Freakonomics Radio - Are You Ready for a Glorious Sunset? (Rebroadcast)
Episode Date: August 25, 2016The gist: we spend billions on end-of-life healthcare that doesn’t do much good. So what if a patient could forego the standard treatment and get a cash rebate instead? ...
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Hey, podcast listeners, I'm Stephen Dubner.
Hope you're enjoying these last lazy days of summer.
We sure are.
So, from the archives today,
one of the most controversial ideas we've ever explored.
Episode number 217.
It's called, Are You Ready for a Glorious Sunset?
We'll be back next week with a brand new episode of Freakonomics Radio.
But first, one more thing.
I am starting a brand new podcast along with The New York Times.
It's called Tell Me Something I Don't Know.
It's a live game show with guest presenters, celebrity panelists, me as the host.
We are currently looking for guest presenters,
people who are willing to get up on a stage and tell me, well, something I don't know.
It might be a technological breakthrough you've learned about,
maybe even some research you're working on yourself,
or it could just be an interesting fact or historical wrinkle,
maybe even just a great unasked question.
So if you or someone you know would like to participate
in Tell Me Something I Don't Know,
please go to Freakonomics.com slash TMSIDK, as in tell me something I don't
know.
That's Freakonomics.com slash TMSIDK.
You'll find everything you need there, including a signup sheet and information on how to buy
tickets for our tapings, which are at Symphony Space in New York in September.
Look forward to hearing from you and maybe seeing you.
Thanks.
In our previous episode,
we talked about a set of TV commercials
that use behavioral research
to sell financial products
like life insurance.
It's great to think optimistically,
but let's plan for whatever the
future might bring. And this got us to thinking about how you might sell a different kind of
insurance, one that doesn't even exist yet, and what kind of ad you'd make for it. Okay, here's
what I would show. That's Steve Levitt. He's my Freakonomics friend and co-author. I would show
a sick old person, but not the way
sick old people are usually shown as being, you know, reasonably happy and fit, but what really
people who are dying look like. Deformed, can't breathe, suffering deeply. And then at the bedside
would be a bunch of children in tattered clothing clothing looking kind of hungry and seeming as if they could really use a college education or something. of pain so bad it distorts your face lying in bed in a coma
isn't worth the cost of your kids, or your grandkids, I should say,
not being able to go to college.
So this TV ad might sound something like this.
We all want to take care of Mom.
But the doctor says her treatments might cost hundreds of thousands of dollars,
and even so, she'll never fully recover.
And we've got two kids to put through college.
Millions of families are struggling with these same decisions.
Now, a new health care plan puts you in control.
You can decide if medical treatments are right for you or your loved one.
And if you decide to forego the standard treatment,
we'll put the money directly in your pocket to use for whatever you need.
College tuition, a new house,
or to take mom on one last adventure to soak up some glorious sunsets.
Thanks to Glorious Sunset Healthcare Option,
mom won't have to suffer,
and we can make decisions that make sense for our family.
Isn't it time for you to think about a glorious sunset?
Enroll today.
So, what do you think?
Is it time for you, for all of us,
to think about a glorious sunset?
On this episode, we will put this idea through its paces
and solicit a variety of opinions from economists.
I love that idea.
To physicians.
It would be a public relations nightmare.
To physicians who are also public intellectuals.
It's so cold-blooded, it's so calculating,
it's so utilitarian that it's not American.
And we hear from you, our listeners.
My name's Samu. I'm 40 years old. First, I'd like to know, who's the heartless person who
thought of this? Second of all, I think it's pretty genius, actually. From WNYC Studios, this is Freakonomics Radio, the podcast that explores the hidden side of everything.
Here's your host, Stephen Dubner.
The proposal under consideration today comes from a listener.
Send us an email.
I'm Tim Price.
I'm the chief investment officer for a midsize public pension fund.
Okay.
You want to name the public pension fund for us?
I've been asked not to.
Ah, okay.
This is a personal idea and not a organizational idea.
Fair enough.
In other words, that's a good hint that the idea we're about to discuss is so repugnant
that your firm is smart enough to not want to be anywhere near it.
Well, I shouldn't say repugnant, but it's...
Potentially unpalatable.
Potentially unpalatable.
That's a good way of putting it.
Price lives in the Bay Area.
He's in his late 30s, got a wife, two kids.
