“Yeah, like really . . .”

Paula Creamer.jpgThe youngest player to win an LPGA golf tournament in 50 years emerged yesterday as graduating high school student Paula Creamer won her first LPGA event at something called the Sybase Classic by sinking a clutch 20-foot birdie putt on the final hole.
For you fellow parents of teenage girls, I’m sure you can relate to Paula’s following answer to a question during her post-round interview:

Q: You said yesterday you were anxious. Did you just handle that much better today?
A: Yes, I think so. I called Colin, my caddie. We talk a lot, every day, and we talked to Lance about it, and just things to help me be not anxious and be calm and patient out there. And it worked well for a while. It’s funny, because on 17 I hit a pretty decent good shot and then Gloria hit it within two feet. And Lance was like, “Come on, you have to make this putt.” And I’m like, “Listen, you need to settle down, not me. We have a hole and a half to play. Come on.” It worked well.
There were times I tend to walk very fast when things are like on the last hole, 18, I was 50 yards in front of Lance. And Lance was screaming, “Paula, Paula, stop!” And I waited. And then we walked up. I just have to learn how to control it. The last putt, I was shaking because of nerves and just wanting to see what’s going to happen.

It’s only a matter of time before Dan Jenkins picks up on this material.

The potential effect of the human genome on health insurance

HealthInsurance.gifDoctor and author Robin Cook has re-evaluated his view on universal health insurance based on advances in academic understanding of the human genome. In this NY Times op-ed, Dr. Cook notes the following:

In this dawning era of genomic medicine, the result may be that the concept of private health insurance, which is based on actuarially pooling risk within specified, fragmented groups, will become obsolete since risk cannot be pooled if it can be determined for individual policyholders. Genetically determined predilection for disease will become the modern equivalent of the “pre-existing condition” that private insurers have stringently avoided.
As a doctor I have always been against health insurance except for catastrophic care and for the very poor. It has been my experience that the doctor-patient relationship is the most personal and rewarding for both the patient and the doctor when a clear, direct fiduciary relationship exists. In such a circumstance, both individuals value the encounter more, which invariably leads to more time, more attention to potentially important details, and a higher level of patient compliance and satisfaction – all of which invariably result in a better outcome.
But with the end of pooling risk within defined groups, there is only one solution to the problem of paying for health care in the United States: to pool risk for the entire nation. (Under the rubric of health care I mean a comprehensive package that includes preventive care, acute care and catastrophic care.) Although I never thought I’d advocate a government-sponsored, obviously non-profit, tax-supported, universal access, single-payer plan, I’ve changed my mind: the sooner we move to such a system, the better off we will be. Only with universal health care will we be able to pool risk for the entire country and share what nature has dealt us; only then will there be no motivation for anyone or any organization to ferret out an individual’s confidential, genetic makeup.

Hat tip to the HealthLawProf Blog for the link.

An expensive blown save

rivera.jpgIn a gathering of advertisers last Wednesday in New York City, CBS chairman Leslie Moonves explained that CBS lost the key rating title this past season to Fox among viewers between the ages of 18 and 49 because of Yankees relief pitcher Mariano Rivera.
Mr. Moonves reasoned that the ratings race between Fox and CBS was so close that if the ratings for just one of the seven playoff games between the Yankees and the Red Sox last October were subtracted, CBS would have beaten Fox for the year. That series went to a seventh game because Riviera uncharacteristically blew several Yankee save opportunities. Thus, Mr. Moonves concluded, “Mariano Riviera cost us more money than the Yankees.”
I wonder if that will lead to a new pitching statistic: “Blown ratings race?”