13 minutes

Trupi i pajetë i një shtetase 75-vjeçare të Maqedonisë së Veriut ishte nxjerrë nga pjesa detare në Nea Kalikatria në Halkidiki, me automjet të ndihmës së shpejtë gruaja ishte dërguar në qendrën shëndetësore, ku ishte konstatuar vdekja, informon korrespondentja e MIA-s nga Athina. Nga Shërbimi Bregdetar i Greqisë njoftuan se dje në orët e pasdites, […]

Trupi i pajetë i një shtetase 75-vjeçare të Maqedonisë së Veriut ishte nxjerrë nga pjesa detare në Nea Kalikatria në Halkidiki, me automjet të ndihmës së shpejtë gruaja ishte dërguar në qendrën shëndetësore, ku ishte konstatuar vdekja, informon korrespondentja e MIA-s nga Athina. Nga Shërbimi Bregdetar i Greqisë njoftuan se dje në orët e pasdites, […]
14 minutes
Lisboa vai ter a primeira Festa do Dia da Criança Africana. Um dia de festa pensado para as famílias de todas as origens mas onde se celebram as raízes africanas. Uma data a coincidir com os protestos de crianças e jovens sul-africanos do bairro de Soweto, em Joanesburgo, a 16 de Junho de 1976, contestando a imposição da língua Afrikaans no ensino, uma língua associada à minoria branca.
14 minutes
Lisboa vai ter a primeira Festa do Dia da Criança Africana. Um dia de festa pensado para as famílias de todas as origens mas onde se celebram as raízes africanas. Uma data a coincidir com os protestos de crianças e jovens sul-africanos do bairro de Soweto, em Joanesburgo, a 16 de Junho de 1976, contestando a imposição da língua Afrikaans no ensino, uma língua associada à minoria branca.
14 minutes
Three top Senate Democrats are accusing the Trump administration and Republicans of “taking a wrecking ball” to childcare programs, highlighting the issue in a midterm year where many Democrats are running on inflation and the high cost of living. Childcare costs have skyrocketed in recent decades, outpacing inflation. There’s bipartisan consensus on the crisis: an […]
Three top Senate Democrats are accusing the Trump administration and Republicans of “taking a wrecking ball” to childcare programs, highlighting the issue in a midterm year where many Democrats are running on inflation and the high cost of living. Childcare costs have skyrocketed in recent decades, outpacing inflation. There’s bipartisan consensus on the crisis: an […]
17 minutes
President Donald Trump has touted more than $500 billion in prescription drug savings over 10 years from his policies. But the savings are largely aspirational, and not based on the more limited actions the administration has taken so far. The post The Shaky Assumptions Behind Trump’s Over $500 Billion in Projected Drug Savings appeared first on FactCheck.org.
President Donald Trump has touted more than $500 billion in prescription drug savings over 10 years from his policies. But the savings are largely aspirational, and not based on the more limited actions the administration has taken so far. The post The Shaky Assumptions Behind Trump’s Over $500 Billion in Projected Drug Savings appeared first on FactCheck.org.
18 minutes

Both incumbent Rep. Grace Meng and progressive challenger Chuck Park are the children of immigrants. Concerns about ICE loom large among voters. The post Immigration Takes Center Stage in New York’s 6th Congressional District Primary appeared first on Documented.

Both incumbent Rep. Grace Meng and progressive challenger Chuck Park are the children of immigrants. Concerns about ICE loom large among voters. The post Immigration Takes Center Stage in New York’s 6th Congressional District Primary appeared first on Documented.
21 minutes
در پی حمله نیروهای نظامی به تجمع ساکنان روستای پشموکی کرمان، دستکم هفت زن بلوچ زخمی و سه زن بازداشت شدند. این تجمع در اعتراض به نحوه واگذاری و بهرهبرداری از معدن کرومیت برگزار شد.
در پی حمله نیروهای نظامی به تجمع ساکنان روستای پشموکی کرمان، دستکم هفت زن بلوچ زخمی و سه زن بازداشت شدند. این تجمع در اعتراض به نحوه واگذاری و بهرهبرداری از معدن کرومیت برگزار شد.
