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Showing 5321-5340 of 131,637 results

Florida Abortion Ballot Will Include Peculiar Financial Language

August 22, 2024 Morning Briefing

The wording of the measure, which was approved by the state’s Supreme Court, calls into question whether Floridians will wind up paying for the procedure. Meanwhile, health care providers are finding themselves in difficult positions after the U.S. Supreme Court declined to weigh in on the Emergency Medical Treatment and Labor Act.

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HHS Report Warns Of Risks For Kids From Too Much Fluoride In Water

August 22, 2024 Morning Briefing

The report found, “with moderate confidence,” that fluoride in drinking water at twice the recommended limit may be linked to lower IQ in kids. Meanwhile, the U.S. Navy has received over 540,000 compensation claims related to contaminated water at North Carolina’s Camp Lejeune.

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Study Details Long Covid Symptoms In Kids — And They Differ From Adults

August 22, 2024 Morning Briefing

The symptoms include back or neck pain, trouble with focus, fear of crowded spaces, and refusal to go to school, researchers determined. Also, an updated covid vaccine might be available within days.

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First Edition: Thursday, Aug. 22, 2024

August 22, 2024 Morning Briefing

Today’s early morning highlights from the major news organizations.

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A close-up photograph of a stethoscope and wooden gavel, with a person using a laptop computer in the background.

Biden Administration Blocks Two Private Sector Enrollment Sites From ACA Marketplace

By Julie Appleby August 22, 2024 KFF Health News Original

Regulators have been under the gun to curb unauthorized Obamacare enrollment and switching of plans. Separately, a pending lawsuit was amended with additional defendants and new allegations regarding tactics to garner greater ACA sales commissions.

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The back of a row of apartments where some of the windows are boarded up. A sidewalk runs parallel to the building.

A Teen’s Murder, Mold in the Walls: Unfulfilled Promises Haunt Public Housing

By Fred Clasen-Kelly and Renuka Rayasam August 22, 2024 KFF Health News Original

For years, federal lawmakers have failed to deliver the money needed to fix derelict public housing, leaving tenants — mostly people of color and families with low incomes — living with mold and gun violence that has had lasting health consequences.

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The Rapidly Evolving Field of Street Medicine

By Angela Hart August 21, 2024 KFF Health News Original

The rapidly evolving field of street medicine — the practice of providing health care to homeless people living outside — is getting a jolt in California with a new player: a medical group devoted exclusively to homeless people. And it’s actually making money. Sachin Jain, who worked on federal Medicaid policy during his tenure in […]

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As Cancer Afflicts Younger Generations, Employers Wary Of Expenses Ahead

August 21, 2024 Morning Briefing

In terms of health care costs, catastrophic claims and specialty medications are driving up increases, a survey has found. Meanwhile, in a study conducted during the covid pandemic, researchers found that playing video games does indeed have health benefits.

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Mpox Cases Suspected In Travelers To Argentina And Thailand

August 21, 2024 Morning Briefing

Argentinian authorities have quarantined a cargo ship and Thai officials are monitoring dozens of people as both countries aim to stop the new fast-spreading variant of the disease. Meanwhile, Africa is almost ready to roll out mpox vaccinations.

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Viewpoints: Aging Doesn’t Have To Mean Losing Cognitive Function; Cancer Shouldn’t Bankrupt People

August 21, 2024 Morning Briefing

Editorial writers discuss these public health issues.

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New Jersey Forgives $100M In Medical Debt For Nearly 50,000 People

August 21, 2024 Morning Briefing

The initiative, announced Tuesday by Gov. Phil Murphy, a Democrat, will be one of the largest efforts by a state to help people unable to pay medical bills. Also in the news: how Maine’s deadliest shooting could have been averted; another measles case in Georgia; and more.

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Morning Briefing for Wednesday, August 21, 2024

August 21, 2024 Morning Briefing

Bill disputes, HIV, abortion ballot measures, obesity drugs, IVF, long cancer medical debt, mpox, cancer in younger people, and more

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Abortion Measures Make The Ballots In Arizona, Montana

August 21, 2024 Morning Briefing

Protections of abortion rights until fetal viability in the state constitutions of both states will be decided by voters this November after separate decisions by the Arizona Supreme Court and the Montana Secretary of State.

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Democratic Convention: Abortion, IVF At Top Of Speakers’ Minds On Day 2

August 21, 2024 Morning Briefing

Kate Cox, who made headlines after being forced to leave Texas to have an abortion, said during the Texas roll call that she is pregnant again. Plus, former President Barack Obama cracks a joke about the name of Obamacare.

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Zepbound Appears To Dramatically Lower Risk Of Developing Diabetes

August 21, 2024 Morning Briefing

Eli Lilly says that its Phase 3 trial data show that people with prediabetes who took the company’s obesity drug had a 93% lower risk of progressing to diabetes as opposed to the people in the study who took the placebo.

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FTC Lacks The Authority To Ban Noncompete Deals, Federal Judge Rules

August 21, 2024 Morning Briefing

Many health care organizations include noncompete agreements in job contracts, Modern Healthcare reminds us. Also in industry news: electronic health record company Epic; Steward Health; Baptist Health and Florida Blue; Molina Healthcare; and more.

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J&J Treatment For Most Common Type Of Lung Cancer Wins FDA Approval

August 21, 2024 Morning Briefing

The treatment for non-small cell lung cancer is a non-chemotherapy combination of J&J’s cancer drug Rybrevant and existing drug lazertinib. Meanwhile, a judge ruled that lawsuits claiming Tylenol causes ADHD in children of mothers who took the drug in pregnancy can’t proceed.

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First Edition: Wednesday, Aug. 21, 2024

August 21, 2024 Morning Briefing

Today’s early morning highlights from the major news organizations.

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A photo of a woman wearing a mask and gloved hands reaching for medical supplies.

Cautious Optimism in San Francisco as New Cases of HIV in Latinos Decrease

By Vanessa G. Sánchez Updated August 22, 2024 Originally Published August 21, 2024 KFF Health News Original

New HIV diagnoses have decreased among Latinos in San Francisco, potentially marking the first time in five years that the group hasn’t accounted for the largest number of new cases. Public health experts express cautious optimism, but outreach workers warn that many Latinos still struggle to find testing and treatment.

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A photo of a woman standing outside with green foliage behind her.

Patient Underwent One Surgery but Was Billed for Two. Even After Being Sued, She Refused To Pay.

By Tony Leys August 21, 2024 KFF Health News Original

A collection agency sought court authority to garnish a patient’s wages to pay a disputed surgery bill. But after the patient showed up in court to argue the bill was bogus, the judge declined to let the bill collector seize her money.

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