In Light Of Zika Findings, Stepped-Up Monitoring Of Childrens Symptoms Urged
Three different studies highlight the challenges ahead for the health system as it attempts to address the damage done to children who were exposed to it in utero.
The independent source for health policy research, polling, and news.
Shefali Luthra was a correspondent for 窪蹋勛圖厙 News until June 2020.
Showing 161 - 180 of 259
Three different studies highlight the challenges ahead for the health system as it attempts to address the damage done to children who were exposed to it in utero.
Responding to a national epidemic, many state Medicaid programs are making the coverage rules for these opioid-based medicines tougher so that physicians will think twice before prescribing them. But some worry that legitimate pain patients could suffer.
Training these first responders to identify people who are suffering from mental illness and connect them with treatment other than the emergency room could be part of the solution to gaps in the nations mental health system.
Republicans want to jettison the health law, but some features are already hardwired into the system.
Voters across the country also considered a variety of health policy questions as they decided state ballot measures.
A study that showed positive results in terms of contraceptive efficacy but may have been linked to depression has sparked debate about possible bias in contraceptive research. But the issues may not be so simple.
New research tracks how the widespread availability of these high-powered medications is causing a high rate of hospitalizations for opioid poisoning among children.
Rhode Island installed coaches in all of the states hospital emergency rooms and others are following its lead.
States are contemplating whether access to IUD through post-delivery procedures could be an important step in curbing unintended pregnancies.
Research released by the American College of Emergency Physicians highlights how gaps in mental health care play out in the emergency room with longer stays and difficulties in securing follow-up care.
Testing people especially pregnant women who may have been exposed to the virus is an integral part of the response strategy, but its putting a strain on this part of the nations public health infrastructure. New congressional funding could change that.
The federal government is supporting efforts to test whether telemedicine strategies can be used to treat Appalachias painkiller addiction crisis.
Heres a breakdown of what women should know, and what is still unclear, regarding how Zika is transmitted, who is at risk and how to take precautions against it.
Mosquito season may be ending in parts of the U.S., but public health officials say the additional resources will make a difference because the threat will not be measured in one cycle but in years.
Cost pressures may induce patients to forego needed care, some worry.
Research suggests pediatricians shy away from the topic, but parents generally are open to discussing firearms in the context of safe storage.
Researchers writing in Health Affairs report that decisions by 19 states to not expand the program for low-income residents could be hurting the financial stability of rural hospitals.
A Brazilian case report indicates the virus may cause brain impairment after a child is born, increasing the need for tracking the development of children who may have been exposed.
Research to be published in full this fall details how medicines implicit bias whether real or perceived undermines the doctor-patient relationship and the well-being of racial and ethnic minorities as well as lower-income patients.
A new study finds that women may have suffered more complications and needed more follow-up care as a result of the law. The laws advocates question the findings.
Stay informed by signing up for the Morning Briefing and other emails:
穢 2026 KFF