HHS officially renews public health emergency for COVID-19
HHS has officially renewed the public health emergency designation that is tied to significant funding for healthcare providers and state Medicaid programs.
HHS has officially renewed the public health emergency designation that is tied to significant funding for healthcare providers and state Medicaid programs.
As hospitals and payers deal with potential fallout from President Donald Trump’s new tax law, telehealth companies are cautiously embracing it.
Children’s hospitals say the trickle-down effects of reduced Medicaid funding will hurt the very patient populations the program was built to protect.
Medicare Advantage rules, hospital cuts, physician pay and numerous expiring programs remain unaddressed.
State-directed payments and provider taxes have become a lifeline for providers in covering Medicaid costs.
The offering comes as fundraising for healthcare IPOs, typically a staple of the U.S. calendar, continues to lag in 2025.
Despite a shifting economic and regulatory environment, healthcare mergers and acquisitions (M&A) are showing a remarkable degree of resilience in 2025.
House Budget Committee Chairman Jodey Arrington said Republicans will seek deeper cuts to Medicaid and new spending reductions in Medicare.
Zimmer Biomet, a medical device maker, has agreed to acquire Monogram Technologies, a robotics firm specializing in orthopedic surgery.
The combined company would sell advanced lab tools and diagnostic solutions and is expected to generate $6.5 billion in sales this year.
President Donald Trump’s new tax cut law has pushed rural hospitals’ service expansion strategies.