March 6
Zach Dyer reads the news of this week: the current epidemic of the flipper of birds is growing despite the mass slaughter of infected poultry, and the Trump administration adopts the game of conservative policy known as the Project 2025.
February 27
Katheryn Houghton reads the news of this week: the Republicans in the Congress are considering cups in Medicaid, and the food supplements industry hopes to take the new role of RFK Jr. as head of the Ministry of Health and Social Services.
February 20
Jackie Fortiér reads this week’s news: some states are turning to laundromats to reach people who could qualify for programs such as Medicaid and food assistance, and cross -border telehealth helps Hispanophone agricultural workers.
February 13
Sam Whitehead reads this week’s news: hospital systems are looking for ways to help people in the United States without legal status, and some schools say that endowment shortages are difficult to meet the needs of diabetic students who use continuous glucose monitors.
February 6
Katheryn Houghton provides this week’s news: pediatricians believe that a drop in infant vaccination rates could generate a return of clarification of preventive vaccination, and experts in drug addiction say that the legalization of sports betting has disadvantages for health.
January 30
Renu Rayasam provides this week’s news: there are still no proven therapies for long covids despite more than a billion dollars in federal funding, and some hospitals affect dogs to work alongside medical staff in hospitals to help them cope with professional and stress.
January 23
This week on the KFF Health News Minute: stable accommodation is rare for an increasing number of homeless elderly people, and insurers sometimes deny the coverage of prosthetic members by deeming them experimental or not medically necessary.
January 16
This week on the KFF Health News Minute: IA tools in medicine may not save money, and credit agencies can no longer include medical debt on credit reports.
January 9
This week on the KFF Health News Minute: small interventions in the doctor’s office, such as the abolition of a splendor, can be presented as surgeries, and billing problems with the Indian health service leave the Amerindian communities with much higher medical debt than the national average.
January 2
This week at the KFF Health News Minute: Hyperthermia death increases, and millions of people could lose Medicaid if the congress controlled by the republican actually follows the reductions proposed to federal funding.
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