The more-than-a-quarter-million Americans who use PrEP could lose free access to the HIV-prevention medication through their employer-sponsored health insurance, following a Texas judge’s ruling last ...
The Biden administration on Oct. 21 issued a new proposed rule that would require health insurance providers to cover an injectable form of the HIV prevention medication known as PrEP, marking a ...
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PrEP insurance denials and cost-sharing persist for many, despite accessibility efforts
A new study by CUNY SPH researchers suggests that insurance and cost-related barriers persist for sexual and gender minority people seeking pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP), despite regulations ...
*Refers to the latest 2 years of stltoday.com stories. Cancel anytime. Gay couple using laptop with toddler daughter in living room Pride month is a time for the LGBTQ community to celebrate the ...
When Nicklaus Chalk started law school at the University of California, Berkeley, last fall, one of his top priorities was to take care of his health. The 24-year-old student visited a doctor to get a ...
Paul Shafer has received funding in the past three years from the Commonwealth Fund, Arnold Ventures, Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, Kate B. Reynolds Charitable Trust, Starbucks Coffee Company, and ...
A federal judge in Texas has sided with two companies that don’t want to pay toward their employees’ PrEP, the medication that, when taken daily, prevents HIV infection. Judge Reed O’Connor, a Bush ...
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