NEW JERSEY VOTERS SUPPORT FEDERAL AND STATE FUNDING FOR LOW-INCOME WOMEN’S HEALTH, INSURANCE COVERAGE FOR WOMEN’S REPRODUCTIVE HEALTH SERVICES
Voters largely positive about Planned Parenthood, aware of its services PRINCETON, N.J. — As officials consider changes to Medicaid funding at the state and federal levels, and as Congress weighs health insurance reform, large majorities of New Jersey registered voters want to maintain federal and state funding for women’s reproductive health services for lower-income women,…Read More…
Poll finds many in N.J. support state, federal funding for women’s health care
Originally published on NewsWorks.org: http://bit.ly/2snZZeX Many in New Jersey want to maintain federal and state funding for women’s reproductive health services for lower-income women, according to to a new poll of registered voters. A majority of those polled also support the American Care Act requirements related to such services, found the New Jersey Health Care…Read More…
Poll: Most NJ Voters Favor Funding Planned Parenthood
Published on The Observer by Alyana Alfaro. Most New Jersey voters support federal and state funding to low-cost women’s health centers including Planned Parenthood, according to a Rutgers-Eagleton poll released Wednesday. Nearly 78 percent of voters surveyed said they support health care funding for lower-income women, 84 percent said Medicaid should continue funding Planned Parenthood…Read More…
New Jersey Voters Support Federal and State Funding for Low-Income Women’s Health, Insurance Coverage For Women’s Reproductive Health Services
Voters largely positive about Planned Parenthood, aware of its services PRINCETON, N.J. — As officials consider changes to Medicaid funding at the state and federal levels, and as Congress weighs health insurance reform, large majorities of New Jersey registered voters want to maintain federal and state funding for women’s reproductive health services for lower-income women, as…Read More…
ER? Urgent Care? Doctor’s Office? ‘Health Matters’ Poll Explores Where We Seek Care
We want people to car pool, so we create HOV lanes. We don’t want them to smoke, so we tax cigarettes and raise the age to purchase tobacco. Society has all kinds of incentives and penalties to encourage people to do the right thing. In health care, we have many choices of places to seek…Read More…
New Jerseyans Open To Receiving Care In A Variety Of Settings, Especially If It Means Longer Visits, Less Waiting, And Lower Costs
New Jersey Health Care Quality Institute and Rutgers-Eagleton Explore New Jersey Residents’ Comfort With Alternatives To The ER in Latest Health Matters Poll PRINCETON, N.J. – The New Jersey Health Care Quality Institute (NJHCQI), in partnership with the Eagleton Center for Public Interest Polling (ECPIP) at Rutgers, the State University of New Jersey, released a…Read More…
Heartbeats: Quality Institute, Rutgers-Eagleton explore ‘telehealth’
Published by Brad Wadlow on myCentralJersey.com The New Jersey Health Care Quality Institute (NJHCQI), in partnership with the Eagleton Center for Public Interest Polling (ECPIP) at Rutgers, the State University of New Jersey, released a poll exploring how New Jersey residents feel about “telehealth,” which allows patients to use video calls, text and other technology…Read More…
EDITORIAL: N.J. ready to take its (tele)medicine
Published in the Asbury Park Press. A new poll has found that only 16 percent of New Jerseyans have ever used an electronic device to receive medical care from a doctor or other medical profession. But given the results of the poll, which solicited consumers’ views about utilizing telemedicine for various types of care, and…Read More…
Telehealth in New Jersey Hindered By a Lack of Awareness
As New Jersey’s legislators continue efforts to regulate telehealth, a recent survey finds that most of the state’s residents haven’t used it. And two-thirds of those surveyed aren’t aware of the benefits or aren’t interested. Published on mHealthIntelligence. Healthcare providers looking to launch a telehealth platform should be reminded to first make sure their potential…Read More…
Would you Skype your doctor?
Published by Kathleen O’Brien on NJ.com. Although most New Jersey residents have never received medical care via their cellphones or computers, they would be comfortable getting their care that way – especially if that meant longer visits, shorter wait times, or lower cost, according to a new poll. Nearly four out of five poll respondents…Read More…