When I was an undergraduate, I was convinced by my professors of healthcare policy that the solution to what ails American healthcare—unequal access, extreme variations in quality, high costs and disparities in outcomes—lay in smart policy making.
When I was an undergraduate, I was convinced by my professors of healthcare policy that the solution to what ails American healthcare—unequal access, extreme variations in quality, high costs and disparities in outcomes—lay in smart policy making.