In a nutshell, the defect that causes the guns to fire when holstered occurs when there is a small amount of pressure on the trigger. If the slide (top part of the gun) is wiggled / nudged, it will fire. Also, the gun…
Semaglutide / GLP-1 compounding is not limited to just Hims. Lot's of pharmacies do it. The manufacturer (Novo Nordisk) charges 5x-10x for the exact same thing. The author calls the GLP-1s used in compounding "Chinese…
No, this doesn't imply an "infinite amount of money", it's just a pricing model. You still need the parameters of the distribution (brownian motion / random walk), and these are unobservable. You can try to estimate…
Your post is completely off-topic. The paper includes a great discussion about how the property insurance crisis in Florida dates back to Hurricane Andrew in the 90s, not a court decision in 2017. The issue raised in…
https://www.hhs.gov/hipaa/for-professionals/faq/505/what-doe... I really don't want to keep googling things for you. The police are not judicial officers. Yes, I've read the article.
https://www.hipaajournal.com/hipaa-compliance-for-pharmacies... The police are breaking federal law and the article is wrong. This is not a gray area.
When you buy health insurance, you sign a temporary HIPAA release (limited duration) to cover the period that they are underwriting. They can only query your specific pharmacy records for the purposes of underwriting.…
I work in this space, and your comment is completely wrong. Data covered by HIPAA is always covered by HIPAA. A covered entity would also include a health insurer, and all payment intermediaries, this is straight from…
no prob, go ahead
I think there is an additional reason here too. Software development work is (too often) seen as heads-down, anti-social work. Large corporations often bridge communication between software developers and the…
witch (incorrect), rather than which
Have you heard of Citadel?
> Generally they make 25-50% more than a similar level vanilla software engineer. It's often even less in my experience. Despite having a "unicorn" skillset (soft-skills, advanced degree, domain experience, and SWE…
Not if you factor in risk aversion and declining utility. Most investors would happily give up some upside for downside protection. This is where option strategies are not zero sum
"I used an leverage to take a concentrated position in a risky asset, you can too".
> Then they start issuing rebates instead of discounts? They already do, and it's a huge amount of money. It's how they keep prices opaque. There is a list price (retail price), the pharmacy dispenses the drug, and gets…
> It’s a huge rip off. Medicare should be paying a discount to the median price actually paid on the open market. But apparent nobody has an incentive to fix this. This is utterly wrong. First of all, Medicare Part D…
Conceptually, I agree that it's cool, but oh man are there going to be some indecipherable formulas showing up in spreadsheets once the power users start using it.
So here is my super simple understanding take on the long-winded article. If the duration of treasuries, or whatever you are basing the spread on, is equal to MBSs, the spread would be constant. This is not the case…
Not defending this, but what you are doing is entering claims information exactly how a hospital / clinician would have to. A lot of this is done automatically by software now. This isn't a dark-pattern, it's just…
https://h1bdata.info/
You seem to have very strong anti-establishment opinions. There are a lot of off-patent drugs (i.e. generics) that are dirt cheap and widely prescribed. Metformin is one example. Unfortunately, your world-view prevents…
Because there is, and the person who wrote the original article has no domain experience. Fixing data sucks and it requires judgement. Public health and medical researchers derive an enormous amount of research benefit…
Not sure if you are being sarcastic, but that's precisely what the ACA did. It created giant incentives for hospitals to modernize their medical record systems, which many did.
Typical draw-down rate is 3%-5% per year, so yes, very gradually.
In a nutshell, the defect that causes the guns to fire when holstered occurs when there is a small amount of pressure on the trigger. If the slide (top part of the gun) is wiggled / nudged, it will fire. Also, the gun…
Semaglutide / GLP-1 compounding is not limited to just Hims. Lot's of pharmacies do it. The manufacturer (Novo Nordisk) charges 5x-10x for the exact same thing. The author calls the GLP-1s used in compounding "Chinese…
No, this doesn't imply an "infinite amount of money", it's just a pricing model. You still need the parameters of the distribution (brownian motion / random walk), and these are unobservable. You can try to estimate…
Your post is completely off-topic. The paper includes a great discussion about how the property insurance crisis in Florida dates back to Hurricane Andrew in the 90s, not a court decision in 2017. The issue raised in…
https://www.hhs.gov/hipaa/for-professionals/faq/505/what-doe... I really don't want to keep googling things for you. The police are not judicial officers. Yes, I've read the article.
https://www.hipaajournal.com/hipaa-compliance-for-pharmacies... The police are breaking federal law and the article is wrong. This is not a gray area.
When you buy health insurance, you sign a temporary HIPAA release (limited duration) to cover the period that they are underwriting. They can only query your specific pharmacy records for the purposes of underwriting.…
I work in this space, and your comment is completely wrong. Data covered by HIPAA is always covered by HIPAA. A covered entity would also include a health insurer, and all payment intermediaries, this is straight from…
no prob, go ahead
I think there is an additional reason here too. Software development work is (too often) seen as heads-down, anti-social work. Large corporations often bridge communication between software developers and the…
witch (incorrect), rather than which
Have you heard of Citadel?
> Generally they make 25-50% more than a similar level vanilla software engineer. It's often even less in my experience. Despite having a "unicorn" skillset (soft-skills, advanced degree, domain experience, and SWE…
Not if you factor in risk aversion and declining utility. Most investors would happily give up some upside for downside protection. This is where option strategies are not zero sum
"I used an leverage to take a concentrated position in a risky asset, you can too".
> Then they start issuing rebates instead of discounts? They already do, and it's a huge amount of money. It's how they keep prices opaque. There is a list price (retail price), the pharmacy dispenses the drug, and gets…
> It’s a huge rip off. Medicare should be paying a discount to the median price actually paid on the open market. But apparent nobody has an incentive to fix this. This is utterly wrong. First of all, Medicare Part D…
Conceptually, I agree that it's cool, but oh man are there going to be some indecipherable formulas showing up in spreadsheets once the power users start using it.
So here is my super simple understanding take on the long-winded article. If the duration of treasuries, or whatever you are basing the spread on, is equal to MBSs, the spread would be constant. This is not the case…
Not defending this, but what you are doing is entering claims information exactly how a hospital / clinician would have to. A lot of this is done automatically by software now. This isn't a dark-pattern, it's just…
https://h1bdata.info/
You seem to have very strong anti-establishment opinions. There are a lot of off-patent drugs (i.e. generics) that are dirt cheap and widely prescribed. Metformin is one example. Unfortunately, your world-view prevents…
Because there is, and the person who wrote the original article has no domain experience. Fixing data sucks and it requires judgement. Public health and medical researchers derive an enormous amount of research benefit…
Not sure if you are being sarcastic, but that's precisely what the ACA did. It created giant incentives for hospitals to modernize their medical record systems, which many did.
Typical draw-down rate is 3%-5% per year, so yes, very gradually.