Good Reads: From domestic violence, to lion survival, to the cost of Medicare
In this week's round-up of Good Reads includes fighting domestic violence, a look at how lions survive, why apps can't end poverty, Greek youth unemployment, and the Medicare panel that decides your health-care costs.
Male participants in an Ohio domestic violence awareness walk wore red, high-heeled shoes.
Randy Roberts/The Courier/AP
To fight domestic violence
Between 2000 and 2006, more than 10,600 people were killed in domestic homicides in the United States. About 3,200 US soldiers were killed overseas during the same period. A new approach to assessing domestic homicide risk could change the trajectory of these crimes.
In , Rachel Louise Snyder highlights cases overseen by Kelly Dunne, chief operating officer of the Jeanne Geiger Crisis Center in Amesbury, Mass. In 2005, Ms. Dunne created a Domestic High Violence Risk Team, which began including local police, hospitals, and courts when assessing domestic homicide risk case by case.
鈥淒unne attributes the prevalence of domestic violence, in part, to a deep cultural misunderstanding of how violence operates,鈥 writes Ms. Snyder. 鈥淲e assume that victims incite abuse, or that if the situation at home was truly threatening they would leave. Restraining orders, when filed, are thought to keep perpetrators away. And, if a woman fails to ... renew a restraining order, the assumption is that the problem has somehow been resolved.鈥
It usually means the opposite, but that is where Dunne鈥檚 strategy comes into play: recognizing potentially lethal behavior and helping victims take steps to avoid it. Since 2005, none of Dunne鈥檚 cases have ended in homicide.
Lion king or coalition
Why do lions live in prides when many other big cats (like jaguars, cougars, and tigers) lead a solitary life?
鈥淐ontinual risk of death, even more than the ability to cause it, is what shapes the social behavior of this ferocious but ever jeopardized animal,鈥 writes David Quammen for . 鈥淭he lion is the only feline that鈥檚 truly social, living in prides and coalitions, the size and dynamics of which are determined by an intricate balance of evolutionary costs and benefits.鈥
Mr. Quammen followed a group of researchers in Serengeti National Park in Tanzania, where the highest concentration of the world鈥檚 35,000 lions live. They use 40 years of data to uncover patterns of lion behavior in such wild, harsh conditions.
An app to end global poverty?
There are applications that know what you want before you do. But can Silicon Valley鈥檚 ingenuity apply to ending global poverty? In , Charles Kenny and Justin Sandefur raise some doubts. They point out that technology has already done much to improve lives in the developing world 鈥 think vaccines, radios, bicycles, and cellphones. But many well-intentioned high-tech projects (like One Laptop Per Child or Soccket) fail to meet the reality on the ground. Despite the fact that extreme poverty has decreased by half, millions of people still die from preventable diseases.
鈥淣one of this is for a lack of science; often it isn鈥檛 even for lack of money. It is because parents don鈥檛 follow simple health practices like washing their hands, government bureaucrats can鈥檛 or won鈥檛 provide basic water and sanitation programs, and arbitrary immigration restrictions prevent the poor from moving...,鈥 the authors write. 鈥淪orry, but no iPhone, even one loaded with the coolest apps, is going to change all that.鈥
Youth unemployment in Greece
Youth unemployment in Europe is particularly severe in Greece, where 55.3 percent of young adults don鈥檛 have jobs.
鈥淎bsent a rapid and dramatic economic turnaround, an entire generation in Southern Europe faces years, possibly decades, of dependency and disillusionment 鈥 with consequences that can鈥檛 be measured in economic terms alone,鈥 writes Stephan Faris in
For many young Greeks, this means living with their parents and waiting to start families. Although the economy is showing signs of mending, there still aren鈥檛 enough jobs to be found. About 160 young Greeks apply for one job opening, although that number is down from 330 in January 2012, according to a jobs website.
Secret committee sets Medicare prices
In , Haley Sweetland Edwards takes an in-depth look at the hidden process behind determining how doctors bill Medicare for specialized procedures and general care. Based more on politics than science, prices are set by the Specialty Society Relative Value Scale Update Committee (or RUC), convened three times a year by the American Medical Association.
The RUC sends its recommendations to the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, which doesn鈥檛 have the resources to investigate the prices independently.
鈥淏ecause of the way the system is set up, the values the RUC comes up with wind up shaping the very structure of the U.S. health care sector, creating the perverse financial incentives that dictate how our doctors behave, and affecting the annual expenditure of nearly one-fifth of our GDP,鈥 Ms. Edwards writes.
The small group of doctors, driving up fees for their services, drive up the entire cost of health care in the country. The author argues that the process requires major reform before Americans will receive the best care at the lowest cost.