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  • Reproductive Health

    State Public Coverage of Pregnant Undocumented Immigrants and Prenatal Insurance Uptake

    August 2025 Meghan Bellerose Linqing Zheng Arielle Desir Rachel E. Fabi Laura R. Wherry Maria W. Steenland

    Health insurance coverage increases access to recommended pregnancy care, but undocumented immigrants are not eligible for pregnancy Medicaid coverage without state uptake of alternative policy options. Twenty-four states and the District of Columbia (DC) offer public insurance to undocumented immigrants who are income eligible for pregnancy Medicaid through the Children’s Health Insurance Program From-Conception-to-End-of-Pregnancy option or state funds. More

  • Behavioral Health Population Health

    Alcohol Problems and Policies: The States Have the Power, But Will They Use It?

    August 2025 David H. Jernigan

    Alcohol is a causal factor in more than 200 disease and injury conditions in the human body. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) define excessive drinking as binge drinking (4 or more drinks for women, 5 or more for men on one occasion in the past month), heavy drinking (8 or more drinks for women, 15 or more for men in a week), and any drinking during pregnancy or by persons younger than age 21 years. More

  • Health care costs

    The Significance of Definitions in Determining the Level of Community Benefits for Nonprofit Hospitals

    August 2025 Hossein Zare Gerard Anderson

    The American Hospital Association determined that in 2022 nonprofit hospitals spent $129 billion on community benefits. This is more than the entire budget for the US public health service. Different organizations estimate different amounts of community benefit spending depending on their definition of community benefit. More

  • Health Equity

    Health Equity Benefits All Communities (Including White Ones)

    August 2025 Philip M. Alberti

    For more than 2 years, I have started my speaking engagements with a simple message: “Health equity benefits all communities.” Although the message may be straightforward, health equity–focused scientists and advocates like me have done an inadequate and ineffective job making that point clear and believable through stories, data, and messaging. More

  • Health Insurance

    From Disappointment to Predominance: Medicare Advantage’s Ascendancy and Transformation of Medicare

    August 2025 Rick Mayes Micah Johnson

    From 2004 to 2024, Medicare Advantage (MA) went from being a “policy disappointment,” covering 12% of all Medicare beneficiaries, to predominance, covering more than one-half (52%), with more growth predicted in the future. Drawing on an extensive review and synthesis of the literature, Medicare Payment Advisory Commission (MedPAC) reports, congressional committee hearings, and Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) data, this paper analyzes the evolution of Medicare and managed care in three parts More

  • Public Health

    People Versus Product: Conditions for Success for Community Health Workers as Sustainable Members of the Public Health Workforce

    August 2025 John Billimek Melina Michelen Patricia J. Cantero Noraima Chirinos Rocio Salazar Mary Anne Foo Samantha Peralta Brittany N. Morey Jacqueline J. Chow Salvador Zarate Sora Park Tanjasiri Alana M. W. Lebrón

    Community health workers (CHWs) are frontline public health workers who support the well-being and capacity building of residents disproportionately affected by health inequities. The purpose of this study is to examine diverse perspectives on the conditions for CHW success as CHWs were engaged in rapidly implemented, highly responsive education, vaccination, and recovery efforts during the COVID-19 pandemic in a large county in Southern California. More

  • Mental health Population Health

    A Case Study of Maine’s Risk-Based Firearm Removal Law

    August 2025 David B. Joyce Jeffrey Swanson

    Extreme Risk Protection Orders (ERPOs) are an effective legal tool for reducing firearm suicide by temporarily removing access to firearms for certain individuals who exhibit dangerous behavior. Unlike most state laws restricting access to firearms based on status, ERPOs are predicated on the assessment of future risk of harm to self or other, as determined by civil court file finding. Emerging research indicates that separating those in crisis from lethal means reduces firearm mortality. We assess Maine’s unique approach and consider whether it is a replicable policy option for other states or should be modified to comport with other states’ more broadly applicable model. More

  • Maximizing the Public Health Benefits of Opioid Settlements: Policy Recommendations for Equity, Sustainability, and Impact

    Opioids

    Maximizing the Public Health Benefits of Opioid Settlements: Policy Recommendations for Equity, Sustainability, and Impact

    July 2025 BRANDON D. L. MARSHALL Kristen Pendergrass Sara Whaley

    The US overdose crisis is one of the most severe and devastating public health problems of the 21st century. Since 1999, more than one million Americans have lost their lives to accidental drug overdose. More

  • Health Equity Population Health

    Turf Wars: How Growth and Competitive Shocks Have Affected the Performance and Stability of Community Health Centers

    July 2025 Justin Markowski

    Context: Community health centers (CHCs) are a critical and growing part of the health care safety net, doubling over the past 15 years to expand access to essential health care services to over 31 million patients in traditionally underserved communities. However, increasingly, CHCs have opened care delivery locations in communities already served by another CHC, potentially creating competitive markets with unknown implications for how this safety net operates. More

  • Legal Barriers to Safer Smoking Supplies Cause Harm and Should Be Removed

    Population Health

    Legal Barriers to Safer Smoking Supplies Cause Harm and Should Be Removed

    July 2025 Corey Davis Amy Lieberman Czarina Behrends

    The United States continues to experience a nearly unprecedented level of drug-related health harms, with over 105,000 Americans dying of overdose in 2023 alone. Although overall overdose deaths declined slightly from 2022 to 2023, rates for Black people continued to rise. Stimulants such as cocaine and methamphetamine are increasingly involved in overdose deaths, and xylazine and other contaminants continue to be prevalent in the illicit drug supply. More