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The Solidarity Collaborative launched at a pivotal time for members of the inaugural cohort. “This political landscape will challenge solidarity as particular organizations and groups are targeted and ...
No amount of philanthropy can fully replace the critical role of public funding in keeping people informed and communities prepared. With this vote, this Administration has dismantled yet another ...
The Health Insurance Marketplace and Medicaid are important sources of coverage in farm states, with between one-fifth and one-third of the states’ populations enrolled in these two programs.
The coronavirus pandemic has had unprecedented, widespread impacts on households across America, raising concerns about our ability to weather long-term health and financial harms.
A series of policy briefs include evidence-based recommendations to help people through the immediate health and economic crises and longer-term recommendations to ensure a fair and just opportunity ...
For communities and their residents to recover fully and fairly from COVID-19, state and local leaders should consider five health equity principles in designing and implementing their responses.
Yolo Akili Robinson, an expert committed to the mental health and healing of Black communities, shares insights from his work.
Busting the stereotype of men as breadwinners and women as caregivers benefits families and our economy. New research reveals conditions and supports needed for men to fulfill their caregiver roles.
Annual report from the Trust for America's Health and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation found that adult obesity increased in six states—and did not decrease in any state. Rates were higher in the ...
One year after implementation of the No Surprises Act (NSA), the law is largely protecting consumers from the most pervasive forms of surprise billing, but remaining gaps leave some patients with ...
Closing the Medicaid coverage gap would save lives, reduce health care costs and help eliminate the racial and ethnic health disparities that have persisted for generations.
When Dr. Rex Archer returned to his hometown of Kansas City, Missouri, to lead its health department in 1998, he was shocked by the city’s inequities. Life expectancy for white residents was 6.5 years ...
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