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Artificial Intelligence May Influence Whether You Can Get Pain Medication

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To contain the opioid crisis, health and law enforcement agencies have turned to technology to monitor doctor and patient prescription data. Experts have raised questions about how these systems work and worry about their accuracy and potential biases. Some patients and doctors say they鈥檙e being unfairly targeted.

Funyuns and Flu Shots? Gas Station Company Ventures Into Urgent Care

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A Tulsa-based gas station chain is using its knowledge of how to serve customers and locate shops in easy-to-find spots to enter the urgent care industry, which has doubled in size over the past decade. Experts question how the explosion of convenient clinics will affect care costs and wait times.

Feds Say Hospitals That Redistribute Medicaid Money Violate Law

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Federal officials are trying to clamp down on private arrangements among some hospitals to pay themselves back for the Medicaid taxes they鈥檝e paid. State health officials and the influential hospital industry argue that regulators have no jurisdiction over the agreements.

New Alzheimer鈥檚 Drug Raises Hopes 鈥 Along With Questions

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Clinics serving Alzheimer鈥檚 patients are working out the details of who will get treated with the new drug Leqembi. It won鈥檛 be for everyone with memory-loss symptoms.

Lost Medicaid Health Coverage? Here鈥檚 What You Need to Know

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Patient advocates are tackling the 鈥渙verwhelming task鈥 of connecting people with health insurance as millions lose coverage due to the end of pandemic protections on Medicaid eligibility.

Patients Squeezed in Fight Over Who Gets to Bill for Pricey Infusion Drugs

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To drive down costs, insurers are bypassing hospital system pharmacies and delivering high-priced infusion drugs, including some used in chemotherapy, via third-party pharmacies. Smarting from losing out on billing for those drugs, hospitals and clinics are trying to convince states to limit this practice, known as “white bagging.”

The DEA Relaxed Online Prescribing Rules During Covid. Now It Wants to Rein Them In.

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Supporters say the proposed rules would balance the goals of increasing access to health care and helping prevent medication misuse. Opponents say the rules would make it difficult for some patients 鈥 especially those in rural areas 鈥 to get care.

Malpractice Lawsuits Over Denied Abortion Care May Be on the Horizon

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Physicians and attorneys say it鈥檚 a question of when 鈥 not if 鈥 a pregnant person dies from lack of care in a state with an abortion ban, potentially setting the stage for a malpractice lawsuit that could pressure providers to reconsider delaying or denying care.

Familias huyen de los estados que niegan atenci贸n de salud a las personas trans

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M谩s de una cuarta parte de los adultos trans encuestados por 麻豆女优 y The Washington Post a fines del a帽o pasado dijeron que se mudaron a otro vecindario, ciudad o estado en busca de un ambiente m谩s tolerante.

Medical Exiles: Families Flee States Amid Crackdown on Transgender Care

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As more states restrict gender-affirming care for transgender people, some are relocating to more welcoming destinations, such as California, Illinois, Maryland, and Nevada, where they don’t have to worry about being locked out of medical care.

What Does a Chatbot Know About Eating Disorders? Users of a Help Line Are About to Find Out

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The National Eating Disorders Association鈥檚 help line has seen demand climb to unsustainable levels since the beginning of the covid pandemic, with more people reporting severe mental health problems, the nonprofit says. But staffers worry this chatbot may make things worse.

More States OK Postpartum Medicaid Coverage Beyond Two Months

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Montana, Alaska, Mississippi, Missouri, South Dakota, Texas, Utah, and Wyoming are among the latest states moving to provide health coverage for up to a year after pregnancy through the federal-state health insurance program for low-income people.

Journalists Give Status Reports on the ‘Personhood’ Debate and the HIV Epidemic

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麻豆女优 Health News and California Healthline staff made the rounds on national and local media this week to discuss their stories. Here鈥檚 a collection of their appearances.

Can a Fetus Be an Employee? States Are Testing the Boundaries of Personhood After ‘Dobbs’

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Laws granting rights to unborn children have spread in the decades since the U.S. and Missouri supreme courts allowed Missouri鈥檚 definition of life as beginning at conception to stand. Now, a wrongful death lawsuit involving a workplace accident shows how sprawling those laws 鈥 often intended to curb abortion 鈥 have become.

People With Down Syndrome Are Living Longer, but the Health System Still Treats Many as Kids

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The median life expectancy for a U.S. baby born with Down syndrome jumped from about four years in 1950 to 58 years in the 2010s. That鈥檚 largely because they no longer can be denied lifesaving care, including surgeries for heart defects. But now, aging adults with Down syndrome face a health system unprepared to care for them.

Se pagar谩n $50,000 millones como liquidaci贸n del acuerdo sobre opioides. Veremos c贸mo se gastan

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La mayor铆a de los acuerdos estipulan que los estados deben gastar al menos el 85% del dinero que recibir谩n, en los pr贸ximos 15 a帽os, en el tratamiento y la prevenci贸n de adicciones.

States Try to Obscure Execution Details as Drugmakers Hinder Lethal Injection

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Pharmaceutical companies have put the brakes on many states鈥 ability to execute prisoners using lethal injections. Lacking alternatives, states are trying to keep the public from learning details about how they carry out executions.

$50 Billion in Opioid Settlement Cash Is on the Way. We鈥檙e Tracking How It鈥檚 Spent.

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Spending the money effectively and equitably is a tall order for state and local governments, and a lack of transparency in the process is already leading to fears of misuse.