Skip to main content
Home
   Gulf Coast

Resilience System

Main menu

  • Home
  • Forum
  • Groups
  • Maps
  • FAQs
  • We Need Answers’: Hurricane Michael Leaves Florida Residents Desperate for Aid

User login

  • Create new account
  • Request new password
What is the weather on the sun

Search form

Language

English Arabic Danish Dutch Filipino Finnish French German Greek Haitian Creole Hebrew Hindi Indonesian Irish Italian Japanese Korean Persian Portuguese Russian Spanish Swedish Thai Turkish Ukrainian Vietnamese

Anonymous's groups in this site

User is not a member of any group.

Your groups across all your sites

User is not a member of any group.

Recent Content

Trump administration's threatened budget cuts would undermine CDC's asthma protection program
Government Accounting Office (GAO) tells HHS to fix persistent deficiencies before a next pandemic
Measles: Map and chart of cases in the U.S.
How wastewater is now beng used to track measles
Analysis: CBO calculates that nearly 11 million people will be uninsured if GOP megabill becomes law

Recent Comments

  • More details of Trump administration's proposed budget cuts  2 days 18 hours ago
  • Analysis: New CDC Covid statements appear to contradict Kennedy 1 week 14 hours ago
  • Effects of changes in administration's COVID vaccine policy  1 week 1 day ago
  • The universal flu vaccine project puzzles vaccine experts  3 weeks 2 days ago

Who's online

There are currently 0 users online.

Facebook  Twitter  RSS

You are here

Home

Medical Personnel

Scientists study evolution of COVID in an effort to head off a resurgence

Wed, 2024-03-27 14:16 — mike kraft

Rat droppings from New York City. Poop from dog parks in Wisconsin. Human waste from a Missouri hospital. These are some of the materials that are readying us for the next chapter of the coronavirus saga.

More than four years into the pandemic, the virus has loosened its hold on most people’s bodies and minds. But a new variant better able to dodge our immune defenses may yet appear, derailing a hard-won return to normalcy.

Scientists around the country are watching for the first signs.

Country / Region Tags: 
United States
General Topic Tags: 
COVID-19
Contagion
Symptoms
Disease Prevention
Health
Medical Personnel
Public Health
Research
Problem, Solution, SitRep, or ?: 
Situation Report
  • Read more about Scientists study evolution of COVID in an effort to head off a resurgence
  • Twitter logo
  • Facebook logo
  • Log in or register to post comments

CDC study describes percentage of U.S. kids missing doctor visits during COVID pandemic

Wed, 2024-03-27 11:13 — mike kraft
Survey identifies unmet child medical needs in first 2 US COVID pandemic waves In the first two waves of the COVID-19 pandemic, 16% of children aged 5 to 12 years didn't visit their healthcare provider, 11% went without a well-child visit, and 30% didn't complete a well-child visit in the past year, parent responses to a US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) survey show. CIDRAP

 

Country / Region Tags: 
United States
General Topic Tags: 
COVID-19
Children
Disease Prevention
Government
Health
Medical Personnel
Pandemics
Public Health
Research
Problem, Solution, SitRep, or ?: 
Analysis
  • Read more about CDC study describes percentage of U.S. kids missing doctor visits during COVID pandemic
  • Twitter logo
  • Facebook logo
  • Log in or register to post comments

Analysis: The Burden of Getting Medical Care Can Exhaust Older Patients

Wed, 2024-03-27 10:59 — mike kraft
The Burden of Getting Medical Care Can Exhaust Older Patients - KFF Health News It’s estimated that an older patient can spend three weeks of the year getting care — and that doesn’t count the time it takes to arrange appointments or deal with insurance companies. khnkit KFF Health News

 

 

Country / Region Tags: 
United States
General Topic Tags: 
Demographics
Disease
Health
Hospitals
Medical Personnel
Medical Testing
Public Health
Social behavior
Economics
Vulnerability
Problem, Solution, SitRep, or ?: 
Analysis
Problem
Situation Report
  • Read more about Analysis: The Burden of Getting Medical Care Can Exhaust Older Patients
  • Twitter logo
  • Facebook logo
  • Log in or register to post comments

Some U.S. nonprofit hospitals spend less on charity care than they receive in tax breaks --study

Wed, 2024-03-27 10:34 — mike kraft
Some nonprofit hospitals spend less on charity care than they receive in tax breaks, new analysis shows A new study found 80% of 2,425 nonprofit hospitals spent less on charity care and community investment than they got in estimated tax breaks. Brittany Trang STAT

...

Country / Region Tags: 
United States
General Topic Tags: 
Data
Government
Hospitals
Medical Personnel
Public Health
Economics
Problem, Solution, SitRep, or ?: 
Analysis
Situation Report
  • Read more about Some U.S. nonprofit hospitals spend less on charity care than they receive in tax breaks --study
  • Twitter logo
  • Facebook logo
  • Log in or register to post comments

Smaller U.S. providers and community health care centers fight to stay afloat after Change Healthcare hack

Wed, 2024-03-27 10:23 — mike kraft
Hack poses financial problems for community health centers - Roll Call In the aftermath of the Change Healthcare hack, small providers and community health centers are struggling to pay their bills. Jessica Wehrman Roll Call

Community health centers and organizations that primarily serve low-income people are being disproportionately hurt by the biggest hack in health care history, which has disrupted payments for thousands of health care providers for a month now.

