BREAKING NEWS
Texas OB-GYNs urge lawmakers to change abortion laws after reports on pregnant women's deaths
Read full article: Texas OB-GYNs urge lawmakers to change abortion laws after reports on pregnant women's deathsThe group of 111 doctors cited recent ProPublica reporting on two pregnant women who died because doctors did not provide lifesaving care.
Galveston man drops wrongful death claims against women who allegedly helped his ex-wife get an abortion
Read full article: Galveston man drops wrongful death claims against women who allegedly helped his ex-wife get an abortionMarcus Silva and the women agreed to drop lawsuits against each other just days before they were set to go to trial.
Can ire over abortion ban finally put a Democrat on the Texas Supreme Court?
Read full article: Can ire over abortion ban finally put a Democrat on the Texas Supreme Court?Three Republican incumbents are being targeted for their role in recent abortion rulings by a new Democratic political action committee.
Texas maternal mortality committee asks to review abortion-related deaths
Read full article: Texas maternal mortality committee asks to review abortion-related deathsThe panel wants to review those cases, which have been excluded from state data for years, and other reforms amid a report that shows a spike in maternal deaths.
San Antonio man creates app that utilizes AI to help make pregnancy safer
Read full article: San Antonio man creates app that utilizes AI to help make pregnancy saferA new app aims to make pregnancy safer by using artificial intelligence to identify potential risks, through the use of machine learning techniques.
As a Texas city debates an abortion travel ban, maternal care is scarce in nearby rural counties
Read full article: As a Texas city debates an abortion travel ban, maternal care is scarce in nearby rural countiesAmid a fight over an āabortion travel ban,ā women health care experts say more attention is needed to the plight of pregnant Texans in the Panhandle where there are few hospitals and OBGYNs.
āI was dyingā: Heart patient understands disparities between men and women with heart disease
Read full article: āI was dyingā: Heart patient understands disparities between men and women with heart diseaseHeart disease is the leading cause of death for women, but a new study showed 65 percent of women who have high risk factors, are not even referred to specialists. The top doctors in the field admit big changes need to happen fast before more women fall through the cracks.
May is Womenās Health Month; remind women over 40 in your life to get a mammogram
Read full article: May is Womenās Health Month; remind women over 40 in your life to get a mammogramA study by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention shows cost and access are keeping women from getting life saving mammograms.
Texas Medical Board remains silent on abortion laws, despite calls for more guidance
Read full article: Texas Medical Board remains silent on abortion laws, despite calls for more guidanceThe Texas Supreme Court has asked the licensing board to offer doctors guidance on how to interpret the medical exception to the stateās abortion ban. Some doctors say that wouldnāt be enough reassurance.
Texas Supreme Court considers abortion challenge
Read full article: Texas Supreme Court considers abortion challengeIn August, a judge ruled that the stateās near-total abortion ban should not apply to medically complicated pregnancies. The state appealed that ruling to the Texas Supreme Court, putting it on hold.
Watch Texas Tribune journalists discuss their experience on a rural reproductive health project
Read full article: Watch Texas Tribune journalists discuss their experience on a rural reproductive health projectReporter Eleanor Klibanoff and photojournalist Shelby Tauber talked with Tribune editor Terri Langford about their reporting on a story of a 26-year-old Texan who was told her twin sons had a zero percent chance of survival after childbirth.
Why a Texas Panhandle city hit pause on an abortion ātravel banā ā for now
Read full article: Why a Texas Panhandle city hit pause on an abortion ātravel banā ā for nowAmarillo's city council said it will continue to study the issue. The city is one of just a few in Texas to reject the policy pushed by anti-abortion activists.
She was told her twin sons wouldnāt survive. Texas law made her give birth anyway.
Read full article: She was told her twin sons wouldnāt survive. Texas law made her give birth anyway.Miranda Michel, 26, couldnāt leave the state for an abortion. But she also couldnāt bear the idea of carrying a nonviable pregnancy to term.
āThey just tried to scare usā: Anti-abortion centers teach sex ed inside some Texas public schools
Read full article: āThey just tried to scare usā: Anti-abortion centers teach sex ed inside some Texas public schoolsThe groups work in dozens of school districts across the state, but some public health experts say their curricula can be misleading and biased.
Watch live: A conversation about the fight over abortion access at the 2023 Texas Tribune Festival
Read full article: Watch live: A conversation about the fight over abortion access at the 2023 Texas Tribune FestivalTwo Texas lawmakers are among the panelists who will talk about the fight that continues after the Dobbs verdict ā from coast to coast and border to border.