22 minutes
Нацполіція розслідує кримінальне провадження за статтею про зловживання владою або службовим становищем, заявили в ОГП
22 minutes
Нацполіція розслідує кримінальне провадження за статтею про зловживання владою або службовим становищем, заявили в ОГП
23 minutes
El jefe de Gabinete de la presidenta madrileña niega que González Amador recibiera cuatro millones de euros del grupo hospitalario entre 2021 y 2023, cuando Ayuso ya estaba al frente de la región: "El último contrato con Quirón fue en 2010"Un informe de Hacienda revela que la pareja de Ayuso facturó 4,4 millones a Quirón Prevención entre 2021 y 2023 Miguel Ángel Rodríguez, jefe de Gabinete de la presidenta de la Comunidad de Madrid, Isabel Díaz Ayuso, ha publicado a media tarde de este jueves un nuevo tuit para desacreditar a la Agencia Tributaria. Su mensaje llega después de que elDiario.es revelase esta mañana un informe de Hacienda que recoge que Alberto González Amador, pareja Ayuso, facturó un total de 4,4 millones de euros a través de sus dos empresas a Quirón Prevención entre 2021 y 2023, cuando Ayuso ya era la presidenta madrileña. Mencionando a El País, un medio que publicó el informe después que elDiario.es, Rodríguez ha publicado el siguiente tuit: “EL PAÍS lanza insidias sobre los contratos de la Comunidad de Madrid y González Amador, a partir del año 2021. Quede claro: el último contrato con QUIRÓN fue del año 2010. La presidenta no estaba ni pensada. No pueden tapar que las hijas de Zapatero van Pá’lante”. Además, en conversación con el diario de Prisa, Rodríguez ha asegurado que la Agencia Tributaria “debería ser dinamitada”. Rodríguez contradice así a la propia Agencia Tributaria que, en su informe, recoge que González Amador recibió de Quirón Prevención un millón de euros en 2021, casi dos millones en 2022 y finalmente 1,4 millones en 2023, los tres años analizados. Varios artículos de prensa se hicieron eco en la primavera de 2021 de la relación sentimental entre Díaz Ayuso y González Amador, aunque sin precisar el momento en que había comenzado la relación. Se trata de operaciones facturadas por sus sociedades Maxwell Cremona y Masterman & Whitaker por servicios de consultoría en los que Hacienda ha hallado “indicios de simulación” al canalizar el empresario parte de esos ingresos a través de la segunda de esas empresas, a la que la Agencia Tributaria ya calificó de “pantalla”. En su informe, la Agencia Tributaria solicita al juez que investiga a González Amador que suspenda el procedimiento inspector contra ambas al constatar que puede estar relacionado con la causa en la que mantiene imputado al empresario por delitos de corrupción en los negocios y administración desleal. Hacienda argumenta que el resultado de estas actuaciones inspectoras depende de los hechos que se declaren probados en la investigación penal. Este mismo jueves se ha conocido que la Unidad Central Operativa (UCO) de la Guardia Civil analizó durante un mes y medio la información de la causa contra el empresario y comisionista Alberto González Amador y concluyó, de forma provisional, que una de sus empresas “carecería de los medios necesarios para la prestación de servicios de consultoría” que facturaba a Quirón Prevención, división de la empresa de la sanidad privada que recibe fondos de la Comunidad de Madrid que alcanzan los mil millones de euros anuales.
