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For years, U.S. healthcare facilities have instated ethics mechanisms to counsel providers, patients, families, and others as they grapple with the moral considerations of various medical scenarios; in many of these facilities, these mechanisms exist as ethics consultations and ethics committees. Ethics consultations provide spaces in which people within hospital settings may consider the ethical considerations of decisions during times of medical crisis. Consultations range in subject and severity among cases, and each case is reviewed by appointed ethics consultants who are professionally equipped to assuage the distress and anxieties that impact decision-making.

With the recent overturning of Roe v. Wade intensifying the moral considerations of medical abortions, ethics consultants and committees are expected to receive consultation requests from both patients and providers as they adjust to the change in legislation. On this podcast, registered nurse Diana Mason, PhD, RN hosts Virginia L Bartlett, PhD, assistant director of the Center for Healthcare Ethics, and assistant professor of Biomedical Sciences at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles, for a discussion about the services ethical mechanisms provide, the various moral considerations that may require consultation, and how the recent change in abortion legislation has affected ethical decision-making in clinical settings.

This podcast first aired on HealthCetera in the Catskills on WIOX Radio on August 10th, 2022.

Image by Jon Tyson via Unsplash For years,

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The Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, known as SNAP, is a federal anti-hunger program that provides financial assistance for food purchases to low-income Americans. The SNAP program is the largest anti-hunger program in the nation; SNAP funds can be used in most grocery stores, many farmers markets, and restaurants. The benefits of the SNAP program reach beyond preventing hunger: SNAP enrollees experience better overall health, fewer emergency room visits, and fewer long-term care hospital admissions than non-enrolled low-income Americans.

However, trends in SNAP enrollment have indicated that older Americans, specifically those over 50 years old, are underrepresented among those registered to receive benefits. Misconceptions about who is eligible for benefits, necessary technology access and know-how to complete applications, and attitudes toward reliance on government assistance are a few of the reasons why eligible members of this vulnerable demographic may be forgoing their SNAP benefits.

On this podcast, registered nurse Diana Mason, PhD, RN hosts Nicole Burda, the AARP director of government affairs, for a discussion about why eligible older adults may be hesitant to apply for SNAP benefits, how to encourage this demographic to enroll, and available resources older adults may utilize to ease the application process.

This podcast first aired on HealthCetera in the Catskills on WIOX Radio on September 7th, 2022.

On behalf of AARP, Nicole Burda advocates for solutions to address the pressing food needs of older adults across the nation. Nicole has a decade of experience working at non-profit organizations advocating on a wide range of public health issues. She has also worked at the local and state level in public health and as a Congressional Hispanic Caucus Institute health policy fellow in the Senate Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions Committee.

Image by Franki Chamaki via Unsplash The Supplemental

Image by Laurynas Mereckas via Unsplash

On August 16th of this year, President Biden signed the Inflation Reduction Act of 2022, the first legislation allowing Medicare to negotiate and lower the prices of prescription drugs for its enrollees. The signing of this act is a landmark win in the fight for affordable health care costs, as medications such as Medicare-covered insulin and vaccines will cost enrollees a fraction of what they once did.

On this podcast, registered nurse Diana Mason, PhD, RN hosts HealthCetera correspondent Liz Seegert, Association of Health Care Journalists’ topic leader on aging, for a discussion about what the Inflation Reduction Act entails, how its enactment will affect Medicare enrollees, and what changes can be expected over the next few years.

This podcast first aired on HealthCetera in the Catskills on WIOX Radio in September of 2022.

Image by Laurynas Mereckas via Unsplash On August