āAn epidemicā: Syphilis rages through Texas, causing newborn cases to climb amid treatment shortage
Read full article: āAn epidemicā: Syphilis rages through Texas, causing newborn cases to climb amid treatment shortageSyphilis rates in Texas continue to climb, alarming healthcare workers who see the highest increases among pregnant people and newborns. A shortage of treatment is complicating efforts to combat it.
Tearfully testifying against Texasā abortion ban, three women describe medical care delayed
Read full article: Tearfully testifying against Texasā abortion ban, three women describe medical care delayedThe women, believed to be the first to testify about an abortion banās impact on their pregnancy since 1973, are seeking to clarify when a medical emergency justifies an abortion.
Texas Legislature passes bill to offer new moms a year of Medicaid coverage
Read full article: Texas Legislature passes bill to offer new moms a year of Medicaid coverageThe Texas House and Senate voted for the proposal, capping a yearslong effort to extend coverage for low-income moms. Medicaid covers half of all births in Texas, and coverage currently expires after two months.
Texas House votes to repeal sales tax on menstrual products and diapers
Read full article: Texas House votes to repeal sales tax on menstrual products and diapersThe bill, which Democrats have been pushing for years, has become a top priority after the overturn of Roe v. Wade. The Senate has already passed the bill, which would provide tax relief on the purchase of menstrual products, diapers and other child care necessities.
Texas Senate OKs extending postpartum Medicaid ā with an anti-abortion amendment
Read full article: Texas Senate OKs extending postpartum Medicaid ā with an anti-abortion amendmentNew moms will be able to keep their health insurance for a full year under a proposal the Senate passed Sunday. A last-minute anti-abortion amendment means the bill will go back to the House.
Texas House moves to expand Medicaid coverage to new moms for a year after childbirth
Read full article: Texas House moves to expand Medicaid coverage to new moms for a year after childbirthNew moms would be able to maintain their health insurance for up to a year after childbirth under the proposal, which also passed the House last session. The Senate previously reduced it to just six months of coverage.
Gaslighting in womenās health: What doctors donāt know about menopause
Read full article: Gaslighting in womenās health: What doctors donāt know about menopauseGaslighting is when someone makes you doubt your own thoughts and feelings. It happens all the time and itās happening to women at the doctorās office.
Bill eliminating tampon, diaper sales taxes OKād by Texas House
Read full article: Bill eliminating tampon, diaper sales taxes OKād by Texas HouseThe proposal would remove sales tax on diapers, baby wipes and bottles; feminine hygiene products including tampons, sanitary pads and menstrual cups; maternity clothing; and products for pumping breast milk.
How an old law found new life in lawsuit seeking to revoke approval of abortion pill
Read full article: How an old law found new life in lawsuit seeking to revoke approval of abortion pillAnti-abortion advocates are trying to revive the long-dormant 1873 Comstock Act, which banned mailing of anything related to abortion or contraception, in a lawsuit about mifepristone, an abortion-inducing drug.
Federal judge dismisses Wendy Davisā challenge to Texas abortion ban
Read full article: Federal judge dismisses Wendy Davisā challenge to Texas abortion banDavis, best known for her 13-hour filibuster of a 2013 abortion bill, sought to block the stateās ban on abortions after about six weeks of pregnancy. A federal judge found Davis had not āarticulated a credible, imminent threat.ā
In Texasā first post-Roe legislative session, thereās a new political power dynamic on abortion
Read full article: In Texasā first post-Roe legislative session, thereās a new political power dynamic on abortionWhile Democrats and the far-right edge of the Republican Party remain focused on abortion, leaders in both chambers have not yet spent much time discussing the issue this session.
After a hospital stopped delivering babies, Deep East Texas faces a growing maternity care crisis
Read full article: After a hospital stopped delivering babies, Deep East Texas faces a growing maternity care crisisWomen in Deep East Texas drive over an hour to give birth after the last obstetrics unit in the area closed in 2019. But if closing the unit was hard, reopening it is proving nearly impossible.
New Texas maternal mortality report shows disparities persist
Read full article: New Texas maternal mortality report shows disparities persistThe Maternal Mortality and Morbidity Review Committee report, delayed by more than three months, estimates that up to 90% of the deaths may have been preventable. Severe complications from pregnancy and childbirth also increased significantly.
