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Failing to protect people at risk for genetic disease from discrimination may have a silencing effect and erode trust in the patient-provider relationship. Read by author Susanna Smith. This article is a reworked excerpt from an unpublished book manuscript. If you enjoy this essay, order the Health Affairs March 2023 issue.…
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Older Americans’ experiences of the COVID-19 pandemic, including social isolation and loneliness, generosity, and resilience, must be studied and addressed. Read by authors Louise Aronson and Ashwin Kotwal. If you enjoy this essay, order the Health Affairs December 2022 issue.Health Affairs
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Integrating family caregivers into the health care team is particularly important for patients with intellectual disabilities. Read by author Duke University's Courtney Van Houtven. If you enjoy this essay, order the Health Affairs theme issue on disability and health.Health Affairs
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During the COVID-19 pandemic, a narrow view of patients’ and families’ preferences has led to the unjust application of policies meant to accommodate dying patients and their families. Read by author Nora Osman Segar from Yale New Haven Hospital and Yale Medical School. If you enjoy this essay, order the June 2022 Health Affairs issue.…
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A Washington insider discusses lessons learned from communicating about the HIV/AIDS pandemic and current failures to talk effectively about COVID-19. Read by author Richard Sorian from 340B Health. If you enjoy this essay, order the March 2022 Health Affairs issue.Health Affairs
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Shalon Irving’s 2017 death brought national attention to maternal mortality among Black women in the US. This essay remembers her life and legacy. Read by Wanda Irving, chair of the board of Dr. Shalon’s Maternal Action Project. If you enjoy this essay, order the February 2022 Health Affairs Racism and Health theme issue.…
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A mother whose son was stillborn at thirty-six weeks is working to import stillbirth prevention policies from abroad. Read by author Marny Smith, assistant director of Graduate Career Services at the Austin W. Marxe School of Public and International Affairs at Baruch College. If you enjoy this essay, order the January 2022 Health Affairs issue.…
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A genetic counselor uses her own resources to identify the root cause of her mother’s changing personality. Read by author Shivani Nazareth, certified genetic counselor and product manager at Invitae, and a visiting lecturer at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai. When Nazareth’s mother became ill, symptoms pointed to dementia but potential…
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A health care leader shares her story of living with major depression and calls for better treatments. Read by author Nora Super, senior director of the Milken Institute Center for the Future of Aging and the executive director of the Milken Institute Alliance to Improve Dementia Care. “I decided to share my story because I think so many of us who …
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A psychiatry professor’s recovery from perinatal depression drives her research to facilitate practice and policy change. Read by author Kara Zivin, a research career scientist at the Veterans Affairs Ann Arbor Healthcare System, and a senior health researcher at Mathematica. Order the October Perinatal Mental Health Theme Issue.…
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After recovering from acute COVID-19 infection, a physician is stricken with the debilitating symptoms of long COVID. Read by author Maria Victoria Bovo, a pediatric gastroenterologist at the Hospital Germans Trias i Pujol, in Badalona, Spain. Order the September issue of Health Affairs.Health Affairs
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Después de recuperarse de una infección aguda por COVID-19, un médico sufre los síntomas debilitantes del COVID prolongado. Leído por la autora María Victoria Bovo, gastroenteróloga pediátrica del Hospital Germans Trias i Pujol, en Badalona, España. Solicite la edición de septiembre de Health Affairs.…
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Two families’ stories—a separation at the border and an assault in a migrant shelter—show the horrific dimensions of US migration policy. Read by co-author Alfonso Mercado from the University of Texas Rio Grande Valley. Order your copy of the July 2021 issue of Health Affairs.Health Affairs
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Childbirth can be an extremely stressful time in any period. Imagine delivering a baby during a global pandemic, just hours after testing positive for COVID-19 despite taking public health precautions. In this episode of the Narrative Matters podcast, Sara Edmond talks about testing positive for COVID-19 shortly before the birth of her daughter, an…
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Hospice care is meant to optimize quality of life and minimize sources of distress at the end of life. In theory, enrollees are entitled to an unlimited number of days of hospice care, though they have to be recertified after 6 months. But in practice, some patients end up discharged alive rather than re-enrolled. In this episode of the Narrative M…
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Charity care is health care that is provided for free or at a reduced cost to eligible patients, with no expectation that the patient will pay. Under the Affordable Care Act, nonprofit hospitals are required to provide charity care to eligible patients, or risk losing their tax-exempt status. But data show large variation in how much charity care h…
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In June 2019, Hahnemann University Hospital, a teaching hospital that had served poor residents in Philadelphia for more than 170 years, filed for bankruptcy and, within months, closed its doors for good. The complex story of its closure, after being purchased by a private equity executive, highlights concerns with health care finances and how phys…
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A woman with serious mental illness cycles between a state hospital, shelters, nursing homes, and psychiatric units, with no permanent place to land. Read by the author Brian Scott Barnett, a staff psychiatrist at Cleveland Clinic.Health Affairs
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After the release of federal guidelines to curb opioid misuse, a patient is unable to obtain effective pain treatment and dies from complications. Read by author Mary Beth Foglia, originally published in December 2019.Health Affairs
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