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Public health advocates worry restricting care will hurt society while also raising insurance premiums to compensate.
Lower-income people will be the hardest hit. Over the next 10 years, 3.4 million Californians could lose coverage.
OPM told its agency watchdog that it has taken steps to ensure the Postal Service Health Benefits Program remains adequately ...
State officials gave an update this week on expected impacts from Trump's omnibus bill and said New York will not pay for ...
After the devastating implosion of Steward hospitals, state lawmakers tightened controls on the business of medicine. Yet ...
Wimbledon semi-finalist Amanda Anisimova and other players discuss how they take care of their mental health and fight ...
In the coming years, the mismatch of revenue growth and expense growth for providers of health care will result in ...
The New York Times’ lead headline Thursday, claiming 1.5 million New Yorkers could lose health insurance under President ...
Robert F. Kennedy Jr., the health and human services secretary, abruptly canceled a meeting this week of a federal task force that helps determine which preventive health measures must be covered ...
Variation in PICU mortality by ethnicity and area-level deprivation highlights the importance of further investigation into ...
In February, the Michigan Department of Health and Human Services announced it will move toward privatizing the state’s ...