Rio Grande Valley abortion clinic bought by anti-abortion pregnancy center
Read full article: Rio Grande Valley abortion clinic bought by anti-abortion pregnancy centerWhole Womanās Health, which owned the building for nearly two decades, said they were ādupedā after the doctors who bought the building sold it to the McAllen Pregnancy Center.
As abortion access evaporates, many Texans arenāt able to find care, new studies show
Read full article: As abortion access evaporates, many Texans arenāt able to find care, new studies showSeveral new studies show that not everyone denied access to abortions in Texas can travel out of state, but more people than ever before are seeking ways to self-manage abortions with medication at home.
Texas Supreme Court weighs whether to dismiss abortion fundsā defamation case against anti-abortion activist
Read full article: Texas Supreme Court weighs whether to dismiss abortion fundsā defamation case against anti-abortion activistSeveral abortion funds have sued anti-abortion activist Mark Lee Dickson, who called them ācriminal organizations,ā for defamation.
Abortion rights supporters struggle to keep issue top of mind for Texas voters
Read full article: Abortion rights supporters struggle to keep issue top of mind for Texas votersPolling shows that a majority of voters in Texas oppose the stateās near-total ban on abortion, but they ranked the topic ninth on a list of most important issues facing the country.
Attorney General Ken Paxton ordered to testify in abortion lawsuit after evading subpoena
Read full article: Attorney General Ken Paxton ordered to testify in abortion lawsuit after evading subpoenaA federal judge who previously quashed the subpoena ruled that the attorney general must take the witness stand in a lawsuit from abortion funds.
A Texas congresswoman wants to make cancer care easier for the growing number of female veterans
Read full article: A Texas congresswoman wants to make cancer care easier for the growing number of female veteransU.S. Rep. Sylvia Garcia, who serves on the House Armed Services Committee, hopes the pilot program will help female veterans get better access to cancer care.
Watch a panel on Roe v. Wade at the 2022 Texas Tribune Festival
Read full article: Watch a panel on Roe v. Wade at the 2022 Texas Tribune FestivalAna Marie Cox moderates a conversation about womenās health, womenās rights and an uncertain future with former state Sen. Wendy Davis, state Rep. Donna Howard and Planned Parenthood CEO Alexis McGill Johnson.
How Texasā abortion laws turned a heartbreaking fetal diagnosis into a cross-country journey
Read full article: How Texasā abortion laws turned a heartbreaking fetal diagnosis into a cross-country journeyāIt was just a matter of time before the baby died, or maybe Iād have to go through the trauma of carrying to term knowing I wasnāt bringing a baby home,ā said 27-year-old Lauren Hall. āI couldnāt do that.ā
Delayed: Mandatory maternal mortality rate data wonāt be ready for Texas lawmakers in time for 2023 session
Read full article: Delayed: Mandatory maternal mortality rate data wonāt be ready for Texas lawmakers in time for 2023 sessionLawmakers say they need the latest pregnancy-related death data to more precisely address the problem during the legislative session. But delays means they wonāt see it until after the session ends.
Religious employers need not cover PrEP in their health plans, federal judge rules
Read full article: Religious employers need not cover PrEP in their health plans, federal judge rulesU.S. District Judge Reed OāConnorās ruling could threaten access to sexual and reproductive health care for more than 150 million working Americans on employer-sponsored health care plans. The ruling will likely be appealed.
Video: As San Antonio abortion clinic closes, its director worries about who is left behind
Read full article: Video: As San Antonio abortion clinic closes, its director worries about who is left behindIn August, movers arrived at Alamo Womenās Reproductive Services to help the abortion clinic pack up for a move out of state.
Video: AcompaƱantes en MƩxico ayudan a realizar abortos en casa. Su red de apoyo se expande a Texas.
Read full article: Video: AcompaƱantes en MĆ©xico ayudan a realizar abortos en casa. Su red de apoyo se expande a Texas.En algunos estados de MĆ©xico, donde el aborto todavĆa no es legal, redes de acompaƱantes proveen medicamento y apoyo emocional para que las personas puedan realizar abortos en casa. Debido a que el acceso al aborto en Texas es cada vez mĆ”s limitado, estas redes estĆ”n comenzando a formarse en Estados Unidos.
Watch: Volunteer acompaƱantes in Mexico aid at-home abortions. Their network is expanding to Texas.
Read full article: Watch: Volunteer acompaƱantes in Mexico aid at-home abortions. Their network is expanding to Texas.In parts of Mexico where abortion has not been legalized, women rely on volunteer networks to provide medication and emotional support for at-home abortions. As access to abortion is shut down in Texas, similar networks are being built in the U.S.
