Based on our record, Healthcare.gov seems to be a lot more popular than Medscape. While we know about 1794 links to Healthcare.gov, we've tracked only 4 mentions of Medscape. We are tracking product recommendations and mentions on various public social media platforms and blogs. They can help you identify which product is more popular and what people think of it.
I have recently immigrated to the US. I need health insurance until I find a job which provides with one. I visited healthcare.gov and it was bit confusing as some of the plans were showing up a minimum of 500$/month (49 year old). Could someone advise me whether there are cheaper options. Source: 7 months ago
From the Billions spent on social services, from rental vouchers, to HEAP energy assistance, to SNAP food ebt benefits, to free internet service thru ACP, to free govt provided cells, to healthcare.gov, to earned income credits for working . That's how many are doing it. Information is a means to power! Source: 7 months ago
Go to healthcare.gov and see if you qualify for insurance. Maximum out of pocket depends on the type of plan you pick and what it covers. If you don't qualify through healthcare.gov, you will need to buy insurance on your own which could be quite expensive. Source: 7 months ago
You can still get it done without insurance, it's just really expensive. It will be thousands of dollars cheaper to get insurance for a year or so and have the surgery covered than to try and pay for it out of pocket, so it's worth maybe getting insurance. If you're in the USA, healthcare.gov is currently in its 2024 enrollment period so you can buy insurance right now for next year. Source: 7 months ago
IDK where you are but if you're in the USA go to healthcare.gov. If you need help applying, this link lets you set up contact with someone who can help you. Source: 7 months ago
I agree but it can make searching for current information difficult. The googled result I referred to above was based off of results from medscape.com and the next result was a 2010 article from jrheum.org. The article I linked to was lower in the list. Source: over 1 year ago
Medscape.com: Approximately 10%-15% of human bite wounds become infected owing to multiple factors. The bacterial inoculum of human bite wounds contains as many as 100 million organisms per milliliter and is made up of as many as 190 different species. Many of these are anaerobes that flourish in the low redox environment of tartar that lies between human teeth or in areas of gingivitis. Most injuries due to human... Source: almost 3 years ago
If you mean field references, then the apps recommended by Nate are good. If you mean references for research then Up to Date is gold standard but hideously expensive unless your employer is paying. For teaching I use really good free sources like medscape.com, StatPearls.com, and the online Merck manual. They are written by qualified people and edited by equally qualified people. They all follow the standard... Source: about 3 years ago
Depends on which drug they chose. I think albendazole would be the most likely, but niclosamide is another option. I think there are others as well. You can look up the side effects on medscape.com. Source: about 3 years ago
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UpToDate - UpToDate, the evidence-based clinical decision support resource from Wolters Kluwer, is trusted at the point of care by clinicians worldwide.
HealthPlans.org - The Kayak of health insurance shopping.
MyTeleMed - MyTeleMed is an application that allows the doctor to manage their important medical message and any personal health information.
Health Sherpa - A Healthcare.gov certified web broker, giving people, employers, and nonprofits a simple platform for enrolling in ACA-compliant healthcare.
Epocrates - Deliver better patient care