Category: Forbes

California Bill Requesting Insurance Coverage For Children’s Hearing Aids

There remain significant road blocks in access to specialty care for children with hearing loss, and even more road blocks in access to hearing aids.

From Rockstar Life To Mental Health Wellness: A Pause Moment With Lauren Monroe

Sometimes it’s giving them space, sometimes it’s nurturing your own space, giving everyone a calm place to land.

A Pomegranate A Day Keeps The Doctor Away? Researchers Rejuvenate Aging Immune Systems

Our immune system weakens as we age, leaving us more vulnerable to infections and diseases. New research has uncovered a molecule that may be able to undo the damage.

We Can Build A ‘Better’ Roe v. Wade, Says Planned Parenthood’s Alexis McGill Johnson

We Can Build A ‘Better’ Roe v. Wade, Says Planned Parenthood’s Alexis McGill Johnson

Spend Too Much On Your Medications? Help Is On The Way

Millions of Americans are bedeviled by expensive medications.

For The Fight Against HIV, TB And Malaria, A Moment Of Reckoning

While the 17 SDGs present a sweeping vision for improving the lives of people across the world, progress against them is, at best, mixed.

Healthcare Needs To Fix Physician Burnout Before It’s Burned In

If the industry doesn’t remedy this crisis, physicians will go from being burned out to being burned in, which will be an even bigger crisis.

Why Fighting Cancer In Low Income Countries Helps Progress In Rich Countries, Too

Cancer should be addressed “as the global health emergency that it is,” Dr. Satish Gopal, director of the U.S. National Cancer Institute’s Center for global health tells Forbes Editor-at-Large Russell Flannery in an interview.

Dr. Fauci and Colleagues Await AIDS Relief Reauthorization by Congress

Continuing PEPFAR will ensure millions of people access to prevention, care, and treatment for HIV/AIDS.

What Is Progressive Supranuclear Palsy? Lawmaker Calls Her Rare Neurological Disorder ‘Parkinson’s On Steroids.’

A representative from Virginia was first diagnosed with Parkinson’s disease, which is much more common and affects patients similarly to supranuclear palsy.