Abortion-rights groups sue Texas AG, prosecutors to protect ability to help pregnant Texans seek legal abortions in other states
Read full article: Abortion-rights groups sue Texas AG, prosecutors to protect ability to help pregnant Texans seek legal abortions in other statesThe suit comes two days before the stateās newest abortion ban, triggered by the overturning of Roe v. Wade, goes into effect.
Texas Gov. Greg Abbott joins other key Republicans in supporting repealing the ātampon taxā
Read full article: Texas Gov. Greg Abbott joins other key Republicans in supporting repealing the ātampon taxāAdvocates have previously called for repealing the sales tax on products like tampons, sanitary pads and pantyliners. Menstrual products are already tax-free in 24 states.
Not 1925: Texasā law banning abortion dates to before the Civil War
Read full article: Not 1925: Texasā law banning abortion dates to before the Civil WarThe restriction, which was revived after the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade, was put in place amid concerns about declining white birth rates and as the medical profession formalized.
Can adoption replace abortion? Experts say itās a lot more complicated than it sounds
Read full article: Can adoption replace abortion? Experts say itās a lot more complicated than it soundsExperts on adoption and abortion say lawmakers must work to provide financial and mental health support to birth parents, adoptive parents and adoptees in order to make the adoption process a better option for those with unwanted pregnancies.
State, feds say six-month maternal Medicaid coverage still under review
Read full article: State, feds say six-month maternal Medicaid coverage still under reviewHHSC said it was initially told the plan was ānot approvable.ā Federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services issued a statement Friday saying Texasā plan to extend coverage to six months was not rejected but still under review.
Texas universities grapple with how to provide reproductive health care information to students amid new abortion laws
Read full article: Texas universities grapple with how to provide reproductive health care information to students amid new abortion lawsThe changing legal landscape is raising questions for public colleges about how to talk to students about reproductive health care options and creating hesitancy among students about whether they can trust their universitiesā health centers.
Texas Democrats to Biden: Protect out-of-state providers who prescribe abortion-inducing medication
Read full article: Texas Democrats to Biden: Protect out-of-state providers who prescribe abortion-inducing medicationThe request for a public health emergency declaration was part of a set of recommendations to allow abortion access to Texans who might not be able to travel out of state.
Texas hospitals are putting pregnant patients at risk by denying care out of fear of abortion laws, medical group says
Read full article: Texas hospitals are putting pregnant patients at risk by denying care out of fear of abortion laws, medical group saysMedical professionals across the state have expressed confusion over what care they can provide amid Texasā abortion ban, leading to some patients allegedly receiving delayed care or being turned away.
Texas sues after Biden administration issues guidance saying doctors can perform abortions in emergencies
Read full article: Texas sues after Biden administration issues guidance saying doctors can perform abortions in emergenciesTexas Attorney General Ken Paxton argues the Biden administration is violating the stateās āsovereign interestā by reassuring the nationās doctors they can perform abortions in medical emergencies.
Linda Coffee argued Roe v. Wade. Now, sheās watching its demise.
Read full article: Linda Coffee argued Roe v. Wade. Now, sheās watching its demise.Coffee was just 30 when the U.S. Supreme Court agreed with her argument that the constitutional right to privacy extended to abortion: āI thought, OK, well this is done now. I was thinking the [abortion] question was settled for as long as the country lasted.ā
Facing higher teen pregnancy and maternal mortality rates, Black women will largely bear the brunt of abortion limits
Read full article: Facing higher teen pregnancy and maternal mortality rates, Black women will largely bear the brunt of abortion limitsAbout 40% of women who get abortions in the U.S. are Black, and advocates say abortion bans like Texasā will increase their health and financial risks.
Abortion funds languish in legal turmoil, their leaders fearing jail time if they help Texans
Read full article: Abortion funds languish in legal turmoil, their leaders fearing jail time if they help TexansItās unclear whether Texasā tangled web of abortion laws would make it a crime to pay for a Texan to leave the state to get an abortion, but the threat has compelled the funds to cease services.
Local efforts to decriminalize abortion in Texas likely wonāt help clinics stay open
Read full article: Local efforts to decriminalize abortion in Texas likely wonāt help clinics stay openDistrict attorneys and local leaders in five counties have promised not to pursue criminal charges related to the stateās new abortion laws. But civil and administrative fines could be financially devastating or cost health care providers their licenses.