Kids are six and two. Okay. And what are their names? I'm just curious.
Sure. Calvin and Elliot. Like I said, we first heard from Tim Price via email. I asked him now
to read the email aloud. Why don't health insurance companies offer bonuses to patients
who are willing to forego standard end-of-life medical care. When a patient receives a terminal diagnosis, I have to believe that the health care companies
have actuaries and data sets that would give them guidance on what the next 6 to 24 months
of medical care would cost. For patients willing to skip this type of care, my idea is for a bonus
according to the following formula. An immediate bonus of approximately 50% of the difference
between the actuarial underwriting of standard medical care and hospice or palliative care.
The patient maintains control over the optionality, but an immediate benefit opens up to them,
one last grand vacation, a lasting legacy for the next generation, etc.
The health insurer gets an actuarial gain and makes progress towards disincentivizing
excessive consumption of health care in the final months of life.
Seems like a no-brainer to the economist in me, though my sociologist wife thinks I'm completely cold-blooded.
The idea came up, Price tells us, when he and a few colleagues were the study, you look at 40, 60, 80% of lifetime medical care is expended in the final 12 months or the end of life generally.
And once you go down that road of thinking, you know, are you optimizing quality of life or are you optimizing quantity of life?
And under the current structure, it looks like, from my perspective, you're optimizing quantity of life as a proxy for quality of life.
And how long into this conversation did you realize that a lot of people, when they first hear an idea
like this, are just going to immediately hate it?
Oh, pretty much immediately. I mean, it touches on a lot of taboos, right? I mean,
you're touching on death, you're touching on money, you're touching on healthcare,
which is clearly a third rail.
All right, Levitt, how do you like that idea,
the end-of-life, surrendering end-of-life care
for a cash rebate idea from the insurance company?
I love that idea.
I have so long railed against the kind of spending
that we do at the end of life.
And one thing that's hard about end-of-life
is someone's got to decide if it's really end of life, right?
So it's really easy after someone dies to say,
oh, that was the last month of their life.
But before the person dies, it's not so easy to tell.
And so if you leave a decision about end of life care
up to the government, then the problem is people say,
oh, no, that's death panels.
That person's not going to die.
We could still save them.
But if the patient himself or herself says, look, this is the end of my life.
I don't want this expensive care.
I'd rather have the money go to my kids or to charity,
then I think that's a really brilliant way to get around a natural impulse
to fight our concern about not giving people the kind of care
they deserve. If it's so brilliant, why haven't we seen it? Well, for starters, my hunch is it's
probably not legal and somehow you get into trouble for doing it because there's a lot of
things we don't let people do. Like we we don't really let people commit suicide, and we don't let others in most states do assisted suicide.
So there is this amazing unwillingness for the living
to let people who want to die, die.
So I think that's part of the repulsive nature of this program,
that many people would hear about it and say,
ooh, I don't like the feeling of that.
My name is Ryan, and I'm from South Carolina.
Probably, if this was enacted, it would be a firestorm of negativity from people who
weren't faced with that decision, decrying it as putting a price on human life.
There are both legal hurdles, and it would be a public relations nightmare.
That's Thomas Smith. He's an oncologist and a prominent cancer researcher.
He runs the palliative medicine program at Johns Hopkins' Sidney Kimmel Comprehensive Cancer Center.
I don't think Cigna, Aetna, Trigon really want to deal with that.
You'd have to figure out what you would do with the money you would pay the patient.
How does it get taxed state by state? How does it get taxed by the feds?
And it's a public relations nightmare because it looks like the insurance companies are trying to
keep people out of the hospital, keep them from getting their chemotherapy, which might help them,
keep them from getting their left ventricular assist device or artificial heart just to save money.
It really is a nightmare.
It's hard to sell because healthcare isn't just economics.
It's ethics. It's partly religious.
And that is...
Uwe Reinhardt. I teach economics at Princeton University.
Reinhardt is among the most prominent healthcare economists in the world.
He's thought long and hard about the many ways in which healthcare,
which has been creeping toward 20% of GDP in the U.S., is a unique animal.
It is absurd that people seem to think the market works in healthcare.
And as an economist, I say, how could any market work
when the buyers don't know prices and quality ahead of time?
You go into a hospital, you don't have a clue what you'll owe when you come out.
You don't have a clue.
They wheel in a machine.