El jefe de Gabinete de la presidenta madrileña niega que González Amador recibiera cuatro millones de euros del grupo hospitalario entre 2021 y 2023, cuando Ayuso ya estaba al frente de la región: "El último contrato con Quirón fue en 2010"Un informe de Hacienda revela que la pareja de Ayuso facturó 4,4 millones a Quirón Prevención entre 2021 y 2023 Miguel Ángel Rodríguez, jefe de Gabinete de la presidenta de la Comunidad de Madrid, Isabel Díaz Ayuso, ha publicado a media tarde de este jueves un nuevo tuit para desacreditar a la Agencia Tributaria. Su mensaje llega después de que elDiario.es revelase esta mañana un informe de Hacienda que recoge que Alberto González Amador, pareja Ayuso, facturó un total de 4,4 millones de euros a través de sus dos empresas a Quirón Prevención entre 2021 y 2023, cuando Ayuso ya era la presidenta madrileña. Mencionando a El País, un medio que publicó el informe después que elDiario.es, Rodríguez ha publicado el siguiente tuit: “EL PAÍS lanza insidias sobre los contratos de la Comunidad de Madrid y González Amador, a partir del año 2021. Quede claro: el último contrato con QUIRÓN fue del año 2010. La presidenta no estaba ni pensada. No pueden tapar que las hijas de Zapatero van Pá’lante”. Además, en conversación con el diario de Prisa, Rodríguez ha asegurado que la Agencia Tributaria “debería ser dinamitada”. Rodríguez contradice así a la propia Agencia Tributaria que, en su informe, recoge que González Amador recibió de Quirón Prevención un millón de euros en 2021, casi dos millones en 2022 y finalmente 1,4 millones en 2023, los tres años analizados. Varios artículos de prensa se hicieron eco en la primavera de 2021 de la relación sentimental entre Díaz Ayuso y González Amador, aunque sin precisar el momento en que había comenzado la relación. Se trata de operaciones facturadas por sus sociedades Maxwell Cremona y Masterman & Whitaker por servicios de consultoría en los que Hacienda ha hallado “indicios de simulación” al canalizar el empresario parte de esos ingresos a través de la segunda de esas empresas, a la que la Agencia Tributaria ya calificó de “pantalla”. En su informe, la Agencia Tributaria solicita al juez que investiga a González Amador que suspenda el procedimiento inspector contra ambas al constatar que puede estar relacionado con la causa en la que mantiene imputado al empresario por delitos de corrupción en los negocios y administración desleal. Hacienda argumenta que el resultado de estas actuaciones inspectoras depende de los hechos que se declaren probados en la investigación penal. Este mismo jueves se ha conocido que la Unidad Central Operativa (UCO) de la Guardia Civil analizó durante un mes y medio la información de la causa contra el empresario y comisionista Alberto González Amador y concluyó, de forma provisional, que una de sus empresas “carecería de los medios necesarios para la prestación de servicios de consultoría” que facturaba a Quirón Prevención, división de la empresa de la sanidad privada que recibe fondos de la Comunidad de Madrid que alcanzan los mil millones de euros anuales.
23 minutes

New Mexico has spent $843.5 million since 2022 to rebuild the state’s behavioral health system, but some residents still face issues scheduling behavioral health appointments and New Mexico was one of just seven states to see an increase in overdose deaths last year, according to a new state report.

23 minutes
New Mexico has spent $843.5 million since 2022 to rebuild the state’s behavioral health system, but some residents still face issues scheduling behavioral health appointments and New Mexico was one of just seven states to see an increase in overdose deaths last year, according to a new state report.
24 minutes
Një sulm masiv ukrainas në rafinerinë e naftës së Moskës më 18 qershor pritet të përkeqësojë edhe më tej telashet me mungesën e karburanteve që kanë prekur mbarë Rusinë.
Një sulm masiv ukrainas në rafinerinë e naftës së Moskës më 18 qershor pritet të përkeqësojë edhe më tej telashet me mungesën e karburanteve që kanë prekur mbarë Rusinë.
