2 results found
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Press Releases
Low-income seniors report worse health, more depression and less access to care than their wealthier peers, UCLA fact sheet shows Single or partnered elderly Californians whose income is above the official poverty level but below what is required to maintain a basic quality of life are almost twice as likely to say they are in poor or fair health; feel depressed; and cannot get timely health care as their wealthier counterparts, according to a new fact sheet by the UCLA Center for Health Policy
February 29, 2016

Press Releases
Low-income seniors report worse health, more depression and less access to care than their wealthier peers, UCLA fact sheet shows Single or partnered elderly Californians whose income is above the official poverty level but below what is required to maintain a basic quality of life are almost twice as likely to say they are in poor or fair health; feel depressed; and cannot get timely health care as their wealthier counterparts, according to a new fact sheet by the UCLA Center for Health Policy
February 29, 2016

Press Releases
How do health care providers serve those most likely to slip through the holes in our health care safety-net: the low-income and uninsured? In a new policy brief, researchers from the UCLA Center for Health Policy Research examined the progress of 10 California counties to create care networks for their most vulnerable residents.
December 17, 2009

Press Releases
How do health care providers serve those most likely to slip through the holes in our health care safety-net: the low-income and uninsured? In a new policy brief, researchers from the UCLA Center for Health Policy Research examined the progress of 10 California counties to create care networks for their most vulnerable residents.
December 17, 2009