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Titles
- 3.7 million people would gain health coverage in 2023 if the remaining 12 states were to expand Medicaid eligibility1
- A framework for assessing equitable health outcomes of parks: guidance for park practitioners and local leaders1
- ARPA’s enhanced premium subsidies provide particularly large benefits to residents of rural areas1
- Access to paid leave is lowest among workers with the greatest needs: findings from the December 2021 Well-Being and Basic Needs Survey1
- Access to reproductive health care for women in treatment for substance use disorder1
- Accounting for social risk in value-based payment and quality measurement1
- Adding an out-of-pocket spending limit to traditional Medicare1
- Addressing youth substance use through school services and supports: lessons from the District of Columbia, Massachusetts, and New Mexico1
- Advancing maternal health equity in southern states: what are Medicaid programs doing and what more could they do?1
- Aligning maternal health policies with birthing people’s preferences and experiences1
- Analysis of alternative approaches to increasing Part B financial assistance to Medicare beneficiaries with low incomes1
- Applying a premium cap in Medicare Part B and Part D1
- Assessing health care access among Medicaid/CHIP-enrolled children in Illinois: changes in policy and practice to improve access1
- Assessing health care access among Medicaid/CHIP-enrolled children: a national chartbook, 2016–191
- Assessing the access and equity concerns in a Medicare-X-style public option reform1
- Being an immigrant with disabilities: characteristics of a population facing multiple structural challenges1
- Bolstered by recovery legislation, the health insurance safety net prevented a rise in uninsurance between 2019 and 20211
- Building and supporting a black midwifery workforce in Oklahoma: findings and recommendations from an expedited review1
- Capacities of health systems in climate migrant receiving communities: insights in the US Gulf Coast1
- Capping Medicare beneficiary Part D spending at $2,000: who would it help and how much?1
