We thank Naoki Aizawa, Diane Alexander, Gadi Barlevy, Lori Beaman, Giulia Brancaccio, David Dranove, Amy Finkelstein, Jonathan Gruber, Martin Hackmann, Gaston Illanes, Karen Kopecky, Zachary Levin, Matt Notowidigdo, Maria Polyakova, Dan Sacks, Hannes Schwandt, Mark Shepard, Jonathan Skinner, Amanda Starc, Udayan Vaidya, and participants in seminars at Dartmouth College, Emory University, the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago, the Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland, the Federal Reserve Board, Gies College of Business, Kansas State University, London School of Economics, Marquette College of Business Administration, Notre Dame, Northwestern Pritzker School of Law, NYU Stern School of Business, University of California San Diego, University of Chicago, University of Illinois Chicago, University of Michigan, Wisconsin Business School, the 2022 American Society of Health Economists Annual Conference, the 2022 BFI Women in Empirical Microeconomics Conference, the 2023 BFI Health Economics Initiative Annual Conference, the 2023 Micro and Macro Labor Economics Conference at the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco, the 2024 North American Winter Meeting of the Econometric Society, the 2024 Conference of the Health Economics and Policy Innovation Collaborative (HEPIC) at Georgia Tech, the 2024 NBER Summer Institute (Economics of Health), the 2024 Conference of the Texas Health Economist Network (TEXHEN) at University of Texas at San Antonio, and the 2025 Kansas Health Economics Conference (KHEC) at University of Kansas for helpful feedback. Eilidh Geddes acknowledges financial support from the National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship under Grant NSF DGE-1842165. All errors are our own. The views expressed herein are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views of the National Bureau of Economic Research.