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Mashup Score: 1In the “Wild West” of Outpatient Vascular Care, Doctors Can Reap Huge Payments as Patients Risk Life and Limb - 1 year(s) ago
To move vascular procedures out of expensive hospitals, the government turbocharged payments to doctors’ offices. Instead of saving money, it started a boom that is making doctors rich and putting patients in danger.
Source: ProPublicaCategories: Healthcare Professionals, Latest HeadlinesTweet
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Mashup Score: 48See top nonprofits in Indiana - Nonprofit Explorer - ProPublica - 1 year(s) ago
Since 2013, the IRS has released data culled from millions of nonprofit tax filings. Use this database to find organizations and see details like their executive compensation, revenue and expenses, as well as download tax filings going back as far as 2001.
Source: ProPublicaCategories: Critical Care, Latest HeadlinesTweet
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Mashup Score: 11Right-Wing Websites Connected to Former Trump Lawyer Are Scamming Loyal Followers With Phony Celebrity Pitches - 1 year(s) ago
A mysterious network called AdStyle is placing ads with fake endorsements from celebrities like Oprah Winfrey and Elon Musk on conservative sites based in the U.S. and abroad.
Source: ProPublicaCategories: Infectious Disease, Latest HeadlinesTweet
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Mashup Score: 0How Often Do Health Insurers Say No to Patients? No One Knows. - 1 year(s) ago
Insurers’ denial rates — a critical measure of how reliably they pay for customers’ care — remain mostly secret to the public. Federal and state regulators have done little to change that.
Source: ProPublicaCategories: Healthcare Professionals, Latest HeadlinesTweet
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Mashup Score: 225
As part of the Paycheck Protection Program, the federal government has provided hundreds of billions in financial support to banks to make low-interest loans to companies and nonprofit organizations in response to the economic devastation caused by the coronavirus pandemic. Search more than 11 million loans approved by lenders and disclosed by the Small Business Administration. |
Source: ProPublicaCategories: Hem/Oncs, Latest HeadlinesTweet
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Mashup Score: 0How Often Do Health Insurers Say No to Patients? No One Knows. - 2 year(s) ago
Insurers’ denial rates — a critical measure of how reliably they pay for customers’ care — remain mostly secret to the public. Federal and state regulators have done little to change that.
Source: ProPublicaCategories: Hem/Oncs, Latest HeadlinesTweet
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Mashup Score: 1How Often Do Health Insurers Say No to Patients? No One Knows. - 2 year(s) ago
Insurers’ denial rates — a critical measure of how reliably they pay for customers’ care — remain mostly secret to the public. Federal and state regulators have done little to change that.
Source: ProPublicaCategories: Latest Headlines, Rare DiseaseTweet
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Mashup Score: 23Inside the Secretive World of Penile Enlargement - 2 year(s) ago
How a doctor’s two-decade quest to grow the penis is leaving some men desperate and disfigured.
Source: ProPublicaCategories: Hem/Oncs, Latest HeadlinesTweet
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Mashup Score: 0
The Journal editorial page accused ProPublica of misleading readers in a story that hadn’t yet been published.
Source: ProPublicaCategories: Cardiologists, Latest HeadlinesTweet
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Mashup Score: 0Organ Transplant Patients Can Die When Donors Aren’t Screened for This Parasitic Disease - 2 year(s) ago
Bob Naedele died after receiving a heart from a donor with Chagas disease. His death could have been prevented if the donor had been tested. The group that governs U.S. transplant policies is considering mandatory screening of at-risk donors.
Source: ProPublicaCategories: Cardiologists, Latest HeadlinesTweet
RT @MarilynMann: @matthewherper A couple months ago there was a @propublica article on this https://t.co/GKBiNaZ7or