Once the program's reserves are depleted, it would only be able to cover 89 percent of scheduled benefits, according to the annual report from Social Security and Medicare trustees released Monday.
Phil Galewitz| KFF Health News. "It's a very interesting paradox," said Andy Schneider, a research professor at Georgetown University's McCourt School of Public Policy, of plans' Medicaid revenue ...
Community health worker Ron Sanders, right, helps a patient at San Francisco’s Southeast Family Health Center, part of the Transitions Clinic Network that assists former inmates navigate health care ...
The defendant, Vincent Villafane Cruz, 28, was working as a wedding photographer and graphic designer on Staten Island at the time of his arrest in late 2023.. Villafane Cruz, of Fords, New Jersey, ...
An insurance company wrongfully relied on isolated evidence, ignored contradictory evidence and failed to comply with the Employee Retirement Income Security Act, or ERISA, when it denied a woman’ s ...