WATCH: Trump’s Medicaid cuts will cost Arizona $65 million
Data shows that an uninsured America is more costly than a covered one; a price tag Arizonans will get familiar with to the tune of $65 million as Trump's Medicaid cuts reach the state.
Data shows that an uninsured America is more costly than a covered one; a price tag Arizonans will get familiar with to the tune of $65 million as Trump's Medicaid cuts reach the state.
Arizona has joined its 36th lawsuit against the Trump administration with a case that challenges a new childhood vaccine schedule and remade vaccine safety advisory board.
On Jan. 1, the Affordable Care Act (ACA) tax credits expired, and tens of thousands of Arizonans were hit with steep health insurance hikes.
Yuma County produces 90% of the nation’s lettuce during the winter months, a pace that growers say would be difficult to maintain without pesticides, even as organizations like Beyond Pesticides warn of their public health risks.
In late October, multiple children began appearing at emergency rooms around the state with severe symptoms. Doctors determined the children had been getting sick from a toxin called Shiga.
Thousands of Arizona families rely on state funding to care for loved ones. That support is now uncertain following a sharp increase in program spending.
SNAP benefits still have not been distributed, even though the Trump administration agreed to partially fund the program by court order.
Arizona's blood supply is in crisis. For minority patients, the shortage is even more severe.
As Republicans refuse to extend federal premium tax credits for the Affordable Care Act, Arizonans fear rising costs.
A bond initiative on the November ballot would expand emergency and behavioral health care for Maricopa County’s only public teaching hospital and safety net health care system.