Combining certain antibiotics could make them stronger against harmful bacteria; Kentucky’s decision to abruptly cut Medicaid dental and vision benefits for about 500,000 adults has created confusion; Americans are having fewer babies.
Combining certain antibiotics could make them stronger against harmful bacteria, STAT News reported. Scientists at the European Molecular Biology Laboratory in Germany tested 3000 different combinations of antibiotics with each other or with drugs, food additives, and other compounds on 3 common types of bacteria. Their results, published in Nature, showed that hundreds of combinations made antibiotic treatment more effective, whereas others did not. Pairs of drugs that targeted the same cellular processes were more likely to be successful than combinations that worked in 2 different ways.
Kentucky’s decision to abruptly cut Medicaid dental and vision benefits for about a half-million adults has created confusion, the Courier Journal reported, as children, pregnant women, and disabled adults are mistakenly showing up in the state's computer system as having lost coverage. Health law advocates are considering a lawsuit to fight the cutoff of dental and vision services that followed a federal judge's ruling Friday striking down the state’s plan to impose work requirements for some adults receiving Medicaid. One dentist told the paper he has turned away about 10 children, some with significant dental decay, since Monday for lack of Medicaid coverage.
Americans are having fewer babies for a variety of reasons, The New York Times reported. A survey conducted for the newspaper found that the declining fertility rate, hitting a record low for the second consecutive year, is due to a variety of factors, including wanting more leisure time and personal freedom, not yet having a partner, not being able to afford childcare costs, and economic insecurity factors. The fertility rate influences major societal issues, such as immigration, education, housing, the labor supply, the social safety net, and support for working families.
Empowering Community Health Through Wellness and Faith
April 23rd 2024To help celebrate and recognize National Minority Health Month, we are bringing you a special month-long podcast series with our Strategic Alliance Partner, UPMC Health Plan. In the third episode, Camille Clarke-Smith, EdD, MS, CHES, CPT, discusses approaching community health holistically through spiritual and community engagement.
Listen
Data Back Neoadjuvant Combo vs Chemo Alone for Early-Stage NSCLC
April 24th 2024For patients with early-stage non–small cell lung cancer (NSCLC), combining neoadjuvant immune checkpoint inhibitors and platinum-based chemotherapy improves 2-year outcomes over chemotherapy alone, suggest findings of an extensive literature review and meta-analysis.
Read More
Overcoming Employment Barriers for Lasting Social Impact: Freedom House 2.0 and Pathways to Work
April 16th 2024To help celebrate and recognize National Minority Health Month, we are bringing you a special month-long podcast series with our Strategic Alliance Partner, UPMC Health Plan. Welcome to our second episode, in which we learn all about Freedom House 2.0 and the Pathways to Work program.
Listen
Patient Navigation in Oncology at Heart of Priority Health White House Visit
April 24th 2024On March 27, Priority Health's president and CEO, Praveen Thadani participated in a discussion on how to expand and optimize patient navigation services in oncology care, as part of the Cancer Moonshot initiative.
Read More