Kansas voters rejected an anti-abortion measure while the Department of Justice sued Idaho to protect abortion access; the US uninsured rate hit a record low of 8% at the start of 2022; the Senate passed an expansion of veteran health care, sending it to President Biden’s desk.
Kansas voters resoundingly voted against a ballot measure that would remove the right to an abortion from the State Constitution, The Associated Press reported. The high voter turnout and large margin of 59% to 41% in support of protecting abortion access in a conservative state was deemed a “major victory for abortion rights advocates.” Also on Tuesday, the US Department of Justice filed a lawsuit against Idaho to protect abortion access, claiming the state’s near-total abortion ban—set to go into effect August 25—violates the Emergency Medical Treatment and Labor Act by preventing clinicians from providing the necessary care in emergency situations.
More Americans are gaining health care coverage, with the uninsured rate hitting a record low of 8% at the start of 2022, USA Today reported. According to an HHS analysis, the uninsured rate declined throughout 2021 and early 2022, reflecting more than 5.2 million people gaining health care coverage since 2020, with the largest drop in uninsured rates among Americans experiencing poverty. Additionally, about 2 million adults who gained insurance since 2020 got it through insurance marketplaces set up by the Affordable Care Act for those not insured by employer or government plans. The previous record low was 9% in 2016.
The Senate voted 86 to 11 Tuesday to pass an expansion of veteran health care, sending it to President Biden’s desk, Politico reported. The legislation will extend health benefits to about 3.5 million veterans who have been exposed to toxins and burn pits while serving in the military, many of whom have developed cancers, respiratory diseases, and other illnesses from these exposures. The bill was previously blocked by Republican lawmakers, and another provision in the bill extends federal health care coverage to 23 illnesses.
Disparities in Telehealth Access Undermine Adoption Among Patients With Schizophrenia
January 16th 2025The COVID-19 pandemic accelerated the widespread adoption of telemental health care, and new research indicates significant racial and ethnic disparities in access to this technology among Medicaid beneficiaries with schizophrenia.
Read More
Study Suggests Postdischarge Care Needs Targeted, Multifaceted Approaches
January 15th 2025The findings challenge the effectiveness of these widely used transitional care interventions and suggest a need for more targeted, multifaceted approaches to address the needs of higher-risk patients.
Read More
Frameworks for Advancing Health Equity: Pharmacy Support for Non-Hodgkin Lymphoma
December 19th 2024Rachael Drake, pharmacy technician coordinator, University of Kansas Health System, explains how her team collaborates with insurance companies and providers to support treatment access for patients with non-Hodgkin lymphoma.
Listen