Country / Region Tags: 
United States
General Topic Tags: 
Health
Hospitals
Medical Personnel
Public Health
Economics
Employment
Security
Technology
Problem, Solution, SitRep, or ?: 
Situation Report
  • Read more about Smaller U.S. providers and community health care centers fight to stay afloat after Change Healthcare hack
  • Twitter logo
  • Facebook logo
  • Log in or register to post comments

Opinion: U.S. needs nonpartisan commission to examaine what wrong in dealing with early stages of COVID pandemic

Fri, 2024-03-22 19:30 — mike kraft
What Did the US Get Wrong During Covid? We Need to Know In the first year of the pandemic, leaders badly fumbled. We need a nonpartisan investigation into how things went so wrong. F.D. Flam Bloomberg

 

 

Country / Region Tags: 
United States
General Topic Tags: 
COVID-19
Contagion
Disease Prevention
Government
Health
Medical Personnel
Mutations
Pandemics
Public Health
Research
Science
Social behavior
Vaccinations
Problem, Solution, SitRep, or ?: 
Analysis
  • Read more about Opinion: U.S. needs nonpartisan commission to examaine what wrong in dealing with early stages of COVID pandemic
  • Twitter logo
  • Facebook logo
  • Log in or register to post comments

Large U.S. Nursing home operator files for bankruptcy after cyber attacks

Fri, 2024-03-22 10:29 — mike kraft
Nursing home co. Petersen files for bankruptcy after cyberattacks Petersen Health Care, one of the largest nursing home operators in the U.S., filed for bankruptcy on Wednesday after cyberattacks and defaults on government-backed loans worsened the company’s long-standing financial challenges. Dietrich Knauth Reuters

...

Country / Region Tags: 
United States
US - MidWest
General Topic Tags: 
Hospitals
Medical Personnel
Economics
Problem, Solution, SitRep, or ?: 
Situation Report
  • Read more about Large U.S. Nursing home operator files for bankruptcy after cyber attacks
  • Twitter logo
  • Facebook logo
  • Log in or register to post comments

Opinion: sabbaticals for nurses could help counter shortages and burnout

Thu, 2024-03-21 11:16 — mike kraft
Sabbaticals for nurses could help fight worker shortages and burnout Sabbaticals for nurses could help fight worker shortages and burnout. Torie Bosch STAT
Country / Region Tags: 
United States
General Topic Tags: 
Demographics
Government
Health
Hospitals
Medical Personnel
Economics
Employment
Problem, Solution, SitRep, or ?: 
Analysis
Solutions
  • Read more about Opinion: sabbaticals for nurses could help counter shortages and burnout
  • Twitter logo
  • Facebook logo
  • Log in or register to post comments

Analysis: After years of ransomware attacks, health-care defenses still fail

Wed, 2024-03-20 10:58 — mike kraft
After years of ransomware attacks, health-care defenses still fail The danger was obvious in 2021, when ransomware gangs struck hospitals already overwhelmed by the covid-19 pandemic. Joseph Menn The Washington Post
Country / Region Tags: 
United States
General Topic Tags: 
Government
Hospitals
Medical Personnel
Public Health
Science
Social behavior
Economics
Security
Technology
Problem, Solution, SitRep, or ?: 
Analysis
Problem
Situation Report
  • Read more about Analysis: After years of ransomware attacks, health-care defenses still fail
  • Twitter logo
  • Facebook logo
  • Log in or register to post comments

UnitedHealth hack takes toll on healthcare providers to the American poor

Wed, 2024-03-20 10:44 — mike kraft
UnitedHealth hack takes toll on healthcare providers to the nation's poor The ransomware attack on UnitedHealth that has disrupted payments to U.S. doctors and healthcare facilities nationwide for a month, has taken an especially harsh toll on the community health centers that serve more than 30 million poor and uninsured patients. Julie Steenhuysen Reuters

...

Country / Region Tags: 
United States
General Topic Tags: 
Disease Prevention
Hospitals
Medical Personnel
Economics
Security
Technology
Problem, Solution, SitRep, or ?: 
Situation Report
  • Read more about UnitedHealth hack takes toll on healthcare providers to the American poor
  • Twitter logo
  • Facebook logo
  • Log in or register to post comments

Pages

  • « first
  • ‹ previous
  • …
  • 9
  • 10
  • 11
  • 12
  • 13
  • 14
  • 15
  • 16
  • 17
  • …
  • next ›
  • last »
Subscribe to Medical Personnel
©Copyright 2021, OVIAR Global Resilience Systems, Inc.
howdy folks
Page loaded in 0.603 seconds.