On most days around 2 p.m., home health aide Duane Crichlow can be found in an apartment in Sunset Park, Brooklyn, playing catch with his client — a man in his 30s with a developmental disability who ...
State lawmakers are launching a public hearing to probe New York’s controversial $9 billion taxpayer-funded program that connects residents with home-health-care aides. State Senate Health Committee ...
ALBANY — The state health commissioner is countering what he calls "lies" spread in a statewide TV lobbying campaign over control of a program that allows families to hire home health aides paid by ...
Facing a severe shortage of aides and high costs, people trying to keep aging loved ones at home often cobble together a patchwork of family and friends to help. Credit... Supported by By Reed Abelson ...
Health officials are rolling out regulations to implement a 2024 law legalizing the use of certified medication aides in long-term care facilities, rules that supporters say will help address severe ...
BOSTON (SHNS) – Health officials are rolling out regulations to implement a 2024 law legalizing the use of certified medication aides in long-term care facilities, rules that supporters say will help ...
ALBANY — Problems continue to plague the administrative transition of a multibillion-dollar Medicaid program to a vendor hand-picked by New York officials, including some home care aides who say they ...
A lot has changed in Jonathan Miller's life in the past decade, but one thing that's remained consistent is his house. The brick two-bedroom, ranch-style house in West Des Moines, Iowa, is filled with ...
In the op-ed “MassHealth’s Personal Care Attendant Program’s hybrid model cheats families like mine” (Opinion, May 19), John Summers presented a comprehensive overview of this program. Given that my ...