New York Times featured Christian Grose in a story about Diane Feinstein’s decision to serve in the U.S. Senate until her death. The Times also talked to Grose for a story about the history of consequential deaths in Congress.
Washington Post quoted Rosalie Pacula about the link between some work professions and higher rates of overdoses.
Los Angeles Times interviewed Antonio Bento about L.A.’s “Green New Deal” plan to address climate change.
Associated Press spoke to Alice Chen for a story fact checking false claims connecting vaccine policies to infant mortality rates.
USA Today included research from Bryan Tysinger estimating how much Medicare and other government programs would save by eliminating new cases of diabetes, and described USC Schaeffer research by Tysinger and colleagues on how covering weight-loss drugs would save Medicare and private insurers hundreds of billions of dollars over a decade.
Politico talked to Mindy Romero for a story about the upcoming election for U.S. Senate in California. News From The States cited a study from Romero about how mail-in ballots increase voter turnout.
The Hill published an op-ed from Neeraj Sood and Karen Van Nuys on how middlemen in the drug supply chain inflate drug prices. The Economist cited research from Sood about intermediaries in the healthcare supply chain.
Forbes mentioned a Schaeffer Center study that found including new classes of weight loss drugs in Medicare coverage could significantly reduce healthcare costs. Forbes also cited a USC Price School study about the Medicare costs of an aging population.
KPCC interviewed Dana Goldman about California’s plans to produce its own insulin.
This represents only a portion of recent USC Price faculty media.