Health Policy Podcast
Nurse practitioner and author Cynthia Thurlow discusses her transition from traditional allopathic medicine to a lifestyle-focused practice centered on perimenopause and menopause care. She explains the evolving role of nurse practitioners in the U.S. healthcare system, including their training, scope of practice, and ability to help fill gaps created by physician shortages. Thurlow highlights key systemic challenges shaping modern healthcare, including insurance-driven decision-making, declining reimbursement rates, consolidation of private practices, and the growing administrative...
info_outlineHealth Policy Podcast
Emergency physician Dr. Colleen Smith discusses how government regulations and market distortions have contributed to the rise of large, vertically integrated healthcare corporations. In the interview, she explains how policies such as certificate-of-need laws, Stark regulations, and the structure of employer-based insurance have limited competition and consumer choice in healthcare. Smith argues that simply breaking up large healthcare companies will not solve systemic problems unless policymakers also reform regulations, expand health savings options, and restore competition in the...
info_outlineHealth Policy Podcast
Peter Mihalick, health policy and advocacy director for the International Hearing Society and a former congressional staffer, discussed the federal 340B drug discount program on a recent episode of the Health Policy Podcast, highlighting concerns about its rapid expansion and lack of oversight. Mihalick explained that the program was originally designed to help safety-net providers serve low-income patients by allowing them to purchase outpatient drugs at steep discounts. However, he said the structure does not require hospitals or clinics to pass those savings directly to patients,...
info_outlineHealth Policy Podcast
Nathan Benefield, Chief Policy Officer of the Commonwealth Foundation, joins the Health Policy Podcast to examine whether the Affordable Care Act has achieved its core promise of lowering health care costs. Sixteen years after its passage, Benefield argues that rising premiums, expanded subsidies, and increased government spending have failed to reduce costs for families. The conversation explores the impact of temporary COVID-era subsidy expansions, declining competition on insurance exchanges, and what Benefield describes as “perverse incentives” built into the subsidy structure. He...
info_outlineHealth Policy Podcast
Susan Goldhaber, writer for the American Council on Science and Health and a former EPA researcher, joins the Health Policy Podcast to examine the renewed debate over fluoride in drinking water. With decades of experience studying fluoride standards, Goldhaber explains the history of fluoridation — from early 20th-century dental discoveries to its adoption as a major public health measure after World War II. The conversation explores why the EPA is conducting a new toxicity assessment, the controversy surrounding recent National Toxicology Program findings linking higher fluoride levels to...
info_outlineHealth Policy Podcast
On this episode of the Health Policy Podcast, Brian Hyde speaks with Pete Sepp, President of the National Taxpayers Union, about the accelerating financial crisis facing Medicare and other federal healthcare programs Sepp outlines how Medicare Part A is projected to become insolvent in 2033—just one year after Social Security’s trust fund is expected to fall short—triggering an automatic 11% cut in hospital insurance benefits unless Congress acts. He explains that healthcare spending now accounts for more than a quarter of federal expenditures and continues to grow, even after...
info_outlineHealth Policy Podcast
On this episode of the Health Policy Podcast, Jennifer and Maya Reinhardt share their powerful story of battling cystic fibrosis and a life-threatening antibiotic-resistant infection. When traditional treatments failed and FDA barriers stood in the way, Jennifer fought to access bacteriophage therapy — an international treatment not approved in the United States at the time. The journey required extensive research, travel to Oregon, international coordination, and navigating federal red tape, all while Maya’s health rapidly declined. The treatment ultimately stabilized Maya long enough for...
info_outlineHealth Policy Podcast
Joel White, president of the Council for Affordable Health Coverage, joins the Health Policy Podcast to discuss why health care costs continue to rise despite years of reform efforts. Drawing on his experience as former staff director of the House Ways and Means Health Subcommittee and co-author of the Health Savings Account law, White argues that market consolidation, regulatory complexity, and structural flaws in the Affordable Care Act have created localized monopolies that drive prices higher for American families. White outlines how vertically integrated insurers and providers shape...
info_outlineHealth Policy Podcast
On this episode of the Health Policy Podcast, Brian Hyde speaks with Brian Norman, Director of State Affairs at the Goldwater Institute, about the push to expand “Right to Try” laws to include individualized and gene-based treatments. Norman explains how the original Right to Try movement, signed into federal law in 2018, allowed terminally ill patients to access investigational drugs that had passed Phase I FDA safety trials. Now, Goldwater is advancing “Right to Try 2.0,” aimed at creating a clearer regulatory pathway for patients with rare and ultra-rare diseases to access...
info_outlineHealth Policy Podcast
Dr. Valerie Fuller, president of the American Association of Nurse Practitioners (AANP), joined the Health Policy Podcast to discuss a federal policy proposal that could have significant implications for the health care workforce and patient access to care across the country. AANP is the largest organization representing nurse practitioners in the United States. In January, the U.S. Department of Education released a proposed rule that would redefine which degree programs qualify as “professional” for the purposes of federal student loan limits. While this may sound technical, the decision...
info_outlineIn this intro episode of the Health Policy Podcast, host Brian Hyde explains why this show exists and what listeners can expect from future conversations. He argues that healthcare policy is among the most complex and consequential areas of public life, yet many of its most important decisions happen behind closed doors in Washington, inside large health systems, or within organizations that benefit from the status quo. Patients and taxpayers often feel the effects of these policies without ever seeing how or why choices were made.
Hyde sets out a clear mission for the podcast: to bring transparency, accountability, and intellectual clarity to healthcare policy discussions. He describes the kinds of guests the show will feature, including policy experts, economists, and analysts, and outlines the core questions that will shape each episode. These include how incentives drive behavior in healthcare, why costs keep rising, how public programs are structured, and where policy design creates friction or failure.
The episode also establishes what the podcast will not be, it is not about outrage, clickbait, or defending institutions for their own sake. Instead, it aims to create a space for careful, informed, and practical conversations about how the system operates and where reform is genuinely needed. By the end of the episode, listeners have a clear sense of the show’s purpose, its audience, and why deeper understanding is a prerequisite for meaningful policy debate.