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391
October 9, 2009

More Is Less

An hour explaining the American health care system, specifically, why it is that costs keep rising. One story looks at the doctors, one at the patients and one at the insurance industry.

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  • Transcript
Michael Forster Rothbart

This show was a co-production with NPR News, and was one of two shows we did on health care: The other is Someone Else's Money.

Prologue

Former Bush Administration official David Frum explains a very surprising fact about Bush's economic failure, as it relates to health care. Frum is a regular contributor to the radio show Marketplace. (5 minutes)

By

David Frum
Act One

Dartmouth Atlas Shrugged

Are doctors to blame for the rising costs? NPR Science Correspondent Alix Spiegel reports on the shocking results of studies about varied health care spending. Hear more health care stories this week from Alix at npr.org. (18 minutes)

By

Alix Spiegel
Act Two

Every Cat Scan Has Nine Lives

Or is the problem the patients? Producer Lisa Pollak reports. (13 minutes)

By

Lisa Pollak
Act Three

Who Would Win In A Fight Between A Polar Bear And An Insurance Company?

Or maybe the insurance companies are to blame? Producer Sarah Koenig reports. (13 minutes )

By

Sarah Koenig
Act Four

Now What?

Host Ira Glass talks with Susan Dentzer, editor of the journal Health Affairs, about what current health reform proposals do to fix the rising costs of healthcare...And points at a surprising, kind of heartening phenomenon happening within the current debate. (6 minutes)

By

Ira Glass

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Act One: Shots In The Dark

Measles cases are higher in the U.S. than they've been in a decade, mostly because more and more nervous parents are refusing to vaccinate their kids.
200: Hearts and Minds
Nov. 30, 2001

Act One: Don't Believe Anything You Hear On The Radio

The story of a clandestine radio station the CIA set up back in the good old, bad old days of the 1950s, to overthrow Guatemala.

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562
July 31, 2015

The Problem We All Live With - Part One

There’s one thing that has been proven to cut the achievement gap between black and white students by half: integration.

562
July 31, 2015

The Problem We All Live With - Part One

There’s one thing that has been proven to cut the achievement gap between black and white students by half: integration.

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