24 minutes
Public health, explained: Sign up to receive Healthbeat’s free New York City newsletter here.Olivia Killingsworth, an actor and bookkeeper living in Brooklyn has a rare life-threatening genetic condition for which she sees specialists, limits exercise, takes prescribed medication to lower her blood pressure, and monitors her heart rate with a watch. The 44-year-old is one of some 450,000 New Yorkers who could lose health insurance at the end of the month.That’s because of a change to the state’s “Essential Plan,” a low-cost health insurance option that covers people who earn too much money to qualify for Medicaid and too little to afford private plans sold on the state health insurance marketplace.On July 1, New York plans to revert to an earlier plan that will narrow insurance eligibility for low-income residents, potentially leaving thousands suddenly uninsured and looking for coverage options. Killingsworth and others like her may find themselves in an unusual predicament as they weigh their health insurance options: Do they try to earn more money so they might qualify for a plan that proves to be more expensive or do they work less so they earn less money to be eligible for a separate plan? “People are really going to be in the situation of making incredibly difficult choices,” said Michael Kinnucan, health policy director at the Fiscal Policy Institute, a nonpartisan think tank that aims to promote sound and equitable fiscal policy to strengthen New York’s economy.When New York launched the Essential Plan in 2016 with funding from the Affordable Care Act, it was hailed a success. The plan offered no monthly premiums or deductibles, and annual checkups were free. In a state whose monthly premiums for marketplace plans are among the most expensive nationwide, it became wildly popular, now offering high-quality and affordable insurance to 1.7 million New Yorkers.Of those, about 450,000 are in households making up to 250% of the federal poverty line. That is $39,900 a year for a single adult with no children, like Killingsworth who last year earned around $35,000, or $80,375 for a family of four. The state received federal permission in 2024 to expand eligibility to those New Yorkers. But the passage of H.R. 1, the Trump administration’s One Big Beautiful Bill Act, changed that. The legislation prompted the state to shrink eligibility and undo its expansion, and the income limit for eligibility dropped from 250% to 200%. There are no changes for the 1.3 million enrollees with income below 200% of the federal income poverty level, or an income below $31,920. New York City’s Department of Health and Mental Hygiene estimates that 233,000 New York City residents will lose their Essential Plan coverage. The New York State Department of Health, which worked with the Urban Institute, a think tank in Washington, D.C., on its projections, anticipates between 150,000 and 200,000 will become uninsured.Actor and bookkeeper Olivia Killingsworth gives a health update to her physical therapist Melanie Carminati as part of her PT appointment.New Yorkers who lose their insurance can go to a federally qualified health center — typically a community health clinic — for preventative care, dental care, and other services and pay on a sliding scale. Or they may visit a medical school that has a student-run clinic offering free or low-cost care.With so many suddenly losing their insurance, there will be plenty of blame to go around. “The responsibility for those losing coverage rests squarely with House Republicans, and now New Yorkers are beginning to feel the impact,” New York Health Department spokesperson Danielle De Souza said in a statement. Killingsworth and health advocates like Kinnucan disagree. They argue that Gov. Kathy Hochul didn’t do enough to preserve coverage in the budget for Essential Plan enrollees. Lawmakers said she could have dipped into funds that she had set aside for her January budget proposal. But the argument failed to gain traction in negotiations.“We had an opportunity in the state budget to prevent it,” said Kinnucan. “There’s this weird thing that happens with policymakers, where healthcare in theory is some sort of entitlement program that you can cut, but the people who use healthcare are sick and they really need help.” Olivia Killingsworth poses for a portrait after leaving her physical therapy appointment in Brooklyn.Killingsworth diagnosed with rare connective tissue conditionIn 2019, Killingsworth was diagnosed with Ehlers-Danlos Syndrome, or EDS, a rare group of connective tissue disorders. She has what’s referred to as the vascular kind, which means her connective tissue is very fragile, particularly in the blood vessels and organs. That type of EDS runs in the family and can cause life-threatening