Listen to the latest “Kff Health News Minute”
June 26
Jackie Fortiér Week News: The gatherings called “Memory Cafés” people with dementia and their care providers can help reduce depression and isolation, and will make the end of the horizon to some of the affordable prices of sponsorship of ACA plans much more expensive.
June 19
Zach Dyer Akhbar week reads: Using cannabis can be more dangerous for the elderly, and research shows that Covid vaccines in pregnancy can protect pregnant women as well as newborns.
June 12
Sam Whitheid’s news is read: insufficient communication infrastructure hurts the health of rural Americans, and the symptoms of the ministry may seem moderate but need medical treatment.
June 5
Catherine Hutton reads the week’s news: More than 100 rural hospitals have stopped handing over children since 2021, and the federal government has failed to warn the public from the main E. Coli outbreak.
May 29
Jackie Fortier reads the week’s news: The new programs learned black children to swim competitively and help their parents learn as well, and people are often deprived of basic health care prison at the end of their lives.
May 22nd
Zach Dyer reads this week’s news: Federal financing discounts wandering in HIV prevention programs, and financial pressure leads to closing clinics that provide abortion care even in the states where they are legal.
May 15
Sam Whitehead reads this week’s news: The use of “Elderspeak” with the elderly can be harmful, and independent pharmacists may worry that the customs tariff may force them to close.
May 8
Jackie Fortiér reads this week’s news: CPR training and fibrillation can be given skills to help others stay survived, and doctors use a distance distance to help thousands of patients every month to care for miscarriage in the states that are banned.
May 1
Katheryn Houghton Weekend News: You find a new poll that more Americans hear false claims about the measles and the vaccine that prevents it, and the changes in financing federal health make defenders worry that the White House is removing fighting addiction.
April 24
Zach Dyer reads this week’s news: Convention medicine can exacerbate a doctor’s shortage in rural areas, and the Trump administration has canceled the granting of medical research that it says is not in its priority.
April 17
Sam Whitheid reads this week’s news: Families on home health assistants can pay the price of Trump administration policies to combat migrants, and some local health departments cancel the prescribed services because the federal government is trying to restore health grants.
April 10
Jackie Fortier reads this week’s news: The Trump administration is back away from the accommodation of persons with disabilities, and a charity is about to eliminate $ 30 billion in medical debts, but that will not prevent Americans from benefiting more.
April 3
Katheryn Houghton will read this week’s news: The Trump administration may stop using the “Housing First” approach to end the displacement, and the Medicaid bases can force persons with disabilities not to work in order to maintain the services they need.
March 27
Zach Dyer provides news this week: Federal organizers want to collect more data to see why some CT checks have made much more than others, and opposition to Marna vaccines may end promising efforts to treat diseases including pancreatic cancer.
March 20
Jackie Fortiér reads this week’s news: The recent firefighting release in the centers of control and prevention of diseases may make it difficult to control the outbreak of infectious diseases, and storage disorder can be particularly dangerous for the elderly.
March 13
Sam Whitehaid reads this week’s news: Trump voters may prefer government regulations to reduce health care costs, and health workers are trained in the law to deal with possible raids by immigration and customs staff in healthcare places.
March 6
Zach Dyer reads this week’s news: The outbreak of the current bird flu is gaining momentum despite the mass execution of the affected poultry, and the Trump administration adopts the conservative play book known as the project 2025.
February 27
Catherine Hutton reads this week’s news: Republicans in the Congress study the discounts offered by Medikid, and hopes to make nutritional supplements to obtain the role of RFK JR. New as head of the Ministry of Health and Humanitarian Services.
February 20
Jackie Fortier reads this week’s news: Some states are heading to laundries to reach people who can qualify for programs including medicaid and food assistance, and health care helps a distance across the Spanish -speaking agricultural workers.
February 13
Sam Whitehaid reads this week’s news: Hospital systems are looking for ways to help people in the United States without legal status obtaining care, and some schools say that a lack of employment makes it difficult to meet the needs of students with diabetes who use continuous glucose screens.
February 6
Katheryn Houghton provides news this week: Pediatricians believe that the decrease in childhood vaccination rates can lead to the return of retailer diseases, and addiction experts say that the legalization of sports betting has health strains.
January 30
Renu Rayasam provides news this week: There are yet no proven treatments for Long Covid despite more than a billion dollars of federal financing, and some hospitals help dogs to work alongside the medical staff in hospitals to help them deal with fatigue and stress.
January 23
This week in the KFF Health News: Stably housing is rare for an increasing number of homeless elderly, and insurance companies deny covering compensatory parties by considering them experimental or unnecessary medical aspects.
January 16
This week on the KFF Health News minute: Artificial intelligence tools may not provide money, and credit agencies are no longer able to include medical debts on credit reports.
January 9
This week in the KFF Health News minute: Small interventions in the doctor’s office, such as removing the fragment, such as surgeries, and the problems of bills with Indian health service can leave original American societies with much higher medical debts than the national average.
January 2
This week in the KFF Health News minute: The number of deaths increases, and millions of people may lose Medicaid if the next Republican Congress, followed by the proposed cuts of federal financing.
KFF Health News is available every Thursday on CBS News Radio.
KFF Health News It is a national news room that produces in-depth press on health issues and is one of the basic operating programs in KFF-independent source of health policy research, polling, and journalism. Learn more about KFF.
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