Kansas City, MO - infoZine - Newswise - With the economy in a state of decline, it is difficult for many Americans to afford health care. Visits to doctors are down 10 percent to 15 percent and many individuals are not taking their ...
Instead of cash, state welfare workers can offer families in financial trouble a complex array of targeted aid programs such as children’s health insurance, nutrition programs for women and infants, work training and job placement ...
The agency expects an 8 percent increase in health insurance costs.Even though diesel prices have dropped, the ATA has budgeted about 14 percent more for fuel this year than last. The budget assumes an average fuel price of $3.17 ...
Ninety-two percent of bicyclists killed in 2007 reportedly weren’t wearing a helmet, according to the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety, which notes that helmet use has been estimated to reduce risk of head injury by 85 percent. ...
A Suspicious Call for Universal Health Care. Automakers are not the only companies heading to Washington these days. America’s Health Insurance Plans (AHIP), the national association of health insurance companies, kicked off December by ...
Kansas City is sick and broke. MyFoxKC: Truman Medical Center Asking for Help Over Unpaid Bills . . . Unfortunately, health care is a topic most politicos ignore and people of KC don't really understand. Anyone unfortunate enough to ...
KANSAS CITY, Kan. -- KCTV5 News is following reports of a shooting in Kansas City, Kan. Police dispatch said that a man has been shot in the 5900 block of State Avenue. Dispatch said that the man was shot in the neck, but there was no ...
Americans were buying their own health insurance plans more and more frequently this past year, according to a report by the Kansas City Star. They state that the past year's economy combined with lower unemployment rates, ...
More and more people were able to afford their own health insurance plans this past year, a fact attributed to a stronger economy and lower unemployment rates. The Kansas City Star went on record as such. With today's economic situation ...
The family of a 17-year-old leukemia patient has sued health insurance giant Cigna Corp. for her death in 2007 after the company initially refused to pay for a liver transplant.