complications, such as an aneurysm, and affects roughly 1 in 100,000 to 200,000 people, according to the Ehlers-Danlos Society, an advocacy organization that aims to promote awareness about EDS. “I’m a 44-year-old woman with the joints and connective tissue of a 74-year-old,” said Killingsworth, who has dyed parts of her graying hair purple.Killingsworth hasn’t performed as an actor since 2021 but is hoping to return to the stage or TV soon. Treatment keeps her busy.Care requires visits to a niche cardiologist and a vascular specialist, both at Mount Sinai on the Upper East Side; she consults them on taking long bike rides and is under orders not to over exert herself. Olivia Killingsworth does exercises with her physical therapist Melanie Carminati at her studio in Brooklyn.She also sees a physical therapist almost weekly who specializes in EDS, one of the few in the city, if not the country. Each visit runs $250. The physical therapist, the owner of a Brooklyn studio, doesn’t accept insurance like many other physical therapists, because she believes it would limit the quality of care. It’s a stretch for Killingsworth to pay out of pocket, but she can make it work because her other healthcare has been covered. Killingsworth’s father was diagnosed with EDS, and she believes her aunt likely had it, dying at the age of 70 in 2018 because of an aortic rupture, Killingsworth said. Her aunt’s inheritance allowed her in 2022 to pay cash for her one-bedroom apartment in Brooklyn’s Kensington neighborhood where she lives with her two cats. She paid $521,000, public records show.Killingsworth realizes that she is lucky enough to live in one of the world’s most expensive cities without having to pay a mortgage or rent. That recognition compelled her to participate in an organized protest in April outside Hochul’s office in Midtown Manhattan. A member of the Democratic Socialists of America who canvassed for Mayor Zohran Mamdani when he ran for office last year, Killingsworth was part of a group arrested in the April demonstration on trespassing charges, which were later dropped.“I have a college degree, I have a lot of skills, I can do a lot of stuff,” Killingsworth said. “I know that there are lots of other people that aren’t from that position and are facing much worse conditions. They don’t have the same options that I do. So that’s one of the reasons that I wanted to go out there and take that arrest.”Killingsworth joined the Essential Plan in 2024 and it was a godsend. Because of her yearly salary of around $35,000, she qualified for a plan for New Yorkers whose annual income was more than 200% of the federal poverty line and less than 250% of the federal poverty line. The annual income is between $31,920 and $39,900. If she were to purchase a plan through the marketplace, she would pay more. According to a calculation on the marketplace offered by New York state, Killingsworth is eligible for more than 60 plans. The NYS Health Department says that consumers with income between the 200% and 250% poverty line will be eligible for a plan with an estimated average premium of $220 after tax credits and a deductible of $2,150.If Killingsworth were to pursue one of these plans, she says she would stay with her current insurance whose services she has liked. One estimate she obtained shows she could pay a monthly premium of $432 after tax credits with an annual deductible of $2,050 — reaching a minimum of $7,234 total, or 20% of last year’s income. This doesn’t include costs for imaging, specialists’ visits, or her physical therapy sessions.She is inclined to see if she can join another tier on the Essential Plan.There is no monthly premium or deductible, and the maximum out of pocket is $350. A visit to see her cardiologist would cost $25. To be eligible, Killingsworth would need to work fewer hours so she could earn less money. Her annual salary can’t exceed $31,920.Trenton Daniel is a reporter covering public health in New York for Healthbeat. Contact Trenton at tdaniel@healthbeat.org or on the messaging app Signal at trentondaniel.88.
Public health, explained: Sign up to receive Healthbeat’s free New York City newsletter here.Olivia Killingsworth, an actor and bookkeeper living in Brooklyn has a rare life-threatening genetic condition for which she sees specialists, limits exercise, takes prescribed medication to lower her blood pressure, and monitors her heart rate with a watch. The 44-year-old is one of some 450,000 New Yorkers who could lose health insurance at the end of the month.That’s because of a change to the state’s “Essential Plan,” a low-cost health insurance option that covers people who earn too much money to qualify for Medicaid and too little to afford private plans sold on the state health insurance marketplace.On July 1, New York