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Sarah Kwon

@skwonjournalist

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Asian Health Center Tries Unconventional Approach to Counseling

By Sarah Kwon October 9, 2024 KFF Health News Original

Facing a dire shortage of bilingual and culturally attuned therapists, an Oakland, California, community clinic serving Asian immigrants has trained staffers in a victim support unit to provide lay counseling.

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Mothers of Color Can’t See if Providers Have a History of Mistreatment. Why Not?

By Sarah Kwon October 6, 2023 KFF Health News Original

Many women, especially Black women, have reported discrimination in maternity care, but expectant mothers lack tools to see where this happens. Funding and regulations to measure disparities have been slow in arriving, but some innovators are trying to fill the void.

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A father cradles his baby daughter and feeds her from a bottle. He is wearing a black t-shirt and she is wearing a white bow headband around her black curly hair.

Amid Lack of Accountability for Bias in Maternity Care, a California Family Seeks Justice

By Sarah Kwon August 8, 2023 KFF Health News Original

April Valentine’s family wants to know whether racism could have played a role in her death. A KFF Health News analysis shows state regulators are ill-equipped to find discrimination in its many forms.

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A photo shows an AMR ambulance parked on the side of the road.

Ambulance Company to Halt Some Rides in Southern California, Citing Low Medicaid Rates

By Sarah Kwon October 28, 2022 KFF Health News Original

American Medical Response, the largest U.S. ambulance company, is ending nonemergency transportation for 12 hospitals in Los Angeles and Orange counties, saying the state doesn’t pay enough to transport low-income patients. The state is pushing back.

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Five doctors in doctors in lab coats and blue gloves fist-bump.

Agotados por covid y por trabajar 80 horas a la semana, médicos residentes deciden sindicalizarse

By Sarah Kwon May 27, 2022 KFF Health News Original

Los residentes son médicos recién recibidos, que han terminado la carrera de medicina, y deben pasar de tres a siete años de formación en hospitales universitarios antes de poder ejercer de forma independiente. Ganan poco y trabajan mucho.

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Five doctors in doctors in lab coats and blue gloves fist-bump.

Burned Out by Covid and 80-Hour Workweeks, Resident Physicians Unionize

By Sarah Kwon May 27, 2022 KFF Health News Original

In California and beyond, physician trainees working long hours for what in some states amounts to little more than minimum wage are organizing to seek better pay, benefits, and working conditions. More than 1,300 of them at three L.A. County public hospitals will vote May 30 on whether to strike.

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Apple Aims to Push More Patient Data to Doctors. But Who Can Gauge Its Impact on Health?

By Sarah Kwon August 12, 2021 KFF Health News Original

The Silicon Valley giant has been cryptic about its plan for the growing mound of health data available through its iPhones and watches. Health systems have experimented with the company’s health app, but it hasn’t yet become central to treatment.

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Doctors Now Must Provide Patients Their Health Data, Online and On Demand

By Sarah Kwon May 18, 2021 KFF Health News Original

A new federal regulation makes it easy to get test results and see what your doctor is recording about your health. One downside: You might not understand what you read.

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Illustration of a covid-19 vaccine

Companies Pan for Marketing Gold in Vaccines

By Sarah Kwon February 19, 2021 KFF Health News Original

Some assisted living facilities, pharmacy chains and health care providers are luring new customers with covid shots.

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‘Peer Respites’ Provide an Alternative to Psychiatric Wards During Pandemic

By Sarah Kwon January 11, 2021 KFF Health News Original

A growing number of “peer respites,” nonclinical settings for psychiatric recovery, can help people in distress who mainly need to talk to people who understand their problems.

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To Free Doctors From Computers, Far-Flung Scribes Are Now Taking Notes For Them

By Sarah Kwon October 1, 2020 KFF Health News Original

Paid even less than low-wage doctors’ scribes in the United States, remote note takers in India gain a foothold in a rapidly expanding industry.

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Latest Morning Briefing Stories

  • First Edition: Tuesday, Feb. 18, 2025 6:27 AM ET

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