What's this?
Echogram.
Well, how much does it cost the nurses?
How would I know? Imagine that. They go to a counter and they say, hey, it's a nice shirt.
How much is it? And the sales clerk says, how would I know? But this is how we buy health care.
That's how we buy health care in large part because consumers often don't pay the costs directly.
They're paid for by an insurer, a private firm, or in the case of Medicaid, Medicare, a government plan.
Once you bundle that lack of transparency with the end of a person's life, well, plainly, we're not just talking economics here.
But it's a good place to start.
First of all, there is a fair amount of money in end-of-life care.
That's Ezekiel Emanuel, not Rahm Emanuel, mayor of Chicago, or Ari Emanuel, co-CEO of William Morris Endeavor.
Those are his brothers. This is Zeke.
I'm vice provost of global initiatives and chair of the Department of Medical Ethics and Health Policy at the University of Pennsylvania. Emmanuel is also a physician who, you may recall, helped the White House formulate the Affordable Care Act, also known as Obamacare.
In the Medicare system, about 25, 27 percent of the Medicare budget actually goes to patients who
die in the last die within the year.
So it's big in Medicare, and that's because people who tend to die tend to be over 65 and on Medicare.
But spending a lot doesn't mean you can save a lot, and I think that's where we often get confused. we should really focus on patient and families and try to make this traumatic event as smooth
and comforting as possible. And we haven't gotten it right. And the healthcare system,
you know, instead of talking to a patient and getting it right, we sort of pound on their
chest and try to resuscitate them, even when that may not be what they want. And I think trying to
get what patients want ought to be our primary focus.
When's the last time you heard about a doctor dying in the ICU with advanced cancer or advanced heart disease or advanced congestive heart failure or emphysema?
That's Tom Smith again from Johns Hopkins.
It just doesn't happen because doctors really bargain for
how much good is this going to do me? Is it really worth it? If you look at the data on doctors,
most doctors don't want a lot of these interventions for themselves. So there is
actually a sort of paradox here that we do this for patients. But when you ask us,
how do we want to be treated? It turns out, no, that's not really for me. Leave me alone. How old are you, Dr. Emanuel?
58. 58. Now, in The Atlantic, you wrote not long ago that you only want to live
until the age of 75, and you spell out in... Well, that's not exactly what I said.
We should note that The Atlantic article was headlined, Why I Hope to Die at 75.
We should also note that writers often don't get to write their own headlines. In any case,
in the article, Emanuel spells out all the things he wouldn't want done to him. No cancer treatment,
no cardiac stress tests, certainly no pacemaker or implantable defibrillator. And I was like, you know, if I get
to 75 and everything's still firing, that's great, but I'm not trying to live forever.
It's about quality of life. And then, you know, I don't want all these interventions that are
really done for the reason of prolonging my life. So the reason I don't want the defibrillator, I wouldn't take cancer chemotherapy is there for prolonging my life. And I will say a number of
people have said to me, including my father, I might say, he says, well, you know, you'll change
your mind. And my father, unlike most people, recognizes that I can be stubborn about these
things. And he says, I think the one thing which is going to change your mind is having grandchildren. And that's an experience I have not had. And maybe he'll be right. He's a
very smart guy. How old is your dad? He's 88. So he must have taken this as a little bit of a,
hey, pops, those last 13 years, you didn't really you didn't really need him.
I mean, no, it's not that he didn't need him.
So we've had a lot a number of long discussions about this.
And he he reminds me we don't agree, but we don't agree on lots of things.
Uwe Reinhart, the Princeton economist, also has a story about his father.
Reinhart is from Germany. That's where his father was,
diagnosed with pancreatic cancer.
So I actually called that German physician
and I said, so what are you going to do about it?
And he said, nothing.
And I said, are you kidding me?
He said, no, no, no.
We make him as comfortable as we can,
but he will pass away in a couple of weeks. So I called my Harvard friend
and told him, shouldn't I fly my dad over here and you guys can do something? And he said, oh yeah,
we could do something. We could probably buy him another three, four months and he'd be in an ICU full of tubes and a lot of pain. He said,
I could do that, but do you want me to do that? And then he said, you know, this
rough German physician actually did you a great favor by simply communicating to you,
don't even tell me what to do. I'm the doc, and I'm telling you, for the patient, it is not a quality life worth doing that for.