plans to revert to an earlier plan that will narrow insurance eligibility for low-income residents, potentially leaving thousands suddenly uninsured and looking for coverage options. Killingsworth and others like her may find themselves in an unusual predicament as they weigh their health insurance options: Do they try to earn more money so they might qualify for a plan that proves to be more expensive or do they work less so they earn less money to be eligible for a separate plan? “People are really going to be in the situation of making incredibly difficult choices,” said Michael Kinnucan, health policy director at the Fiscal Policy Institute, a nonpartisan think tank that aims to promote sound and equitable fiscal policy to strengthen New York’s economy.When New York launched the Essential Plan in 2016 with funding from the Affordable Care Act, it was hailed a success. The plan offered no monthly premiums or deductibles, and annual checkups were free. In a state whose monthly premiums for marketplace plans are among the most expensive nationwide, it became wildly popular, now offering high-quality and affordable insurance to 1.7 million New Yorkers.Of those, about 450,000 are in households making up to 250% of the federal poverty line. That is $39,900 a year for a single adult with no children, like Killingsworth who last year earned around $35,000, or $80,375 for a family of four. The state received federal permission in 2024 to expand eligibility to those New Yorkers. But the passage of H.R. 1, the Trump administration’s One Big Beautiful Bill Act, changed that. The legislation prompted the state to shrink eligibility and undo its expansion, and the income limit for eligibility dropped from 250% to 200%. There are no changes for the 1.3 million enrollees with income below 200% of the federal income poverty level, or an income below $31,920. New York City’s Department of Health and Mental Hygiene estimates that 233,000 New York City residents will lose their Essential Plan coverage. The New York State Department of Health, which worked with the Urban Institute, a think tank in Washington, D.C., on its projections, anticipates between 150,000 and 200,000 will become uninsured.Actor and bookkeeper Olivia Killingsworth gives a health update to her physical therapist Melanie Carminati as part of her PT appointment.New Yorkers who lose their insurance can go to a federally qualified health center — typically a community health clinic — for preventative care, dental care, and other services and pay on a sliding scale. Or they may visit a medical school that has a student-run clinic offering free or low-cost care.With so many suddenly losing their insurance, there will be plenty of blame to go around. “The responsibility for those losing coverage rests squarely with House Republicans, and now New Yorkers are beginning to feel the impact,” New York Health Department spokesperson Danielle De Souza said in a statement. Killingsworth and health advocates like Kinnucan disagree. They argue that Gov. Kathy Hochul didn’t do enough to preserve coverage in the budget for Essential Plan enrollees. Lawmakers said she could have dipped into funds that she had set aside for her January budget proposal. But the argument failed to gain traction in negotiations.“We had an opportunity in the state budget to prevent it,” said Kinnucan. “There’s this weird thing that happens with policymakers, where healthcare in theory is some sort of entitlement program that you can cut, but the people who use healthcare are sick and they really need help.” Olivia Killingsworth poses for a portrait after leaving her physical therapy appointment in Brooklyn.Killingsworth diagnosed with rare connective tissue conditionIn 2019, Killingsworth was diagnosed with Ehlers-Danlos Syndrome, or EDS, a rare group of connective tissue disorders. She has what’s referred to as the vascular kind, which means her connective tissue is very fragile, particularly in the blood vessels and organs. That type of EDS runs in the family and can cause life-threatening complications, such as an aneurysm, and affects roughly 1 in 100,000 to 200,000 people, according to the Ehlers-Danlos Society, an advocacy organization that aims to promote awareness about EDS. “I’m a 44-year-old woman with the joints and connective tissue of a 74-year-old,” said Killingsworth, who has dyed parts of her graying hair purple.Killingsworth hasn’t performed as an actor since 2021 but is hoping to return to the stage or TV soon. Treatment keeps her busy.Care requires visits to a niche cardiologist and a vascular specialist, both at Mount Sinai on the Upper East Side; she consults them on taking long bike rides and is under orders not to over exert herself. Olivia Killingsworth does exercises with her physical therapist