āI canāt have one more baby with this manā: Some domestic violence victims see abortion as vital option that would be lost post-Roe
Read full article: āI canāt have one more baby with this manā: Some domestic violence victims see abortion as vital option that would be lost post-RoeAdvocates say abortion has often been the safest option for many experiencing intimate partner violence.
Texas GOP platform calls for ban on teaching āsexual matters,ā while requiring students to learn about ādignity of the preborn humanā
Read full article: Texas GOP platform calls for ban on teaching āsexual matters,ā while requiring students to learn about ādignity of the preborn humanāThe party planks specify what the Texas GOP believes students should and should not be taught in the classroom about gender and sex, signaling further shifts to the right. Critics say such policies would be harmful and discriminatory.
A Texas abortion clinic survived decades of restrictions. The Supreme Court may finally put it out of business.
Read full article: A Texas abortion clinic survived decades of restrictions. The Supreme Court may finally put it out of business.Abortion clinics, and the patients they serve, have always had to adapt to changing laws and tightening restrictions. But the Supreme Court seems poised to deliver the fatal blow theyāve been dodging for decades.
Abortion restrictions threaten care for pregnant patients, providers say
Read full article: Abortion restrictions threaten care for pregnant patients, providers sayWomenās health care providers are holding back when counseling pregnant patients about treatment options, doctors report pharmacists are hesitant to distribute some prescriptions, and OB-GYN training is diminishing for Texas medical school students.
Watch: Abortion rights supporters protest leaked draft opinion indicating Roe v. Wade will be overturned
Read full article: Watch: Abortion rights supporters protest leaked draft opinion indicating Roe v. Wade will be overturnedIn this video, see what abortion rights supporters in Texas say about the impact of a likely U.S. Supreme Court decision that would overturn Roe v. Wade.
Abortion remains legal in Texas, but confusion reigns after Supreme Court document leak
Read full article: Abortion remains legal in Texas, but confusion reigns after Supreme Court document leakProviders, advocates and doctors spent much of the day Tuesday reassuring people that the procedure remains legal until the high court issues an official opinion overturning it.
Texas Supreme Court deals final blow to federal abortion law challenge
Read full article: Texas Supreme Court deals final blow to federal abortion law challengeThe U.S. Supreme Court left abortion providers only the narrowest avenue to challenge the ban on abortions after about six weeks of pregnancy. Fridayās Texas Supreme Court ruling has effectively ended that federal legal challenge.
After nearly dying of COVID-19, a Texas mom encourages pregnant women to get vaccinated
Read full article: After nearly dying of COVID-19, a Texas mom encourages pregnant women to get vaccinatedThe COVID vaccine is proven safe during all stages of pregnancy, and pregnant patients are at an increased risk of getting seriously ill if they contract the virus. Still, many pregnant women hesitate.
Texasā āmaternity desertsā grow as staff shortages close rural labor and delivery units
Read full article: Texasā āmaternity desertsā grow as staff shortages close rural labor and delivery unitsOnly 40% of Texasā rural hospitals offer labor and delivery services, forcing some patients to drive hundreds of miles to give birth. With nurses in short supply, more hospitals are considering cutting those services entirely.
Texas abortion funds struggle to meet demand for out-of-state abortion assistance
Read full article: Texas abortion funds struggle to meet demand for out-of-state abortion assistanceBut some Texas nonprofit groups dedicated to paying for the medical costs of abortion say they have more money than patients to give it to ā a likely symptom of fewer people being able to access the procedure because of the new law.
Fewer patients, smaller staff, an uncertain future: abortion providers await court decision on Texas law
Read full article: Fewer patients, smaller staff, an uncertain future: abortion providers await court decision on Texas lawFor two months, providers have had to work in a sort of limbo as they wait to see if the new law passes the Supreme Court's review.
WATCH LIVE: House Judiciary Committee holds hearing on Texas abortion ban impacts
Read full article: WATCH LIVE: House Judiciary Committee holds hearing on Texas abortion ban impactsThe House Judiciary Committee on Thursday morning will hold a hearing on Texasā ban on most abortions and how it has impacted families.
Video: South Texans adapt to near-total abortion ban with Plan B pills and trips out of state
Read full article: Video: South Texans adapt to near-total abortion ban with Plan B pills and trips out of stateIn South Texas, poverty and immigration status compound the obstacles facing pregnant people seeking abortions.
For Texans who want a child but have difficult pregnancies, the new abortion law just made that journey even harder
Read full article: For Texans who want a child but have difficult pregnancies, the new abortion law just made that journey even harderGenetic screenings can help determine if a fetus will have certain conditions ā or even be viable. But those usually occur at the end of the first trimester, long after Texas' new abortion law bans people from terminating their pregnancies.
