4 trillion over the next decade.
Britain’s health system fails to meet “the most basic standards of care.”
For Obamacare to stay, the Constitution must go. That is why the document is so vehemently attacked.
A federal judge ruled the president’s health-care reform law unconstitutional because its mandate forces Americans to buy insurance.
Republicans repeal health reform in the House even though the Senate is almost certain to uphold it.
The prime minister says Britain cannot afford to put off public sector reform.