Tennessee woman gets emergency hysterectomy after doctors deny early abortion care

2:12MayronHollishadtohaveanemergencyhysterectomyafterdoctorsdeniedherearlyabortioncareduetoTennessee ERICBARADAT/AFP/GettyImagesLastsummer,IthoughtitmightbefuntohavemyDNAanalyzed.Twocompanies,23andMean




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People waiting in line, standing in between red rope. -- first opinion coverage from STAT
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Health care providers and health insurance companies are closing the books on their third quarters, and one major question continues to hang over them: How much care is everyone actually getting, now that Covid-19 isn’t scaring so many away from doctors and hospitals?

The short answer, according to financial analysts and the companies themselves: It appears people continue to fill prescriptions, see their doctors, and get recommended surgeries.

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For health insurers, those trends mean they will have to deposit more money into the bank accounts of providers — perhaps more than they predicted.

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