On August 30, 2024, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) granted approval for two updated COVID-19 vaccines developed by Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna. These...
Pneumonia remains a significant concern for patients undergoing cardiac surgery, posing serious postoperative complications. Recent research has shed light on the specific risk factors...
In recent weeks, elderly residents across China have taken to the streets in protest against significant reductions in their health benefits. The demonstrations reflect...
Addressing the mental health care needs of veterans has become a critical focus for healthcare providers and policymakers. Veterans face unique challenges, including post-traumatic...
The Nursing and Midwifery Workforce
Nursing and midwifery represent the backbone of healthcare systems worldwide, constituting a significant portion of the health and social care...
Healthcare AI is no longer in “pilot mode.” In 2026, hospitals and care operators are accelerating automation, analytics, and healthcare robotics—but the real winners won’t be chosen by hype. They’ll be chosen by procurement. This report breaks down where healthcare AI and robotics are actually being deployed today, what decision-makers require to approve and scale new technology, and how healthcare financing and healthtech funding are shifting toward solutions that prove ROI, reliability, and real-world implementation strength.
The urgent care industry is undergoing a fundamental shift as insurers tighten networks, reduce reimbursement, and reassess which providers remain in-network. This in-depth report examines why urgent care network terminations are accelerating, which states are most affected, how owners and investors are being impacted, and what patients often discover only when it’s too late. Backed by regulatory data and real-world trends, this analysis reveals the new reality shaping urgent care in 2025 and beyond.
Millions of Americans struggle to afford essential medications due to rising U.S. drug prices. This in-depth guide explains why prescription costs are so high and how patients are legally accessing affordable prescription medications for diabetes, heart failure, mental health, depression, and HIV — safely, responsibly, and with medical oversight.
America’s healthcare system is undergoing a quiet but profound shift. As hospitals face staffing shortages and pressure to discharge patients earlier, home medical equipment is increasingly replacing functions once handled by facilities. From hospital beds and patient lifts to mobility devices, recovery is moving home — reshaping patient safety, caregiver responsibility, and the future of care across the United States.