Medicare changes equal health care food stamps
The Republican plan would replace Medicare with an increasingly inadequate resource that is limited to those in the most desperate of straits. In addition, vouchers would decrease choice for seniors.
The Republican plan would replace Medicare with an increasingly inadequate resource that is limited to those in the most desperate of straits. In addition, vouchers would decrease choice for seniors.
Which patients will be entitled to which treatments will be prescribed by the government cookbook, and the overriding concern will be cost, not necessarily quality.
It's difficult to find answers to questons about how America's intricate and fragmented health care system works. Two local medical students have written a handbook that helps simplify the complexity.
The Affordable Care Act has brought about a sea change in the way consumers receive medical care. With the Supreme Court preparing to rule on ACA, some analysts believe at least a few key measures will survive or be reinstated.
Missouri’s annual medical costs are projected to double in a decade. But the state can contain this expense and improve quality by changing the way health care is delivered, says a study commissioned by the Missouri Foundation for Health.
Thousands of poor residents in St. Louis and St. Louis County get discounted medical care through area public health clinics. But thousands of others cannot afford the clinic co-payments to see a doctor. Some needy residents will soon get clinic care for between 50 cents and $3.
Dr. Louis W. Sullivan feels some deja vu about health care these days. He recalls that President George H.W. Bush sent a health-reform proposal to Congress and got nowhere. What's different these days, he says, is political gridlock.
Several faith-based and community groups are appealing to Missouri lawmakers to end the gridlock that has thwarted efforts to set up an insurance exchange and upgrade the state’s computer system for processing Medicaid under the health reform law.
Chief Justice John G. Roberts and the U.S. Supreme Court arrive at a constitutional crossroads when they take up the Affordable Care Act Monday. The most controversial element of the law is the individual mandate to buy health insurance.
When people are struggling for food, clothing and shelter, they pay less attention to their health. The absence of a “culture of good health” plays a big role in minority communities and racial disparities in health status.