Biden administration to ask Supreme Court to stop enforcement of Texasā near-total abortion ban
Read full article: Biden administration to ask Supreme Court to stop enforcement of Texasā near-total abortion banCourt decisions have gone back and forth on the lawās enforceability over several weeks.
At least one major Texas abortion provider resumes procedure lawmakers tried to prohibit, after judge blocks near-total ban
Read full article: At least one major Texas abortion provider resumes procedure lawmakers tried to prohibit, after judge blocks near-total banThe ruling late Wednesday from U.S. District Judge Robert Pitman doesnāt protect providers who perform abortions while the Texas law makes its way through the courts.
Texas demonstrations take aim at stateās near-total ban on abortion
Read full article: Texas demonstrations take aim at stateās near-total ban on abortionThousands turned out at demonstrations across the state and protested Texasā new abortion restrictions. Texas Tribune photographers were there.
The Justice Department will argue against Texasā abortion law Friday. Hereās what you need to know.
Read full article: The Justice Department will argue against Texasā abortion law Friday. Hereās what you need to know.The U.S. sued Texas after the Biden administration vowed to oppose Texasā new near-total abortion ban. The lawsuit joins several legal challenges already in progress.
Texas abortion providers ask U.S. Supreme Court to fast-track their challenge to stateās near-total abortion ban
Read full article: Texas abortion providers ask U.S. Supreme Court to fast-track their challenge to stateās near-total abortion banThe Supreme Court had previously declined to block the law but didn't rule on its constitutionality.
Federal judge will hear Texasā arguments against temporarily blocking abortion ban before ruling on Biden administration request
Read full article: Federal judge will hear Texasā arguments against temporarily blocking abortion ban before ruling on Biden administration requestInstead of immediately acting on the request, U.S. District Judge Robert L. Pitman set an Oct. 1 hearing to consider arguments before ruling. The law will have been in effect for one month by that time.
As Texans fill up abortion clinics in other states, low-income people get left behind
Read full article: As Texans fill up abortion clinics in other states, low-income people get left behindTexasā near-total ban on abortions is sending patients out of state for the procedure. Advocates say many immigrants and women of color canāt leave, and thatās increasing the inequities their communities suffer.
Abortion providers and distraught patients confront stark realities of Texasā new law
Read full article: Abortion providers and distraught patients confront stark realities of Texasā new lawTexasā strict new law sends patients scrambling for alternative ways to access abortion, including out-of-state clinics and āself-managedā procedures.
U.S. Supreme Court refuses to block Texasā six-week abortion ban
Read full article: U.S. Supreme Court refuses to block Texasā six-week abortion banThe decision came as major providers in the state said they had canceled most of their abortion appointments and advocates fretted that the procedure had been all but banned in Texas.
Texas Legislature moves to give moms on Medicaid six months of health coverage after birth
Read full article: Texas Legislature moves to give moms on Medicaid six months of health coverage after birthThe bill would add an extra four months of health insurance for low-income women, who now get Medicaid coverage from pregnancy until two months after delivery. It now heads to Gov. Greg Abbott for signature.
Texas lawmakers split over how long to extend Medicaid health coverage for new mothers
Read full article: Texas lawmakers split over how long to extend Medicaid health coverage for new mothersMaternal health advocates said the bill ā originally pitched as a one-year extension ā could reduce the stateās maternal mortality rate and offer vital help to mothers grappling with conditions like postpartum depression or health complications in the months after giving birth.
Despite high rate of teen pregnancies, Texas lawmakers unlikely to expand Childrenās Health Insurance Program to cover birth control
Read full article: Despite high rate of teen pregnancies, Texas lawmakers unlikely to expand Childrenās Health Insurance Program to cover birth controlSign up for The Brief, our daily newsletter that keeps readers up to speed on the most essential Texas news.
Women more likely to suffer from Alzheimerās disease, experts say
Read full article: Women more likely to suffer from Alzheimerās disease, experts sayTwo-thirds of Alzheimerās cases in the United States are in women. Researchers used to think that more women got Alzheimerās because they lived longer. Scientists scanned the brains of women and men and found declines in estrogen were involved in Alzheimerās abnormalities. Another brain scan showed women metabolized sugar better, which may help them compensate for dementia damage better, causing a delayed diagnosis. Specifically, one of the genes was linked to Alzheimerās risk in women and three were linked to risk in men.