Decision of the Month

Books





All I want from Health Care is My Two Front Teeth

May 9th, 2011

Not looking my best…but here is a blog post I wrote for the Hastings Center, in which I try to get to the root, so to speak, of an often overlooked issue: cutting dental coverage when trying to lower the cost of health care.

Share

When Medicaid doesn’t pay

May 6th, 2011

Here is a link to a Marketplace report that discusses the Obama administration’s efforts to keep states from trimming their Medicaid budgets by cutting doctor payments, to the point where patients have insurance but no doctors would be willing to care for them. I am quoted early on, the first broadcast in which I have been able to spout the phrase “dirty, naughty.”

Share

Tough decision? Take it piece by piece

April 21st, 2011

Brian Zikmund-Fisher took the lead on a study published this week in which we found evidence that when people face tough decisions, it helps for them to break the decision into smaller pieces, and take it one step at a time. Here is a link to some media coverage in India.

Share

Do patients need the numbers?

April 20th, 2011

An interesting article by Peter Schwartz in the latest Hastings Center Report on whether patients, facing difficult medical decisions, ought to get precise numbers on the risks and benefits of their alternatives. I contributed a commentary, urging researchers to keep developing better ways to help patients make rational use of the numbers.

Share

Jonah Lehrer Ready for a Shove

April 18th, 2011

The Wall Street Journal article linked below discusses why changing behavior may take more than the kind of nudges some behavioral economists have been promoting. As Lehrer points out, this is an idea I have been pushing (but not shoving, of course!) for a while.

Is ‘Nudging’ Really Enough? – WSJ

Share

What would you do, doc?

April 12th, 2011

A bunch of media outlets are beginning to report on a new study of mine (conducted with a couple of great colleagues) in which we found that docs choose different treatments for themselves than they recommend to their patients. Kinda scary stuff. This Marketplace report is worth listening to. Check out the ‘News and Press’ page for links to some of the other reports.

Share

When Less is More

March 30th, 2011

Here is a news article discussing a paper I wrote with Michael Volk, in which we try to find ways to keep doctors from harming patients by finding and then getting all worked up over what we in medicine call incidentalomas–unexpected and ultimately benign findings that show up with unnecessary tests. The article is in the Archives of Internal Medicine this week.

Share

How not to let a crisis go to waste

March 23rd, 2011

Here is a blog post I wrote for the Hastings Center, laying out some hopeful thoughts about how we can use Medicaid crises, which are occurring in so many states right now, to figure out how to control health care costs.

Share

Why people hate health reform

March 22nd, 2011

Here is a link to an Op-Ed I wrote with two colleagues at Duke, in which we provide a novel explanation for why so many Americans hate Obamacare.

Share

Duke “Office Hours” webcast

March 8th, 2011

Check out my recent webcast interview with Duke University “Office Hours”

Share


I am a physician and behavioral scientist. My research and writing explores the quirks in human nature that influence our lives -- the mixture of rational and irrational forces that affect our health, our happiness and the way our society functions....

more

Contact


Have a question or just want to get in touch? Email me at peter.ubel@duke.edu

Subscribe

 Subscribe to my blog

Enter your e-mail address to receive notifications when there are new posts

Archives