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6 votes
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Ten years after abortion doctor's brutal murder, one woman carries the fight for reproductive rights
7 votes -
All-American despair: For the past two decades, a suicide epidemic fueled by guns, poverty and isolation has swept across the West, with middle-aged men dying in record numbers
12 votes -
U.S. measles cases in first five months of 2019 surpass total cases for any year since 1994, may cause loss of measles elimination status
7 votes -
Abortion clinics reported a surge in trespassing, vandalism and a historic high of picketing
11 votes -
The cancer capital of America: Eastern Kentucky is poor, remote, and inadequately serviced, and those factors have led to alarming rates of cancer in the area
7 votes -
'This case will set a precedent': First major opioid trial to begin in Oklahoma
4 votes -
California Bill to put health warnings on sugary drinks and soda advances
14 votes -
Colorado becomes first state in nation to cap price of insulin
11 votes -
Our fury over abortion was dismissed for decades as hysterical
22 votes -
The politics of going to the bathroom
3 votes -
The struggle to hire and keep doctors in rural areas means US patients go without care
6 votes -
Defend Your Clinics: It’s time for an abortion rights movement that’s not directed from the top-down. Clinic defense is a crucial part of that mass, democratic, and militant movement.
4 votes -
Emotional health in public schools
4 votes -
I told prison guards I have celiac disease. They fed me gluten anyway.
21 votes -
Oregon considers changing the way mentally ill people are committed
4 votes -
Not just for soldiers: Civilians with PTSD struggle to find effective therapy
8 votes -
The University of Maryland waited eighteen days to inform students of a virus on campus. That decision left vulnerable students like Olivia Paregol in the dark
14 votes -
The human antivenom project
5 votes -
Will including prescription drug prices in ads drive down prices?
6 votes -
Highly potent weed has swept the market, raising concerns about health risks
7 votes -
Will Denver vote to decriminalize magic mushrooms?
15 votes -
Amid measles outbreaks, states consider revoking religious vaccine exemptions
14 votes -
The US movement against female genital mutilation is at a crossroads
4 votes -
In the land of hope and grief: An art therapy project in an Alaska Native village helps teens talk about suicide in their community
4 votes -
An afternoon with Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and the Texas Anti-Vaccine Movement
7 votes -
I went down a rabbit hole trying to figure out why my medication costs $6,600 a month
11 votes -
"Looping" has created an underground market for old Medtronic insulin pumps with a security flaw
10 votes -
Lou Ortenzio was a trusted West Virginia doctor who got his patients—and himself—hooked on opioids. Now he’s trying to rescue his community from an epidemic he helped start.
5 votes -
When a treatment costs $450,000 or more, it had better work
8 votes -
For incarcerated Hepatitis C patients, adequate treatment is hard to come by
7 votes -
There's a gold-standard treatment for opioid addiction, one of America's top killers. What keeps treatment centers from using it?
11 votes -
Why measles is back in the US
5 votes -
A bill banning most abortions becomes law in Ohio
22 votes -
An ALS patient's dilemma: End his own life, or die slowly of the disease?
9 votes -
The heroin hearse in the OD capital of America
6 votes -
New York’s Orthodox Jewish community is battling measles outbreaks. Vaccine deniers are to blame.
8 votes -
Her time: Debra Koosed was diagnosed with dementia at sixty-five. That’s when she decided she no longer wanted to live.
5 votes -
American asking - how does your country's healthcare system perform for you?
So I've almost (March 29) quit an IT role in a U.S. company that functions with the private healthcare market. It's been long evident to me that most industrialized nations have much more sensible...
So I've almost (March 29) quit an IT role in a U.S. company that functions with the private healthcare market. It's been long evident to me that most industrialized nations have much more sensible systems, and my employer's business model would be nonexistent outside the U.S.
There's a current political trend towards "Medicare for All", basically a single-payer system for existing health services. The prevailing resistance comes from insurers, whose business models will cease to exist, and those whose compensation might be cut (physicians and hospitals) up to 50% under the current scheme for U.S. Medicare. That's leaving aside pharmaceutical companies.
I'm trying to decide where my political time should be spent - the "Medicare for All" slogan is great for bumper stickers, but are there other models that work better?
Please talk about your nation's policies - the good, the bad, and the ugly. Tildes is mostly a young crowd that might not have direct experience of major medical need, but any commentary on what has worked and what doesn't is welcome.
31 votes -
Facts alone won’t convince people to vaccinate their kids
10 votes -
Decline in HIV infections stalls as Trump administration aims to end epidemic
5 votes -
Dollars on the margins - $15/hr minimum wage as a US public health measure
17 votes -
Donald Trump Administration blocks US funds for Planned Parenthood and others over abortion referrals
15 votes -
When the cure is worse than the disease
13 votes -
Racial disparities in US cancer incidence and survival rates are narrowing
6 votes -
OxyContin maker explored US expansion into “attractive” anti-addiction market
7 votes -
This business helped transform Miami into a national plastic surgery destination. Eight women died.
6 votes -
For Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, US shutdown is no joke
10 votes -
Damning US court docs show just how far Sacklers went to push OxyContin
8 votes -
Americans more likely to die from accidental opioid overdose than in a car accident
12 votes