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2022’s most interesting health care research papers, according to the experts
Though the pandemic and all its attendant health care crises remained the major health care story of 2022, churning all the while in the background has been the critical work of academic scholars, operating on longer timelines, who are still trying to make sense of US health care and of medicine itself, to get a better idea of what’s wrong and how to make it better. To wrap up this year, I asked a couple dozen health policy experts what research released this year (though, as one of them reminded me, these papers are often years in the making) had surprised them, changed their thinking, or struck them as especially…
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The impact of COVID-19 on access to dental care: a report from the 2021 Adult Oral Health Survey
Main findings Just over a third (35{a5ceed037b574a4d8c6b44a0a7290437cee40655417128da3b56d864fe64414f}) of adults in England who responded to the survey reported having a need for dental treatment or advice between March 2020 and March 2021, when access to dental services was limited because of the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic. The most common reasons for needing treatment or advice were because of a broken or decayed tooth (36{a5ceed037b574a4d8c6b44a0a7290437cee40655417128da3b56d864fe64414f}) or toothache or mouth pain (31{a5ceed037b574a4d8c6b44a0a7290437cee40655417128da3b56d864fe64414f}). Around a quarter of participants reported that they did not have a problem but wanted a check-up (24{a5ceed037b574a4d8c6b44a0a7290437cee40655417128da3b56d864fe64414f}). Two thirds of survey participants (68{a5ceed037b574a4d8c6b44a0a7290437cee40655417128da3b56d864fe64414f}) who needed advice contacted their usual dental practice. Less than 1 in 10 tried other approaches, for example…
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Experiences with Health Care Access, Cost, and Coverage: Findings from the 2022 KFF Women’s Health Survey
Introduction Women’s access to health care is shaped by a broad range of factors, including coverage and income, the availability of health care providers in their communities, and the affordability of care and health insurance. The Affordable Care Act (ACA) has expanded pathways to affordable coverage to millions of women by broadening eligibility for Medicaid and providing subsidies to make individual health insurance coverage more affordable for those who do not have access to coverage through their employer. The ACA also contains provisions aimed at alleviating some of the financial barriers to health care; however, many women still face challenges with health care costs and medical bills, particularly those who…
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Eye On Health Phoenix Offers New Expert Diabetic Eye Care
Phoenix, Arizona, Nov. 28, 2022 (World NEWSWIRE) — Eye on Health and fitness Phoenix was launched in 2013 by Dr. Balocca, an experienced Eye Doctor in Phoenix, AZ, with above 8 yrs of observe and who is trained in the prognosis, procedure, and management of numerous eye disorders. Passionate about serving to the neighborhood Phoenix local community, Dr. Balocca now provides diabetic eye care examinations (at Nova Southeastern College, he took a specific fascination in the administration of diabetic individuals and hypertensive eye exams) and is proficient in examining your eyes for macular degeneration. Eye on Wellbeing Phoenix is obtainable for your whole household and has a listing of expert children’s…
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Racist Doctors and Organ Thieves: Why So Many Black People Distrust the Health Care System
Discrimination, deficiency of access, distrust and mistreatment are not distinctive to Black Americans Latinos and other minority teams expertise it, way too. Inadequate persons generally wait around lengthier for worse care in underfunded, understaffed — and normally de facto racially segregated — general public hospitals and clinics than richer, much better-insured people today. And they know it. Expanding up in Detroit, Michael Winans, now in his early 40s, was “too active obtaining by” to pay back focus to a syphilis experiment that finished prior to he was born. But distrust of the healthcare establishment flowed in his family members. His grandmother survived a stroke but died during routine stick to-ups…
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National Women’s Health Advisory Council to tackle medical misogyny in medicine and health care
“Women are in pain,” writes Gabrielle Jackson in Pain and Prejudice. “They’re in pain with their periods, and while having sex; they have pelvic pain, migraines, headaches, joint aches, painful bladders, irritable bowels, sore lower backs… But women’s pain is all too often dismissed, their illnesses misdiagnosed or ignored.” First published in 2019, Jackson’s book — subtitled a “call to arms for women and their bodies” — captured her frustration at how little progress had been made on the treatment of endometriosis after her own diagnosis 14 years earlier. “I was so angry when I wrote the book,” Jackson says. Gabrielle Jackson’s book drew attention to how little progress has…