More Mental Health and telemedicine options. Hello and welcome to axios Virtual Event health care 2021. I am sam Baker Health Care at are coming to you from my home in washington dc. I would like to thank the United Health. For making these conversations possible and thank her audience. Follow along on twitter using the or following. Over the next three minutes we will unpack best way to unpack Health Insurance access and coverage in the United States and exactly what that path forward looks like following the election and in the midst of a pandemic getting worse every day. Our first guest is senator tina smith of minnesota. Thank you. It is terrific to be with everyone today. I would like to start off framing this conversation. Obviously, Health Care Access and coverage has been a hot topic for a long time but i think the pandemic has highlighted and illustrated some of the gaps we are dealing with in the system. We have seen millions of people lose their health determines because the
To fail. Griff good morning. Welcome back, jed. So good to have you back. Jedediah thank you so much. Thank you both. Good to see you both again. I have been watching from home. Its good to see you here. Pete its good to have you here. Jedediah and a big news day. Pete big news day in honor of you. I know you are a surfer this is my flip flop edition of fox friends. We can go if we need. To say. Griff see whats happened i have grown a billie ray sig cyr. Jedediah i have got the flat shoes on and leggings. We are all a team here and all on the same page today. Pete secrets of television. Griff, i have got to ask you are there at the swamp. I will mention it every day. And we love you for that will you talk about the biggest bill of all time . Thats a label you dont expect to hear often really or at all. Here we are massive 3 trilliondollar bill passing the house. Griff griff a reporters job is to offer some scrutiny. Let me do so now. Its not only just the largest bill. This was a bill
Screen time for children under 2 years of age could result in "atypical sensory" behaviors and other processing issues, a new study from Drexel University in Pennsylvania suggests.
Screen time for children under 2 years of age could result in "atypical sensory" behaviors and other processing issues, a study from Drexel University suggests.