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Showing 181-200 of 330 results for "80/200"

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First Flu Death Of The Season Is An Unvaccinated Child From Florida

October 16, 2018 Morning Briefing

Florida health officials have not revealed the name of the child or where the child lived, but they are saying he or she was healthy before getting the flu. The CDC — which has reported almost 200 children were listed among last year’s 80,000 flu fatalities — is urging everyone to get a flu shot.

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How A Drug Company Under Pressure For High Prices Ratchets Up Political Activity

By Jay Hancock and Elizabeth Lucas April 30, 2018 KFF Health News Original

Denmark-based drugmaker Novo Nordisk has invested more in lobbying and doubled political donations since 2015.

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Trump Administration Proposes Rule To Loosen Curbs On Short-Term Health Plans

By Julie Appleby February 20, 2018 KFF Health News Original

The policy change is likely to entice younger and healthier people from the general insurance pool by allowing a range of lower-cost options that don’t include all the benefits required by the federal health law.

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La administración Trump propone norma para planes de salud de corto plazo

By Julie Appleby February 20, 2018 KFF Health News Original

Estos planes durarían doce meses. Son más accesibles, pero su cobertura es más limitada. Y pueden rechazar a personas con condiciones preexistentes.

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New Technologies Help Seniors Age In Place — And Not Feel Alone

By Gabi Redford March 12, 2018 KFF Health News Original

Motion sensors, Alexa and other voice-assistive technologies give seniors the tools they need to live independently and safely.

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Cut In Federal Subsidies Threatens Basic Health Programs In N.Y., Minn.

By Michelle Andrews February 6, 2018 KFF Health News Original

President Donald Trump’s decision to stop paying cost-sharing reduction subsidies means the federal government will reduce its funding of the Basic Health Program that provides low-cost coverage to more than 800,000 low-income people in those two states.

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Doctors Learn How To Talk To Patients About Dying

By Melissa Bailey February 12, 2018 KFF Health News Original

Clinicians can be so focused on fixing problems and saving lives that they often avoid talking to patients about their prognosis.

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Indiana Medicaid Drops 25K From Coverage For Failing To Pay Premiums

By Phil Galewitz February 1, 2018 KFF Health News Original

The state branded its Medicaid expansion with some key conservative policies, and officials and advocates across the country are keenly watching the results.

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Médicos aprenden a hablar con sus pacientes sobre el final de la vida

By Melissa Bailey February 12, 2018 KFF Health News Original

Una guía busca ayudar a los médicos a conversar con sus pacientes terminales sobre un tema crítico que no siempre se aborda de la mejor manera.

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Nuevas tecnologías ayudan a abuelos a vivir solos, y sin riesgos

By Gabi Redford March 12, 2018 KFF Health News Original

Dispositivos como Alexa y Amazon Echo, y nuevas aplicaciones ayudan a los adultos mayores a vivir de manera independiente, controlando si toman la medicación y hasta la temperatura del hogar.

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FDA Chief Says He’s Open To Rethinking Incentives On Orphan Drugs

By Sarah Jane Tribble December 22, 2017 KFF Health News Original

The FDA’s Scott Gottlieb says the agency is focused on the big picture, and he wants to know why pharma churns out drugs for some rare diseases but not for others.

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Cities, Counties and Schools Sidestep FDA Canadian Drug Crackdown, Saving Millions

By Phil Galewitz December 8, 2017 KFF Health News Original

Medicines are up to 80 percent cheaper north of the border and overseas, so U.S. localities are greasing a pharmaceutical pipeline that the feds warn is illegal and possibly unsafe.

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A Battered Doctor, A Slain Patient And A Family’s Quest For Answers

By Brian Rinker March 13, 2018 KFF Health News Original

An addiction-treatment physician fatally shot a troubled ex-Marine after the man pummeled him inside his California office, police records show. The tragedy illustrates how the limited number of clinics available to prescribe buprenorphine, a drug that all but erases opioid withdrawal, can become crowded, chaotic and dangerous.

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Patients With Rare Diseases And Congress Square Off Over Orphan Drug Tax Credits

By Sarah Jane Tribble November 30, 2017 KFF Health News Original

The House and Senate want to reduce or eliminate federal tax credits for “orphan drugs” used to treat rare diseases, but patients are fighting against the plan.

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Patient Advocacy Groups Take In Millions From Drugmakers. Is There A Payback?

By Emily Kopp and Sydney Lupkin and Elizabeth Lucas April 6, 2018 KFF Health News Original

Kaiser Health News launches “Pre$cription for Power,” a groundbreaking database to expose Big Pharma’s ties to patient groups.

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Unlocked And Loaded: Families Confront Dementia And Guns

By JoNel Aleccia and Melissa Bailey Photos by Heidi de Marco, Frank Carlson, PBS NewsHour and Randall Hill June 25, 2018 KFF Health News Original

As more Americans are diagnosed with dementia, families who have firearms struggle with ways to stay safe. A KHN investigation uncovered dozens of cases of deaths and injuries.

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Vaccine Shortage Complicates Efforts To Quell Hepatitis A Outbreaks

By Stephanie O'Neill November 14, 2017 KFF Health News Original

The two FDA-approved manufacturers of the vaccine, hit by an unexpected spike in demand, have had difficulty keeping pace. In San Diego County, home to the deadliest outbreak in the nation, officials are postponing a campaign to give at-risk residents the second of two doses.

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Tending To Patients As Her New Home Burns

By April Dembosky, KQED October 16, 2017 KFF Health News Original

ICU nurse Julayne Smithson had only a few minutes to grab some things from her recently purchased home a block from the Santa Rosa hospital. Then she rushed back to help evacuate patients and has scarcely stopped working since.

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Flurry Of Federal And State Probes Target Insulin Drugmakers And Pharma Middlemen

By Sarah Jane Tribble October 30, 2017 KFF Health News Original

Over the past two years, a powerful federal prosecutor and several state attorneys general have launched investigations related to diabetes drugs.

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Without Price Breaks, Rural Hospitals Struggle To Stock Costly, Lifesaving Drugs

By Sarah Jane Tribble September 18, 2017 KFF Health News Original

A federal drug program blocks rural hospitals from getting discounts on rare-disease drugs, forcing staff to cut back on supplies of lifesaving medicines.

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