Melanie Carminati at her studio in Brooklyn.She also sees a physical therapist almost weekly who specializes in EDS, one of the few in the city, if not the country. Each visit runs $250. The physical therapist, the owner of a Brooklyn studio, doesn’t accept insurance like many other physical therapists, because she believes it would limit the quality of care. It’s a stretch for Killingsworth to pay out of pocket, but she can make it work because her other healthcare has been covered. Killingsworth’s father was diagnosed with EDS, and she believes her aunt likely had it, dying at the age of 70 in 2018 because of an aortic rupture, Killingsworth said. Her aunt’s inheritance allowed her in 2022 to pay cash for her one-bedroom apartment in Brooklyn’s Kensington neighborhood where she lives with her two cats. She paid $521,000, public records show.Killingsworth realizes that she is lucky enough to live in one of the world’s most expensive cities without having to pay a mortgage or rent. That recognition compelled her to participate in an organized protest in April outside Hochul’s office in Midtown Manhattan. A member of the Democratic Socialists of America who canvassed for Mayor Zohran Mamdani when he ran for office last year, Killingsworth was part of a group arrested in the April demonstration on trespassing charges, which were later dropped.“I have a college degree, I have a lot of skills, I can do a lot of stuff,” Killingsworth said. “I know that there are lots of other people that aren’t from that position and are facing much worse conditions. They don’t have the same options that I do. So that’s one of the reasons that I wanted to go out there and take that arrest.”Killingsworth joined the Essential Plan in 2024 and it was a godsend. Because of her yearly salary of around $35,000, she qualified for a plan for New Yorkers whose annual income was more than 200% of the federal poverty line and less than 250% of the federal poverty line. The annual income is between $31,920 and $39,900. If she were to purchase a plan through the marketplace, she would pay more. According to a calculation on the marketplace offered by New York state, Killingsworth is eligible for more than 60 plans. The NYS Health Department says that consumers with income between the 200% and 250% poverty line will be eligible for a plan with an estimated average premium of $220 after tax credits and a deductible of $2,150.If Killingsworth were to pursue one of these plans, she says she would stay with her current insurance whose services she has liked. One estimate she obtained shows she could pay a monthly premium of $432 after tax credits with an annual deductible of $2,050 — reaching a minimum of $7,234 total, or 20% of last year’s income. This doesn’t include costs for imaging, specialists’ visits, or her physical therapy sessions.She is inclined to see if she can join another tier on the Essential Plan.There is no monthly premium or deductible, and the maximum out of pocket is $350. A visit to see her cardiologist would cost $25. To be eligible, Killingsworth would need to work fewer hours so she could earn less money. Her annual salary can’t exceed $31,920.Trenton Daniel is a reporter covering public health in New York for Healthbeat. Contact Trenton at tdaniel@healthbeat.org or on the messaging app Signal at trentondaniel.88.
24 minutes

Los patrullajes preventivos de la 2ª Comisaría de San Pedro de Atacama en la Ruta 27-CH permitieron hallar dos máquinas abandonadas y fiscalizar una tercera en movimiento. Los vehículos de carga mantenían encargo vigente por robo denunciado esa misma jornada en Calama y Antofagasta, resultando un conductor chileno detenido por receptación. Este artículo VIDEO | ¡Eficaz operativo! Recuperan tres camiones robados que pretendían ser sacados del país por San Pedro de Atacama fue publicado originalmente en El Diario de Antofagasta.

Los patrullajes preventivos de la 2ª Comisaría de San Pedro de Atacama en la Ruta 27-CH permitieron hallar dos máquinas abandonadas y fiscalizar una tercera en movimiento. Los vehículos de carga mantenían encargo vigente por robo denunciado esa misma jornada en Calama y Antofagasta, resultando un conductor chileno detenido por receptación. Este artículo VIDEO | ¡Eficaz operativo! Recuperan tres camiones robados que pretendían ser sacados del país por San Pedro de Atacama fue publicado originalmente en El Diario de Antofagasta.
26 minutes
ടിവികെ സർക്കാരിന്റെ ആദ്യ നയപ്രഖ്യാപന പ്രസംഗത്തെ രൂക്ഷമായി വിമർശിച്ച് പ്രതിപക്ഷ നേതാവും ഡിഎംകെ നേതാവുമായ ഉദയനിധി സ്റ്റാലിൻ
ടിവികെ സർക്കാരിന്റെ ആദ്യ നയപ്രഖ്യാപന പ്രസംഗത്തെ രൂക്ഷമായി വിമർശിച്ച് പ്രതിപക്ഷ നേതാവും ഡിഎംകെ നേതാവുമായ ഉദയനിധി സ്റ്റാലിൻ
26 minutes
കാന്തല്ലൂരിൽ കാട്ടാനയുടെ ആക്രമണത്തിൽ ആദിവാസി മരിച്ചു. ചുരക്കുളം ഉന്നതിയിലെ മലപ്പുലയ വിഭാഗത്തിലെ മുരുകൻ (55) ആണ് മരിച്ചത്.
