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Provisions in the new tax and spending bill passed by the Senate would go even further than the House bill in removing health ...
Research presented at the ASCO Annual Meeting 2025 highlighted potential new standards of care and other advances in ...
Under the “One Big Beautiful Bill Act," 10.9 million Americans would lose health insurance by 2034, according to estimates by the Congressional Budget Office.
These findings suggest a need to investigate whether age-specific trends are due to guidelines that suggest reduced screening for older age groups,” the researchers wrote.
Breast cancer patients may have inferior recurrence-free survival after neoadjuvant chemotherapy if they are overweight or obese at diagnosis.
Breast cancer survivors have a lower risk of Alzheimer's disease than cancer-free control individuals, data suggest.
Waiting about 9 months or more to rechallenge patients with amivantamab can improve outcomes in patients with colorectal cancer, data suggest.
The FDA has removed the REMS program requirement for currently approved BCMA- and CD19-directed autologous CAR T-cell therapies.
In 2024, 27.2 million people of all ages were uninsured in the United States, according to early estimates from the National Health Interview Survey.
Cuts that would target states could translate into fewer health services, medical professionals, and even hospitals, especially in rural communities.
Uterine cancer cases and deaths are projected to increase in Black women and White women in the United States.
President Donald Trump’s “One Big Beautiful Bill” cuts federal spending on Medicaid and Affordable Care Act marketplaces by about $1 trillion over a decade, according to the nonpartisan Congressional ...