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Pandemic disrupted the utilization of women s preventive health services

Pandemic disrupted the utilization of women’s preventive health services The COVID-19 pandemic knocked many women off schedule for important health appointments, a new study finds, and many didn t get back on schedule even after clinics reopened. The effect may have been greatest in areas where such care is already likely falling behind experts recommendations. The study, by health care researchers in the University of Michigan Institute for Healthcare Policy and Innovation, looks at screenings for breast cancer, cervical cancer and sexually transmitted infections (STI), as well as two types of birth control care: prescriptions for oral contraceptives and insertions of longer-acting devices.

Even small bills for health insurance may cause healthy low-income people to drop coverage - State of Reform

Even small bills for health insurance may cause healthy low-income people to drop coverage University of Michigan Institute for Healthcare Policy and Innovation | May 10, 2021 Share this: Twenty dollars a month might not seem like a lot to pay for health insurance. But for people getting by on $15,000 a year, it’s enough to make some drop their coverage – especially if they’re healthy, a new study of Medicaid expansion participants in Michigan finds. That could keep them from getting preventive or timely care, and could leave their insurance company with a sicker pool of patients than before, say the researchers from the University of Michigan and University of Illinois Chicago. They have published their findings as a working paper through the National Bureau of Economic Research, ahead of publication in the American Journal of Health Economics.

Even small bills for health insurance may cause healthy low-income people to drop coverage

 E-Mail Twenty dollars a month might not seem like a lot to pay for health insurance. But for people getting by on $15,000 a year, it s enough to make some drop their coverage - especially if they re healthy, a new study of Medicaid expansion participants in Michigan finds. That could keep them from getting preventive or timely care, and could leave their insurance company with a sicker pool of patients than before, say the researchers from the University of Michigan and University of Illinois Chicago. They have published their findings as a working paper through the National Bureau of Economic Research, ahead of publication in the American Journal of Health Economics.

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