Skip to content
ProPublica
Donate
ProPublica
Donate

Health Care

Pulling Back the Curtain on the Health Industry and Regulation

685 stories published since 2013

Future of Program for Brain-Damaged Children Now Rests With Powerful Florida Official

“Don’t You Work With Old People?”: Many Elder-Care Workers Still Refuse to Get COVID-19 Vaccine

To Get a Shot at Justice, They Were Forced to Prove Their Disabled Daughter’s Intelligence

Florida Governor Signs Law Reforming Program for Brain-Damaged Infants

A Program Promised to Pay for Brain-Damaged Infants’ Care. Then It Sent Families to Medicaid Instead.

He Bought Health Insurance for Emergencies. Then He Fell Into a $33,601 Trap.

Florida Program to Aid Brain-Damaged Infants Publicly Embraces Reforms It Once Fought

A Crisis of Undiagnosed Cancers Is Emerging in the Pandemic’s Second Year

Florida Lawmakers Send Lifeline to Families With Brain-Damaged Children

Counties at Highest Risk for COVID Harm Often Have Lowest Vaccination Rates

Parents Want Justice for Birth Injuries. Hospitals Want to Strip Them of the Right to Make That Decision.

Florida Lawmakers Endorse Wide-Ranging Reforms in Program to Aid Brain-Damaged Babies

A Tiny Number of People Will Be Hospitalized Despite Being Vaccinated. We Have to Learn Why.

“We Are Not Here or Funded to ‘Promote the Best Interest’ of the Children,” Wrote the Head of a Program for Brain-Damaged Infants

Florida Plans Audit of Program That Blocks Parents of Brain-Damaged Newborns From Suing

She Can’t Sue Her Doctor Over Her Baby’s Death. When She Spoke Out, She Was Silenced Again.

When Births Go Horribly Wrong, Florida Protects Doctors and Forces Families to Pay the Price

The Broken Front Line

I Received Tips to Look Into How a Hospital Treated Premature Babies. Getting Data Was Nearly Impossible.

Cómo investigamos las tasas de mortalidad de los bebés extremadamente prematuros en los hospitales de maternidad más grandes de este estado

Los dos hospitales tienen tasas de mortalidad infantil similares, hasta que se observa a los bebés extremadamente prematuros

False Barriers: These Things Should Not Prevent You From Getting a COVID Vaccine

No One in This State Is Officially Tracking the Quality of Care in Neonatal Centers

How We Investigated Death Rates for Extremely Preterm Babies in This State’s Largest Maternity Hospitals

The Two Hospitals Have Similar Infant Death Rates — Until You Look at Extremely Premature Babies

Texans Recovering From COVID-19 Needed Oxygen. Then the Power Went Out.

How Inequity Gets Built Into America’s Vaccination System

Mueren en la lista de espera

Why We Can’t Make Vaccine Doses Any Faster

Dying on the Waitlist

Cuomo Still Underreporting the Total Count of COVID Nursing Home Deaths

Fauci: Vaccines for Kids as Young as First Graders Could Be Authorized by September

Why Opening Restaurants Is Exactly What the Coronavirus Wants Us to Do

Rich Investors Stripped Millions From a Hospital Chain and Want to Leave It Behind. A Tiny State Stands in Their Way.

Contractor Who Was Awarded $34.5 Million in Government Money and Provided Zero Masks Pleads Guilty to Fraud

How the CARES Act Forgot America’s Most Vulnerable Hospitals

“We’ve Let the Worst Happen”: Reflecting on 400,000 Dead

How Many Vaccine Shots Go to Waste? Several States Aren’t Counting.

A Woman With Developmental Disabilities Was Abused in Arizona. The State Promised Changes. It Has Not Made Them Yet.

How Operation Warp Speed Created Vaccination Chaos

Memphis-Area Residents Without Internet Must Wait Days for Vaccination Appointments, While Others Go to the Front of the Line

CDC Shut Down a Lab Involved in Making Faulty Coronavirus Tests

The Nursing Home Didn’t Send Her to the Hospital, and She Died

Lavish Bonus? Luxury Trip? Health Benefits Brokers Will Have to Disclose What They Receive From the Insurance Industry

“Those of Us Who Don’t Die Are Going to Quit”: A Crush of Patients, Dwindling Supplies and the Nurse Who Lost Hope

After a Violent Crime, Arizona Promised Reforms for People With Developmental Disabilities. It Has Yet to Deliver.

Memorial Sloan Kettering Gave Top Doctor $1.5 Million After He Was Forced to Resign Over Conflicts of Interest

How COVID-19 Hollowed Out a Generation of Young Black Men

Rio Grande Hospital Workers Turned Down the Vaccine. A Senator and a Sheriff’s Deputy Lined Up Instead.

Restrictions on the South Texas Border Were Meant to Protect People From COVID-19. Then the Handcuffs Came Out.