SHORT BIO
Dan Gorenstein is the former senior reporter for Marketplace’s Health Desk, covering the business of healthcare.
Prior to Marketplace, Dan spent more than 11 years at New Hampshire Public Radio. He got his start in journalism at the Chicago Reporter, an investigative journal that examines race and class disparities in the Chicago area. He’s won numerous national and local awards, including the Society of Professional Journalist Sigma Delta Chi investigative reporting award.
Latest Stories (640)
Victims of Orlando mass shooting struggle to pay medical bills
Jun 23, 2016
The hospital system expects to pick up more than $1 million in costs.
Feds make arrests in alleged Medicaid, Medicare scheme
Jun 22, 2016
The federal government estimates it loses 12 percent of Medicare spending and about 10 percent of Medicaid to fraud and other improper payments.
Why it's still difficult for hospitals to share patient data
Jun 20, 2016
The infrastructure to deliver on the promise of information sharing is there, but business interests don't always align.
Big smiles in Vermont over dental therapy
Jun 20, 2016
The state's governor recently authorized the practice.
When it comes to trauma care, where you live determines if you live
Jun 17, 2016
Many hospitals can't handle those who are victims of mass violence.
Health economists diagnose the Affordable Care Act
Jun 13, 2016
The American Society of Health Economists begins its biennial conference this week. It's like Woodstock — for health geeks.
Insurance executives are using data to help curb opioid abuse
Jun 7, 2016
A new study says one way to stop "doctor shopping" is to track the pharmacies where people are buying these drugs.
Deals aimed at reining in costs of cancer drugs show promise
Jun 6, 2016
Some manufacturers are willing to tie drug price to performance.
One way to cut medical errors: keep patients at home
Jun 3, 2016
It's a 'paradigm shift in medicine,' doctor says, with its own set of challenges.
U.S. death rate increases for the first time in a decade
Jun 1, 2016
A spike in white mortality could be driving this larger death trend.