
Articles on Health policy
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One in ten people experience harm associated with their hospital care, such as medication errors, infections, or a deterioration that isn’t managed properly.

Medicare urgent care clinics were first set up in 2023. But are they meeting their objectives?

To support youth mental health, Canada must work towards reversing global megatrends like climate change and insecure employment, while also investing in youth mental health services.

Australians are waiting longer and longer for their first psychiatry appointment, especially outside major cities.

If Australia followed England’s lead and listed drugs such as Wegovy on the PBS for weight loss, this could bring the cost down from around $500 a month to $31.60.

The evidence suggests there’s benefit to getting those on higher incomes to contribute a small amount to the cost of seeing a GP.

Australia’s child vaccination rates used to be among the best in the world. But after peaking in 2020, they’re falling.

Fewer than half of Australians are always bulk billed when they see a GP. Labor’s Medicare plan, which the Coalition has promised to match, could turn this around.

What is a menopause health assessment? And how will it improve the health care women receive during this stage in their lives?

Factors like age, gender and where you live can make it more likely an applicant will be rejected.

Robert F. Kennedy Jr has been confirmed as the US health secretary. Here’s why this is bad news for America and the world.

Here’s what the evidence says, and how they work overseas.

From access to preventive care to workplace protections, public policies affect the health of LGBTQ+ people and the general public in both direct and indirect ways.

The funding has been billed as a way to shorten waits for care in emergency departments and for elective surgery. But will it really make a difference?

“Drink responsibly” messages have not stopped risky drinking. Some say we need cancer warnings on wine bottles and beer cans like we do on cigarette packs.

In our new study, people told us they’d been fined for leaving home to access drug treatment programs – and still couldn’t afford to pay, years later.

While it doesn’t constitute a national ban on gender-affirming care for minors, the executive order contains provisions that could have a chilling effect on health care providers around the country.

Some communities have too few GPs to ensure everyone can get the care they need, when they need it. Whoever wins the federal election should commit to fixing this.

Overseeing the FDA, NIH and several other public health and medical research divisions, the HHS secretary is a powerful force in how the nation accesses health care.

Health care is universal in Australia, but this doesn’t mean seeing a doctor is always free.