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HAGAN, PERDUE APPLAUD CMS ANNOUNCEMENT THAT MORE NORTH CAROLINIANS WILL BENEFIT FROM PATIENT CENTERED MEDICAL HOMES
2 hours ago ago from WNC Sentinel
U.S. Senator Kay R. Hagan (D-NC) and Governor Bev Perdue today praised the recent Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) announcement that the North Carolina Community Care Networks (NC-CCN) was selected to expand patient-centered medical homes. The successful model of care will be extended to include North Carolinians who are simultaneously eligible for both the Medicare and Medicaid programs, as well as Medicare-only ...
Related contentIgniting a SPARK for Early Learning
6 hours ago ago from North Carolina's Children Blog
By Henrietta Zalkind and Anthony Berkley by Martino! Young children learn more, do better in school and, ultimately, in the workplace when they move seamlessly from home to child care to preschool to the early grades. Unfortunately, far too few children experience such seamlessness, thanks to a herky-jerky educational system that moves them from one place and grade to the next with no sense of continuity. A number ...
Related contentNorth Minneapolis Politics: Bottineau Line-(Light Rail Transit), Dog and Pony shows not needed! : Independent Business News Network
5 hours ago ago from Independent Business News Network
“A performance of epic proportions is great in theater. The question is, will this project provide jobs and economic stimulus to North Minneapolis?” By Donald W.R. Allen, II – Editor in Chief of IBNN and USA Radical Black On Thursday, January 28th, a meeting was held in North Minneapolis to talk about the Bottineau Line (Light Rail) and how it would affect the north Minneapolis community. In a ...
Related contentThe Economic of an Aging Population
7 hours ago ago from Connecticut Political Commentary, News and Analysis — YourCT.com
by turfgrrl on February 9, 2010 9:54 am 0 comments In the 2000 Census, some 470,000 of Connecticut’s 3.4 million residents were 65 or over. What do you think that population is now? Projections by the Connecticut Commission on Aging predict a 64% increase, which means somewhere north of 800,000 residents. Or nearly 25% of all residents. That doesn't bode well for municipalities depending on an active workforce sustaining a vibrant ...
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