Med Students Chip In To Help The Uninsured
Almost 1 million New York City residents are still uninsured. Rather than go to emergency rooms or city hospitals, some of them get free care from medical school students.
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Almost 1 million New York City residents are still uninsured. Rather than go to emergency rooms or city hospitals, some of them get free care from medical school students.
Redesigning and replacing hospital gowns is one example of efforts by hospitals and health systems to enhance the patient experience.
In a California lawsuit seeking to allow doctors to prescribe lethal medications at patients鈥 request, two plaintiffs are physicians with serious illnesses. Both want the option of choosing to end their lives.
For more than a decade, doctors who treat Medicare patients have been threatened with pay cuts due to a faulty formula of how doctors are reimbursed. But in a rare bipartisan agreement, the House of Representatives overwhelmingly passed a deal to permanently end the problem and reward quality of care, not quantity.
Pairing federal payments with private insurance brings benefits to many but creates dueling bureaucracies for some customers caught between them.
A court ruling about Actavis鈥檚 strategy to switch consumers from its top-selling dementia drug, which will lose patent protection this summer, to a newer, patent-protected drug, may define how far drugmakers can go to protect profits from generic rivals.
GOP lawmakers eager to cut off funding to Planned Parenthood are weighing changes to a cancer screening program for poor women. But private clinics unaffiliated with Planned Parenthood say they'd take a hit, too.
Under the agreement, medical bills will not be added to a consumer鈥檚 credit report for six months to give the patient and insurer time to pay.
Often considered less important than technical skills, having a good bedside manner is important to helping patients and can lead to better outcomes.
In September, Florida Blue will debut three 鈥渋ntegrated care鈥 facilities designed to cater to South and Central American populations by offering primary care, specialty services, labs and diagnostics under one roof 鈥 a model common in Latin America.
The federal government is spending $26 billion to get doctors and hospitals to move to digital records to help coordinate care, but the funding does not include mental health clinics, psychologists and psychiatric hospitals.
Under a new process set out by the health law, the FDA approved the first so-called biosimilar drug for sale in the U.S. It鈥檚 a copy of the cancer medicine Neupogen that will be sold under the brand name Zarxio.
A special 鈥渄aycare at night鈥 program in the Bronx cares for Alzheimer鈥檚 patients whose internal clocks mistake night for day.
About 37 percent of subsidized Covered California enrollees are Latino, up six points compared with last year, and about 4 percent are African American, up one point.
Residents of a tiny rural town in northern California talk about the lack of access to mental health care.
Some House Republicans question the transfer of funds, but HHS says the shifts are legal and necessary to operate a marketplace, which is relied upon by 37 states.
With a $400 tax credit, Julia Raye of North Carolina has been able to afford health insurance and keep her diabetes under control. She is one of 8.2 million people who could lose that subsidy in a case that goes before the U.S. Supreme Court Wednesday.
The biggest barrier to treatment for residents of a tiny town in the mountains of Northern California isn鈥檛 insurance coverage-- it鈥檚 distance.
Obese people are far more likely to become disabled as they age, and researchers say this burgeoning demographic will strain hospitals and nursing homes.
The AIDS Foundation of Chicago has warned Coventry, Humana and two other insurers that their pricing of AIDS drugs may violate the health care law鈥檚 protections against discrimination.
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