Freakonomics, M.D.
En podcast av Freakonomics Radio + Stitcher
87 Avsnitt
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The Economics of Everyday Things: Animal Urine
Publicerades: 2023-07-21 -
Tom Brady, A.D.H.D., and a Really Bad Headache (Bonus)
Publicerades: 2023-07-11 -
78. Do Kids Cause Divorce?
Publicerades: 2023-03-31 -
77. They Make Minimum Wage. They Could Save Your Life.
Publicerades: 2023-03-24 -
76. Is a Spoonful of Sunlight the Best Medicine?
Publicerades: 2023-03-17 -
75. What Is Sugar Really Doing to You?
Publicerades: 2023-03-10 -
74. How Does Playing Football Affect Your Health?
Publicerades: 2023-03-03 -
73. Who Pays for Multimillion-Dollar Miracle Cures?
Publicerades: 2023-02-17 -
72. What’s Stopping Us From Curing Rare Diseases?
Publicerades: 2023-02-10 -
71. What Do COVID-19 and Cancer Have in Common?
Publicerades: 2023-02-03 -
70. Why Are There Still So Few Female Surgeons?
Publicerades: 2023-01-27 -
69. Home Sweet … Hospital?
Publicerades: 2023-01-20 -
68. The E.R. Doctor’s Dilemma
Publicerades: 2023-01-13 -
What Can We Do About the Hardest Patients? (Ep. 51 Replay)
Publicerades: 2023-01-06 -
67. Why Did This 60-Year-Old Man Collapse at the Supermarket?
Publicerades: 2022-12-30 -
66. Does Health Insurance Make You Healthier?
Publicerades: 2022-12-23 -
65. How Do Pandemics Change Health Care?
Publicerades: 2022-12-16 -
64. Is Facebook Bad for Your Mental Health?
Publicerades: 2022-12-09 -
63. What Medicine Gets Wrong About Race
Publicerades: 2022-12-02 -
Why Don’t We Have a Cure for Alzheimer’s? (Ep. 49 Update)
Publicerades: 2022-11-25
Each week, physician, economist, and author of "Random Acts of Medicine" Dr. Bapu Jena will dig into a fascinating study at the intersection of economics and healthcare. He takes on questions like: Why do kids with summer birthdays get the flu more often? Can surviving a hurricane help you live longer? What do heart surgery and grocery-store pricing have in common?
