Supreme Court to hear hospital payment case; Congressional efforts against administration's nursing home staffing quotas
Submitted by mike kraft on
![](https://www.reuters.com/resizer/v2/DGPKQ5YKCZO2NCITVTQWTS4PEM.jpg?auth=8739e600d8f035008d330176c38d264e49c05915a8c297ab19c16468d35e8a76&height=1005&width=1920&quality=80&smart=true)
Submitted by mike kraft on
Submitted by mike kraft on
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Submitted by mike kraft on
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Submitted by mike kraft on
Submitted by mike kraft on
Submitted by mike kraft on
Four years ago this month, schools nationwide began to shut down, igniting one of the most polarizing and partisan debates of the pandemic.
Some schools, often in Republican-led states and rural areas, reopened by fall 2020. Others, typically in large cities and states led by Democrats, would not fully reopen for another year.
A variety of data — about children’s academic outcomes and about the spread of Covid-19 — has accumulated in the time since. Today, there is broad acknowledgment among many public health and education experts that extended school closures did not significantly stop the spread of Covid, while the academic harms for children have been large and long-lasting.
Submitted by mike kraft on
Seeing COVID rates hit another high, and vaccine uptake remain low, doctors don’t have an antidote for something they see as an ongoing risk factor: the spread of misinformation, including on the presidential campaign trail.
Submitted by mike kraft on
Submitted by mike kraft on
Submitted by mike kraft on