And here's this American physician telling me, he's a very good doctor, because he didn't put that burden on your shoulder.
He took it on his shoulder.
So this is really the core of Tim Price's idea, the glorious sunset proposal.
Just because life can be medically extended, it doesn't mean that, A, it necessarily should be,
or B, that the quality of life during that extension is in any way desirable.
And yet, if you've essentially already bought and paid for all that end-of-life
treatment through your insurance plan, aren't you entitled to something?
Hello, my name is David Schlesinger. I'm 38 years old, and I live in Oregon, Wisconsin.
I would take the cash rebate from the insurance company, and I would seek treatment for my
condition in a country that had significantly lower medical costs than the United States, possibly India or parts of Europe.
Coming up on Freakonomics Radio, would the glorious sunset plan be just another form of health care rationing?
A very rich guy who runs a hedge fund wouldn't even consider that deal. Because what you're talking about,
maybe $500,000, it's just behind the decimal for what these guys are worth.
And things are changing, subtly, but they are changing, in how our healthcare system looks at death. You know, as I like to say, talking about the end of life is the hardest thing a doctor does. The proposal on the table today, we are calling it the Glorious Sunset Plan,
would allow a terminally ill patient to forego standard end-of-life care
in exchange for a cash rebate from his or her insurance provider.
A lot of people who listen to this program thought this idea might not work so well. My name's Diane. I'm 34 and I'm in Chicago.
I don't know how you're going to get the insurance companies to agree to it and how you smooth out
the fine lines of what happens if a particular patient changes their mind or if they get
admitted to the hospital
while they're found unconscious or something like that.
Hi, Freakonomics.
My name is Israel DeBruin, and I'm from Milwaukee.
And right away when I heard your question,
the first thing that I thought about
was that there would be some people out there
who didn't really feel like they had much of a choice
in the matter and would feel obligated to make the choice
to take the cash rebate
because of their financial circumstances
or their family's financial circumstances.
You know, I could even imagine it coming
because it is just another form of rationing health care
or life years by income class, right?
That's Uwe Reinhart, the health care economist.
A very rich guy who runs a hedge fund wouldn't even consider that deal.
Because what you're talking about, maybe $500,000,
it's just behind the decimal for what these guys are worth.
While if someone were lower middle class,
they would have a very tortured debate
around the dinner table, should we do this?
Let's pretend for a minute that you are not an economics professor,
but that you are, let's say, the CEO of a private health care insurance provider.
Would you even consider trying to craft a proposal
to make this kind of offer to your customers?
You know, I wouldn't for the simple reason,
what's in it for you?
As an insurer, you are just passing through
the hospital and doctor bills
and you get a little margin on them.
It's actually usually 3% to 5%.
So your incentive is actually, in many ways,
to increase health spending, right?
Because then you get your 3% on a higher throughput,
which is why these guys traditionally have never regulated
or controlled costs at all.
So there's a lot going against our glorious sunset plan, isn't there?
The economics, the healthcare rationing argument.
But I bet that even more people would be turned off by its resemblance,
its sort of resemblance at least, to the infamous death panel debate.
Ezekiel, Dr. Ezekiel Emanuel.
Dr. Ezekiel Emanuel believes that we should calculate the value of a human life and the amount we should spend to keep that life alive.
And he is said to be the architect of Obamacare.
He's a respected doctor, but he's been under a lot of fire since this law was born.
This is Ezekiel Emanuel.
You were very involved in the formulation of the Affordable Care Act.
One of the most controversial issues, whether warranted or not, was the so-called death panel formulation of the way that end-of-life care would be kind of accounted for and dealt with and other end-of-life care issues in the Medicare system.
Let me clarify that.
Please do.
There was never, ever, ever in any draft of the Affordable Care Act anything about end-of-life care.
It never made it into the draft.
What ended up happening is that there were some ideas floated around and discussions had,
and that people said, well, they're going to introduce death panels
into the bill. Discussions, including on the other side of the aisle, from what I recall. Yes.
Yes. Oh, absolutely. I mean, you know, the great irony of the whole thing is that Newt Gingrich
had been a long advocate of advanced directives and actually having doctors talk to patients about advanced directives.
Johnny Isakson, a senator from Georgia during that time, similarly had introduced a piece of legislation exactly like what was being discussed in terms of encouraging doctors to have conversations, paying doctors.
