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This is the federal policy agenda offered by the National Womens Law Center and the Oregon Health & Science University to significantly improve womens health.
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As part of Cover the Uninsured Week, Republican and Democratic members of Congress put forth their ideas for reducing the number of uninsured.
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The Department of Health and Human Services Office of Inspector General says that in 2001, Medicaid could have saved millions of additional prescription drug rebate dollars if every state had collected rebates for all single-source physician-administered drugs and 40 multiple-source physician-administered drugs.
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An analysis of federal government data released during Cover the Uninsured Week in May indicates that at least 20 million working Americans dont have health insurance coverage.
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Virginia officials and child health advocates over the next few months will try to sign up more than 6,000 additional children to state-supported child health insurance programs.
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The 2004 Making the Grade on Womens Health: A National and State-by-State Report issued by the National Womens Law Center and the Oregon Health & Science University says states are making some progress in improving health care for women, but often are taking two steps forward and one step back, so they dont make sufficient progress.
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The most recent analyses by the National Conference of State Legislatures and the National Governors Association/National
Association of State Budget Officers indicate improvement in states fiscal situations and cautious optimism that the economic downturn is ending.
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When Steve Dawson, PT, was first approached with the idea of teletherapy four years ago, he had to laugh. Providing therapy services over a videophone to a patient in a remote location went against the very grain of his profession.