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Showing 121-140 of 232 results for "Sarah Varney"

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Marihuana: con leyes más flexibles, médicos aconsejan a embarazadas no fumar

By Sarah Varney January 31, 2018 KFF Health News Original

Muchas embarazadas, especialmente las más jóvenes, consumen marihuana durante la gestación. Pero los médicos enfatizan los riesgos que acarrea para el niño este hábito.

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Inside The Global Race To Deliver A Vital Radioactive Isotope Used To Detect Cancer

By Sarah Varney January 16, 2018 KFF Health News Original

Moly-99, as it’s called, is created in just six government-owned nuclear research reactors — none in North America — raising concerns about the reliability of the supply.

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Maine Voters Chose Medicaid Expansion. Why Is Their Governor Resisting?

By Sarah Varney January 5, 2018 KFF Health News Original

Even though voters in Maine decided to expand Medicaid through a ballot measure, the law’s fate is still unclear. Gov. Paul LePage says the Legislature must find funds for it without raising taxes. Advocates say the law is on their side and expansion must be implemented.

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Texans With HIV Cope With Homes And Medicines Ruined By Hurricane Harvey

By Sarah Varney December 1, 2017 KFF Health News Original

The hurricane closed pharmacies and clinics for a week or longer. Floodwaters spoiled drugs. People who fled to other states couldn’t get their prescriptions filled for HIV medicine.

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Empeora la salud de trabajadores agrícolas, a medida que la fuerza de trabajo envejece

By Sarah Varney December 7, 2017 KFF Health News Original

Con una migración en baja, hoy en día la edad promedio del trabajador agrícola en California, 90 por ciento de ellos hispanos, es de 45 años. Enfrentan más problemas de salud.

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Health Risks To Farmworkers Increase As Workforce Ages

By Sarah Varney December 7, 2017 KFF Health News Original

Harvesting U.S. crops has been left to an aging population of farmworkers whose health has suffered from decades of hard labor. Older workers have a greater chance of getting injured and of developing chronic illnesses.

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Readers And Tweeters Add Two Cents On Amazon Venture To Repackage Health Care

February 6, 2018 KFF Health News Original

Kaiser Health News gives readers a chance to comment on a recent batch of stories.

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For Some Refugees, Women’s Health Care Is A Culture Shock

By Sarah Varney September 28, 2017 KFF Health News Original

Refugee women from conservative Muslim countries can be shocked by some U.S. medical conventions — like trusting a male doctor to care for them.

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Dispositivos que salvan vidas en los Estados Unidos se fabrican en México

By Sarah Varney April 3, 2017 KFF Health News Original

Casi todos los estadounidenses con marcapasos -y personas en todo el mundo- caminan portando partes fabricadas en Tijuana, México, en donde se ha creado una industria que podría estar en riesgo si la administración Trump cambia el juego del comercio global.

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Also Made In Mexico: Lifesaving Devices

By Sarah Varney April 3, 2017 KFF Health News Original

The medical supply industry makes a particularly revelatory case study of the difficulties of untangling global trade.

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Hospitals, Both Rural And Urban, Dread Losing Ground With Health Law Repeal

By Sarah Varney February 28, 2017 KFF Health News Original

Under the Affordable Care Act, hospitals made a high-stakes trade of massive cuts in federal aid in exchange for millions of newly insured customers. Now that deal is in jeopardy.

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Tackling Patients’ Social Problems Can Cut Health Costs

By Sarah Varney January 23, 2017 KFF Health News Original

Intense, “high touch” care that focuses on housing as well as health care brings down medical costs for the most expensive patients. But it’s been hard to replicate successful programs.

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Obama’s Health Care Legacy: A Landmark Becomes A Question Mark

By Sarah Varney January 10, 2017 KFF Health News Original

President Barack Obama succeeded where many other presidents failed, but now the fate of the Affordable Care Act rests with President-elect Donald Trump.

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Medicaid Is Balm And Benefit For Victims Of Gun Violence

By Sarah Varney December 2, 2016 KFF Health News Original

Young men injured by gunshot wounds often lacked insurance and went for years without proper follow-up care. The health law’s Medicaid expansion, in doubt since the election, changed that in many of the states with the most gun violence.

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Uninsured In Coal Country: Desperate Americans Still Turn To Volunteer Clinics

By Sarah Varney November 7, 2016 KFF Health News Original

Dire dental needs and other health problems keep Remote Area Medical’s pop-up free clinics busy in states like Virginia that haven’t expanded Medicaid. 

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An Idea Borrowed From South Africa: Ordinary Citizens Fill Gaps In Health Care

By Sarah Varney October 20, 2016 KFF Health News Original

A New York group seeks to show that a health coach who is also a neighbor can help patients and save money.

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In Arizona, Health Law’s Gains And Losses Play In Presidential Race

By Sarah Varney September 23, 2016 KFF Health News Original

Clinton has offered detailed plans to preserve and expand the law, while Trump has vowed to “repeal and replace Obamacare so quickly.”

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As The For-Profit World Moves Into An Elder Care Program, Some Worry

By Sarah Varney August 24, 2016 KFF Health News Original

PACE, a little-known Medicare program that helps keep older people in their own homes, is allowing for-profit companies in. Tech and venture capital have expressed interest.

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Refugees’ Needs In U.S. Change As World’s Conflicts Shift

By Sarah Varney August 10, 2016 KFF Health News Original

Syrian and Iraqi refugees arrive with decidedly different medical and mental health needs than other waves of refugees.

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Cities Begin To Count The Scars Of Childhood, And Try To Prevent New Damage

By Sarah Varney April 21, 2016 KFF Health News Original

A class action lawsuit in Los Angeles and a task force in Memphis both try to counter the “adverse childhood events” that impair health and well-being.

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