Sarah Palin, when she was governor of Alaska, had a whole month devoted to getting Alaskans to fill out advanced director.
So the Republican Party had always endorsed this until it became convenient not to endorse it and
to vilify it. That was then. Now, well, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services
has just proposed a regulation that would actually pay doctors to do nothing more than have a conversation with patients about their impending death.
You know, talking about the end of life is the hardest thing a doctor does.
And it's emotionally charged. It's physically draining. It takes time. And we need to recognize
increasingly that these kind of conversations, they require a lot of skill, as much skill as maybe doing a colonoscopy or doing a surgical procedure.
It's not physical, manual skill.
It's not about dexterity.
But it is about something probably just as important, if not more important.
It's about emotional understanding of patients.
And it ought to be compensated the way we compensate
for other skills and talents. There's a potential that Medicare will pay doctors like me
a fee for spending a really difficult hour talking with patients about end-of-life care.
That's the oncologist Tom Smith. None of that is trying to get people not to be coded, not to be in the hospital,
but just to discern their wishes.
Because we can't honor people's wishes unless we know what they are about resuscitation,
being on a ventilator, being on dialysis.
So that's a start.
Smith acknowledges the potential conflict of interest
in how some doctors have historically treated dying patients.
We've worried a lot that the incentives are misaligned for the use of chemotherapy in the last month of life because up until recently, oncologists got paid a lot more to give chemotherapy
than they did to spend time talking with patients. But when Ronan Kelly and I actually looked at the
patterns of chemotherapy use around the world, they were exactly the same.
Somewhere between 20 and 30 percent of all patients in Spain, Portugal, Japan, Italy,
and the U.S. get chemotherapy in the last month of life. And it bore absolutely no relationship
to the fact that the oncologist did or did not make money on it. I can't speak to hospitals, but oncologists like me don't give chemotherapy to make money.
So, as a doctor who's had to tell too many people
that their time has come,
and that yes, he can give them some expensive
and not very effective and often very punishing drugs,
Tom Smith understands where Tim Price, our listener, is coming from
with his proposal to let people opt out and split the unspent dollars with the insurance company.
It sounds good on paper. I agree with him that it sounds like it should work.
Smith, in fact, once toyed with a similar idea for treating terminal lung cancer patients.
We actually tried to set up an experiment like that back in the mid-1990s
when, much like now, costs of health care, particularly cancer care, were escalating through the roof.
There were two primary options.
One was to stay in your regular fee-for-service insurance.
And the second was to get a capitated indemnity payment.
Capitation means the health care provider
receives a fixed fee for treating each patient.
At the time of Smith's experiment, it was $18,000.
Because that's what we calculated
the average lung cancer patient would spend
on chemo and radiation in the last 12 months of life.
It's, you know, triple that now.
So we set up the trial.
The patients who went on the indemnity arm, they'd get the $18,000.
They got the best supportive care or hospice care that could be provided.
And they would spend the $18,000 on chemo or radiation if they wanted to,
or they could keep it and use it for a grandkid's, or buy a boat, go on vacation.
Smith was enthusiastic about the idea, but...
It didn't work for a couple of reasons.
The first reason...
Our patients were actually interested, but their doctor providers weren't.
It's pretty hard to look at those two very different choices and decide what to do.
It's very difficult trying to decide, first of all, when somebody's going to die.
We are actually pretty good at making guesses for populations,
but for each individual person, it can be really hard to tell
when they are in a downward spiral and going to die.
There was a second reason.
It's really hard for consumers, also known as people with an illness, and their families to figure out what's the best treatment for them.
We thought it would force doctors and patients to really bargain on either the prices
or to bargain on how effective is this? What's its chance of really
shrinking my cancer? What's its chance of making me live longer? How much longer will I live?
What will my quality of life be? Those are all really good questions, and we think those should
be asked by anybody contemplating non-curative therapy anyway.
These are really tough conversations to have, and when you add in the cost, it gets even tougher.
Tom Smith would propose something completely different.
I would propose that doctors be very honest with their patients about what's going to happen to them. And we're actually
working on a temporary tattoo that goes on the doctor's inner left forearm. And the first question
you look at is, how do you like to get medical information? And number two is, what's your
understanding of your situation? Number three is, what's important to you? Number four is, what are you
hoping for? And number five is, have you thought about a time when you might be sicker, when you
might need an advanced directive or living will? If you do that, if you have that conversation,
it really changes how people pursue end-of-life care. And it gets regular people and their families
actually behaving the way that doctors do.
