Howard Steven Friedman

Howard Steven Friedman
Location
New York, New York, USA
Birthday
June 10
Bio
Howard Steven Friedman works as a statistician and health economist for the United Nations. He has been a lead modeler on a number of key United Nations projects including the ICPD @ 15 Costing, High Level Task Force on Innovative Financing, and the Adding It Up reports. He is credited with being the lead developer of the tool used for costing the health-related Millennium Development Goals. He is also an adjunct professor at School of International and Public Affairs at Columbia University. Prior to joining the United Nations, Howard ran Analytic Solutions LLC, which provides consulting services in designing, developing and modeling data. This work also included teaching data mining and modeling techniques for major international corporations and foreign governments. Prior to that, he was a Director at Capital One, where he led teams of statisticians, analysts and programmers in operations and marketing. Howard is the author of over 35 scientific articles and book chapters in areas of applied statistics, health economics with recent publications in the American Journal of Gastroenterology, Current Medical Research & Opinion, Clinical Therapeutics, Inflammatory Bowel Disease, Journal of Managed Care Pharmacy, Clinical Drug Investigation and Value in Health. Howard Friedman received his BS from Binghamton University in Applied Physics and a Masters in Statistics, along with a Ph.D. in Biomedical Engineering from Johns Hopkins University. Please note that all comments on this blog reflect the opinions of the author and not those of the United Nations or Columbia University

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Salon.com
DECEMBER 14, 2011 1:20PM

Stop Searching for Super

Rate: 2 Flag

I was in the supermarket a few days ago and came across a bag of goji berries. The bag was proudly labeled as a Superfood. Now, I know Americans love a good advertising pitch as much as a simple solution to a complicated problem, but, I have bad news for you... there is no Easter Bunny, no Santa Claus, and there are no Superfoods that will let you miraculously eat whatever you want and still be healthy. Blueberries, pomegranate juice, goji berries, green tea, seaweed, fish oil and nuts are all good things to eat but no single food is going to enable you to eat whatever else you want and still have the body of a world-class athlete. But we love the idea of Superfoods because it is a simple solution to the difficult challenge of maintaining good health.

Thinking about Superfoods brought me to more Supers in the American fantasy mind. We of course have Superman, fighting for truth, justice and the American way. Alas, there is no Superman to solve our current political problems though many perpetually hope that latest newcomer on the political scene will save America from its own destruction. For fun, Google the name of any recent president and Superman to see the rather impressive number of images that people have created either in adoration or to mock political leaders.

From Superfoods to Superman, I soon found myself thinking about the Super Committee. This latest example of politicians being unwilling to develop legislation to solve the countries issues was a prime example of passing the buck. Responsibility to develop legislation to successfully manage the budget was handed from group to group until landing in the arms of six members of the House and six members of the Senate. This Super Committee was going to save America's financial future by hashing out a reasonable set of compromises to have a functional government that balances the desires of most of the people. Unfortunately, the Super Committee accomplished nothing.

My thoughts on Superfoods, Superman, and Super Committees are pretty much the same. It's nice to pretend that there are simple solutions to complicated problems but I live in the real world. In the real world you need to diet and exercise to get in shape. In the real world, no one is going to protect America by flying around in a cape. And in the real world, if you want politicians to take any meaningful action, then you need to make sure that they realize that inaction will lead to them losing the privilege of representing you.

 

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very well said...i'm a political dummy, and i got that!
You cannot possibly characterize the health care legislation process as a "rush to do something" by a bipartisan congress.