How an epidemic begins and ends

How an epidemic begins and ends

Introducing season 3 of The Impact! The 2020 candidates have some bold ideas to tackle some of our country's biggest problems, like climate change, the opioid crisis, and unaffordable health care. A lot of their proposals have been tried before, so, in a sense, the results are in. This season, The Impact has those stories: how the big ideas from 2020 candidates succeeded — or failed — in other places, or at other times. What can Sen. Elizabeth Warren's proposal to fight the opioid crisis learn from what the US did to fight the AIDS epidemic? How did Germany — an industrial powerhouse that invented the automobile — manage to implement a Green New Deal? How did public health insurance change Taiwan? Subscribe to The Impact on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or your favorite podcast app to automatically get new episodes of the latest season each week. On this special preview: Sen. Elizabeth Warren is running for president with a plan to fight the opioid epidemic. Her legislation would dramatically expand access to addiction treatment and overdose prevention, and it would cost $100 billion over 10 years. Addiction experts agree that this is the kind of money the United States needs to fight the opioid crisis. But it’s a really expensive idea, to help a deeply stigmatized population. How would a President Warren get this through Congress? It’s been done before, with the legislation Warren is using as a blueprint for her proposal. In 1990, Congress passed the Ryan White Care Act, the first national coordinated response to the AIDS crisis. In the decades since, the federal government has dedicated billions of dollars to the fight against AIDS, and it’s revolutionized care for people with this once-deadly disease. But by the time President George H.W. Bush signed the bill into law, hundreds of thousands of people in the US already had HIV/AIDS, and tens of thousands had died. In this episode, Vox's Jillian Weinberger explores how an epidemic begins, and how it ends. We look at what it took to get the federal government to finally act on AIDS, and what that means for Warren’s plan to fight the opioid crisis, today. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

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Episoder(766)

Francis Fukuyama on whether America's democracy is decaying

Francis Fukuyama on whether America's democracy is decaying

Francis Fukuyama is a political scientist, a public intellectual, and progenitor of the famed "End of History" thesis. But his recent work is his most important yet. Over two volumes, he's been studyi...

11 Okt 20161h 11min

Tyler Cowen interviews Ezra Klein about politics, media, and more

Tyler Cowen interviews Ezra Klein about politics, media, and more

A number of you have asked that we turn the tables and have someone interview me for the show. So when Tyler Cowen — economist at George Mason University, blogger at Marginal Revolution, and generaliz...

6 Okt 20161h 16min

The best conversation I’ve had about the election, with Molly Ball

The best conversation I’ve had about the election, with Molly Ball

This election season has left pretty much everything I thought I knew about politics in doubt. Both parties nominated unpopular candidates, even when they had popular alternatives. One party's nominee...

4 Okt 20161h 12min

HHS Secretary Sylvia Matthews Burwell on running Obamacare, Medicare, and Medicaid

HHS Secretary Sylvia Matthews Burwell on running Obamacare, Medicare, and Medicaid

This week, I've turned over the mic to The Weeds' Sarah Kliff. She went to Capitol Hill to interview HHS Secretary Sylvia Burwell about all things healthcare. They talked about how to pay doctors to p...

27 Sep 201646min

Dr. Leana Wen on why the opposite of poverty is health

Dr. Leana Wen on why the opposite of poverty is health

There are a couple of ideas that drive how I see policy and politics. One of them is that most of what drives health outcomes has nothing to do with what happens in doctor's offices. Another is that w...

20 Sep 20161h 40min

Arlie Hochschild on how America feels to Trump supporters

Arlie Hochschild on how America feels to Trump supporters

I’ve been reading sociologist Arlie Hochschild’s writing for about a decade now. Her immersive projects have revolutionized how we understand labor, gender equity, and work-life balance. But her lates...

13 Sep 201659min

Stewart Butterfield on creating Slack, learning from games, and finding your online identity

Stewart Butterfield on creating Slack, learning from games, and finding your online identity

If you came by the Vox office, you would find it oddly quiet. That's not because we don't like each other, or because we're not social, or because we don't have anything to say. It's because almost al...

6 Sep 20161h 34min

W. Kamau Bell on the lessons of parenthood, Twitter, and fame

W. Kamau Bell on the lessons of parenthood, Twitter, and fame

W. Kamau Bell is a comedian and a writer. But you probably know him from one of his podcasts(Denzel Washington Is The Greatest Actor Of All Time Period and Politically Re-Active) or his CNN show The U...

30 Aug 20161h 31min

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