കാന്തല്ലൂരിൽ കാട്ടാനയുടെ ആക്രമണത്തിൽ ആദിവാസി മരിച്ചു. ചുരക്കുളം ഉന്നതിയിലെ മലപ്പുലയ വിഭാഗത്തിലെ മുരുകൻ (55) ആണ് മരിച്ചത്.
26 minutes
جیدی ونس، معاون رئیس جمهوری آمریکا در یک کنفرانس خبری گفت که دوره ۶۰ روزه درنظر گرفته شده در تفاهمنامه با ایران از امروز آغاز میشود. او افزود تا زمانی که رفتار حکومت ایران عوض نشود، پولی به دستشان نمیرسد. برشی از پوشش ویژه با ترجمه همزمان پژواک کیومرثی
جیدی ونس، معاون رئیس جمهوری آمریکا در یک کنفرانس خبری گفت که دوره ۶۰ روزه درنظر گرفته شده در تفاهمنامه با ایران از امروز آغاز میشود. او افزود تا زمانی که رفتار حکومت ایران عوض نشود، پولی به دستشان نمیرسد. برشی از پوشش ویژه با ترجمه همزمان پژواک کیومرثی
26 minutes

Elijah Manley, one of the four Democrats opposing Debbie Wasserman Schultz in South Florida’s newly reconfigured Congressional District 20, announced Thursday that he has been endorsed by California Democratic U.S. Rep. Ro Khanna. Wasserman Schultz chose to run after her existing CD 22 seat was redrawn, becoming much more GOP-leaning as part of the new […]

Elijah Manley, one of the four Democrats opposing Debbie Wasserman Schultz in South Florida’s newly reconfigured Congressional District 20, announced Thursday that he has been endorsed by California Democratic U.S. Rep. Ro Khanna. Wasserman Schultz chose to run after her existing CD 22 seat was redrawn, becoming much more GOP-leaning as part of the new […]
27 minutes
据法国周刊《快报》电子版周二16日登出由阿尔班·德·特雷米奥勒署名的报道,中国国家安全部指责外国情报机构利用“间谍乌龟”或者“间谍鱼”来收集海底数据。在报道此一消息的同时时,《快报》也提醒读者反思“是否应该全然相信北京的说法?”
27 minutes
据法国周刊《快报》电子版周二16日登出由阿尔班·德·特雷米奥勒署名的报道,中国国家安全部指责外国情报机构利用“间谍乌龟”或者“间谍鱼”来收集海底数据。在报道此一消息的同时时,《快报》也提醒读者反思“是否应该全然相信北京的说法?”
27 minutes
據法國周刊《快報》電子版周二16日登出由阿爾班·德·特雷米奧勒署名的報道,中國國家安全部指責外國情報機構利用“間諜烏龜”或者“間諜魚”來收集海底數據。在報道此一消息的同時時,《快報》也提醒讀者反思“是否應該全然相信北京的說法?”
27 minutes
據法國周刊《快報》電子版周二16日登出由阿爾班·德·特雷米奧勒署名的報道,中國國家安全部指責外國情報機構利用“間諜烏龜”或者“間諜魚”來收集海底數據。在報道此一消息的同時時,《快報》也提醒讀者反思“是否應該全然相信北京的說法?”
27 minutes
A judge has now cleared the way for construction to begin on All People's Church in Del Cerro, a 54,000-square-foot church at Interstate 8 and College Ave.
A judge has now cleared the way for construction to begin on All People's Church in Del Cerro, a 54,000-square-foot church at Interstate 8 and College Ave.
28 minutes
Take a look inside Mount Zion Black Cultural Center, where stained glass windows have been reinstalled.
28 minutes
Take a look inside Mount Zion Black Cultural Center, where stained glass windows have been reinstalled.