Trump, Affordable Care Act
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1don MSN
Patients’ group presses Trump to take on health-care ‘fat cats,’ demand real price transparency
A nonprofit patients rights group urges President Donald Trump to take steps to improve health care price transparency as the White House prepares a new health care proposal.
On Sunday, Politico and MS NOW reported that Trump would soon roll out a proposal to address the fast-approaching expiration of Affordable Care Act subsidies. If the subsidies expire at the end of the year, health care premiums are expected to spike for millions of Americans and potentially push them off their insurance plans.
Health care is emerging as a central pocketbook issue ahead of the 2026 midterms, as patients and physicians warn that the possible expiration of enhanced Affordable Care Act tax credits could drive up premiums and increase the number of uninsured.
2don MSN
Trump administration plan to reduce access to some student loans angers nurses, health care groups
A coalition of nursing and other health care organizations are angry over a Trump administration plan that could limit access to student loans in some cases. Students pursuing graduate degrees in nursing,
(The Center Square) – The U.S. Department of Education’s move to establish new borrowing caps for professional and graduate students, excluding several health care programs, has drawn criticism from state officials who say the limits could deter students from continuing their education.
Patients are at the heart of health care, and yet, they're rarely part of conversations around AI in health care.
Registered nurses at Sharp HealthCare began waving picket signs at 7 a.m. Wednesday that read “On strike for patient care and safety.” By 9:30 a.m., a key Sharp executive, standing before television cameras, objected vigorously to that slogan, insisting that it leaves out the true motivation for this three-day work stoppage.
Delaware has applied for up to $1 billion in federal funding to address a rural healthcare crisis. The proposal includes 15 new programs, such as establishing the state's first medical school and offering financial incentives to attract healthcare workers.