To Beat Heroin Addiction, A Turn To Coaches
A one-year pilot project in Gosnold, Mass., provides recovering addicts with daily, sometimes hourly, help from a recovery coach.
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A one-year pilot project in Gosnold, Mass., provides recovering addicts with daily, sometimes hourly, help from a recovery coach.
Truvada is a drug that can help people who are not infected avoid contracting the virus that causes AIDS. But some patients are worried the medical community is not up to speed.
A little-known office tests ways to improve care, but some wonder whether its achievements will match its budget.
Vermont plays the maverick again in trying to be the first state to implement a single-payer health care system.
These plans, which can last from a month to nearly a year, do not guarantee many of the benefits of regular health insurance.
The latest fight centers around if states can require doctors to have admitting privileges at hospitals close to where they perform abortions.
The study urges changes in federal policies that allow higher payments for sicker patients.
With many of their patients now insured under the law, most W. Va. free clinics are choosing to get paid by Medicaid.
BlueCross BlueShield’s near dominance and hospitals’ lack of negotiating clout are key reasons Chattanooga has among the lowest priced coverage in the nation.
Cuyahoga County, Ohio, created its own Medicaid program for 28,000 residents. So far, E.R. visits have dropped 60 percent.
Medibid, a four-year-old Internet service, can help people get non-emergency medical services outside of costly hospitals, but critics note that the service provides no guarantee of quality or safety.
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