Medicare, Medicaid plans to experiment with covering weight loss drugs
Under the proposed plan, state Medicaid programs and Medicare Part D insurance plans will be able to voluntarily choose to cover Ozempic, Wegovy, Mounjaro and Zepbound for patients for 'weight management' purposes, according to Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services documents obtained by The Washington Post.
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12 minutes ago
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Best Vitamins and Supplements for Women in 2025
Nature Made makes some of the most affordable vitamins available. The Nature Made women's multivitamin includes 23 nutrients essential for women, including 100% of the recommended daily value of iron. Iron is one of the most common deficiencies in women, especially when pregnant or menstruating. With Nature Made, you get over the recommended value of vitamin C, D3 and E, as well as minerals zinc, copper and chromium. So if you are not deficient in those areas, you could get too much of them. Consuming too much vitamin D or E can result in toxicity. Nature Made doesn't have the additional bells and whistles other options on the list do, like probiotics. It's a dependable multivitamin that established a name for itself long ago. You also can get Nature Made multivitamins for women at every stage of their life -- prenatal, postnatal and over 50. You can trust the quality of Nature Made because all products are third-party tested and USP-verified.
Yahoo
40 minutes ago
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Raw milk sickens 21 people in Florida including 6 children
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (AP) — Six children are among 21 people who have E. coli or campylobacter infections after consuming raw milk from a farm in Florida, public health officials said. Seven people have been hospitalized, and at least two of them are suffering severe complications, the Florida Department of Health said Monday. It did not specify if any of the six infected children under 10 are among those being treated in hospitals, nor how many people were infected by E. coli, campylobacter or both bacteria. 'Sanitation practices in this farm are of particular concern due to the number of cases,' reads the state advisory, which did not identify the farm linked to the cluster of infections in northeast and central Florida. Raw milk appears to be gaining in popularity, despite years of warnings about the health risks of drinking unpasteurized products. The Food and Drug Administration and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention say raw milk is one of the 'riskiest' foods people can consume. Raw milk is far more likely than pasteurized milk to cause illnesses and hospitalizations because of dangerous bacteria such as campylobacter, listeria, salmonella and E. coli, research shows. The infections can cause gastrointestinal illness, and in some cases may lead to serious complications, including a life-threatening form of kidney failure. Young children, the elderly, immunocompromised people and pregnant women are at greater risk of complications. 'We invented pasteurization for a reason,' said Keith Schneider, a food safety professor at the University of Florida. 'It's maddening that this is happening.' States have widely varying regulations regarding raw milk, with some allowing retail purchases in stores and others allowing sale only at farms. Some states allow 'cowshares,' in which customers buy milk produced by designated animals, and some allow consumption only by farm owners, employees or 'non-paying guests.' In Florida, the sale and distribution of raw milk for human consumption is illegal, but retailers get around the ban by labeling their products as for pet or animal food only. Schneider called it a 'wink, wink, nudge, nudge,' form of regulation. 'Everybody knows that they're selling it for human consumption,' Schneider said, adding that people getting sick — or even seriously ill — from drinking raw milk is 'not a question of if, but when.' ___ Kate Payne is a corps member for The Associated Press/Report for America Statehouse News Initiative. Report for America is a nonprofit national service program that places journalists in local newsrooms to report on undercovered issues. Solve the daily Crossword


Axios
42 minutes ago
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Planned Parenthood shuts down in Louisiana over "political warfare"
Planned Parenthood will close its two Louisiana clinics and shut down all services by Sept. 30, the organization announced Monday. Why it matters: The nonprofit sexual health provider has for 40 years provided low- and no-cost primary care, preventative screenings and tests, and treatment and counseling for sexually transmitted infections. The big picture: Planned Parenthood's national organization warned in July that, with its Medicaid funding on the chopping block in President Trump's Big Beautiful Bill, about 60% of its subsidiaries were likely to close. Trump's efforts to "defund Planned Parenthood" have hit a snag in the courts, but the Gulf Coast branch of the organization announced two weeks ago that it would shut down two of its Houston clinics and transfer its remaining four to Planned Parenthood of Greater Texas, Houston Public Media reports. The closure of the organization's remaining facilities — one in New Orleans and another in Baton Rouge — are "a direct result of relentless political assaults," according to a statement from Planned Parenthood Gulf Coast CEO Melaney Linton. What they're saying: "This is not a decision we wanted to make; it is one we were forced into by political warfare," Linton continued. "We are not the first Planned Parenthood affiliate to face this reality, and we will not be the last," she said. "Every health center closure, every patient who goes without care, every undetected cancer and untreated infection is on those lawmakers' hands." By the numbers: While the organization has become a conservative political target for the access it provides to abortion services, Planned Parenthood has long provided additional sexual health care. The organization, for example, provided more than 10,600 visits for nearly 18,000 patients in Louisiana last year, a spokeswoman tells Axios New Orleans. They accounted for nearly 30,000 STI tests, 655 ultrasounds and 1,795 cancer screenings and prevention services, which identified 76 diagnoses of precancerous conditions, according to the spokeswoman. The Louisiana clinics also provided more than 14,000 birth control visits, including nearly 4,200 vasectomies. Go deeper