Because doctors really bargain for
how much good is this going to do me?
Is it really worth it?
In Smith's experience, the failure to talk about death,
even with a patient who's plainly dying, is a big problem.
He'd like to see more widespread palliative care that is easing the symptoms of serious illness,
either parallel to or instead of treating the illness itself.
It turns out if you get palliative care involved early, like at the start of a diagnosis of advanced cancer,
at the start of bad heart failure, at the start of when somebody needs a heart transplant,
the whole scenario changes.
People have better pain and symptom management.
Their families are markedly less distressed.
They end up living longer.
That's right, living longer, not shorter.
And a good side effect is that most end-of-life hospitalizations are avoided.
People really don't come to the hospital because they want to.
They come to the hospital because it's 3 o'clock on a Thursday night,
and their loved one is short of breath
or having pain and they don't know what to do. How much better it would be if you could have had
a palliative care team available to them and a hospice nurse come out and see them on Tuesday
at four o'clock in the afternoon, adjust their pain medicines, adjust their shortness of breath medicines, so they didn't need to come to the hospital.
And that's one way that you can actually reduce health care costs substantially
in the last month or two of life while actually improving care.
And so, for a lot of reasons, Tom Smith cannot sign off on Tim Price's proposal.
Isn't it time for you to think about a glorious sunset in role today?
Because it's not just about medicine or economics or ethics or religion, even politics.
It's about all of them and more.
I think these are really, really tough decisions. It's about all of them and more. of treatments for each disease, have external bodies rather than an
individual doctor and patient decide what's good quality of care, start
monitoring ourselves, start providing the best care that we can based on actual
measurements rather than based on what we think, and hold ourselves accountable.
It's going to get more and more difficult with the amazing
increase in cost of drugs. I mean, some of the new drugs are two and three times what they've
ever been before. And that would exhaust most medical savings accounts very quickly.
That's where it's time for us as a society to sit down and figure out how much we should be spending on cancer
at the end of life versus curative cancer therapy, heart disease therapies, and for my pediatrician
wife, making sure that every kid gets a good head start, making sure that every kid gets
their vaccinations, making sure that we give
people a decent chance to succeed in this life.
Tim Price, for his part, still thinks the idea has merit.
So I'm going to ask you to envision a horrible scenario that involves you and your death.
You can handle it or no?
I can handle it.
All right.
So you're in your late 30s.
You said you have two young kids, six and two, correct?
Yep. All right. So you're in your late 30s. You said you have two young kids, six and two, correct? Yep.
All right.
So let's say, and I hate to even say this in a way because it feels like it's tempting fate, but I don't really believe in that.
So I'm going to go ahead and say, let's say, God forbid, everybody forbid, whatever you believe in, forbid that you, Tim Price, are diagnosed with something like lung cancer.
Okay. Tomorrow. that you, Tim Price, are diagnosed with something like lung cancer, okay, tomorrow. And you're told that you have probably six months to live. And you're told that with the available treatments,
you might have nine months to live. Let's just say those are the numbers. And you're not paying
for those treatments. Those are covered theoretically by your insurance. But I say to you, Tim,
if you decide to forego that standard treatment,
I, the insurance provider,
will essentially split the cost with you.
Well, I think you certainly have to take a look
at what the difference in your life would be
with treatment without.
What the probability is that those additional months are going to
be what I would consider to be valuable months. Um, am I going to be able to
be with my family, be with my sons, uh, get more out of it, Or am I going to be, you know, am I going to be incapacitated and not able to engage and interact with my family?
Versus what would those additional dollars allow me to do today, over the next couple of weeks,
over the next couple of months. I don't know
if I would do it or not, but I know I would like the option of doing that, of having that
conversation with my wife and thinking about kind of the legacy I want to leave for my family.
I think that would be a long and difficult conversation.
You know, it's your life is yours, but it's a little bit belongs to everybody you interact with. Thank you. is produced by Greg Rosalski. Our staff also includes Irva Gunja, Jake Howitt, Merit Jacob,
Christopher Wirth,
Caitlin Pierce,
Alison Hockenberry,
Emma Morgenstern,
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