Nationalinterest.org

Medicare for All: Here's What Unions Think About It

WEBBiden went as far as naming unions in his criticism of Medicare for All. “If they like their employer-based insurance, which a lot of unions broke their neck to get, a lot of people …

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URL: https://nationalinterest.org/blog/buzz/medicare-all-heres-what-unions-think-about-it-70231

How the Pandemic Highlighted the Plight of Community Health …

WEBCommunity health workers are vital to finishing the job of ending the HIV, tuberculosis, and malaria epidemics—three diseases on which bipartisan U.S. global leadership is historic …

Category:  Health Go Health

5 Ways Congress Can Improve Medicare for Seniors

WEBA better way: combine Medicare A and B into a single health plan, with a single deductible and uniform cost-sharing. This would greatly simplify the program, making it more …

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SNAP Benefits Could Hurt Millions of Americans—And Local …

WEBSNAP helped 39.7 million Americans buy food in 2018. Federal research has found that the program reduces hunger, particularly in children – who make up 44% of its beneficiaries. …

Category:  Food Go Health

Plague vs. Pandemic: What Is the Difference

WEBThe past two months have thrust the terminology of public health into the forefront of people’s conversation. Accommodating themselves to life under social distancing …

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5 Worst Public Health Outbreaks in U.S. History

WEBHere are some of the worst public health outbreaks in U.S. history. Cholera: 1832-1866. Three waves of cholera infected the globe between 1832 and 1866, killing an estimated …

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Why Obesity Can (Occasionally) Be Good for Your Health

WEBNot surprisingly, due to the disproportionate number of patients in these categories having heart surgery, overweight and obese patients accounted for the overall majority of …

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How We Classify Diseases Into Epidemics, Pandemics, and Outbreaks

WEBA more recent pandemic was the one caused by Severe Acute Respiratory Disease (SARS) in 2003. While this disease spread rapidly throughout the world, thanks to effective …

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The Sociology of Surviving the Coronavirus The National Interest

WEBThe much-maligned social media realm can help people avoid the detrimental effects of social isolation during this pandemic. The World Health Organization’s March 6 release …

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Could Vladimir Putin Really Have Cancer

WEBSpeculation surrounding Vladimir Putin’s health has soared following the onset of Russia’s 2022 invasion of Ukraine. The Kremlin leader has been rumored to be suffering from a …

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Here's How Inmates Face the End of Their Lives if They Fall Ill

WEBA recent Bureau of Justice Statistics report revealed a startling increase in state prisoner mortality. Between 2006 and 2016, the last year for which the study provided data, there …

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$2,200 'Stimulus Checks' On the Way

WEBThe first round of benefits, sent out from March until the present, have been based on Americans’ 2019 tax returns – indicating their age, marital status, and any qualifying …

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These Deadly Bacteria Use a Common Sugar to Spread Through …

WEBS. pneumoniae can stay in our nose and throats, where it does not cause disease. It plays an import role in this ecosystem. When this bacteria is killed, other deadly bacteria may …

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The Black Death: How Rats, Fleas and Germs Almost Wiped Out …

WEBAnd changed world history. More than six centuries ago, disaster struck the people of Europe. A deadly plague, traveling west along trade routes from Central Asia, struck the …

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The 1957 Pandemic Was a Lot Like Coronavirus—But It's Also …

WEBThe first case of the Asian flu began in Singapore in February 1957 and the flu moved to Hong Kong in April, according to the CDC. Other accounts say the outbreak began that …

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How Churches Become Makeshift Hospitals During Times of Crises

WEBThere is a long history of churches serving as hospitals, particularly during times of crisis such as war or plague. Churches are looking to open up their doors to groups beyond …

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Four Times in History Vaccines Failed (Lessons for a Coronavirus

WEBIn the early 1960s, thousands of children received a particular inactivated vaccine, so if they were exposed to the actual measles virus, they developed atypical measles. This was …

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Tokyo Olympics: Athletes Are Opening Up About Mental Health

WEBThe Tokyo Olympics will go down in history for many reasons. It was the first Olympics to be postponed, the first to be held in the midst of a pandemic and the first to be held without …

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Fifty Years Later, Agent Orange Still Kills in Vietnam

WEBMore than 40 years on, the impact on their health has been staggering. This dispersion of Agent Orange over a vast area of central and south Vietnam poisoned the soil, river …

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