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Mary Mayhew, is President of the Florida Hospital Association, on the report claiming nearly a third of healthcare workers are unvaccinated.
What does the Taliban rule mean for Afghanistan's economy, and the surrounding region? The group says foreign military - including the US, France and Germany - must complete their evacuations and leave the country by 31 August. We hear from Rahmatullah Amiri, a socio-political analyst based in Kabul. who tells us what conditions are like in the capital. Authorities in the US have approved Pfizer's two-dose vaccine for over-16s. But some states are now seeing a surge in cases of the Delta variant. Florida has one of the highest rates, and we speak to Mary Mayhew, president and CEO of the Florida Hospital Association. And John Lydon - better known as Johnny Rotten - has lost a legal battle to stop music by his former band, the Sex Pistols, from being used in a new TV drama. Music journalist Eamonn Forde explains the case. Jamie Robertson is joined throughout the programme by Jeanette Rodrigues, South Asia managing editor for Bloomberg News in Mumbai, and by Peter Morici, economist at the University of Maryland in Washington DC. (Picture: A bazaar in Kabul. Credit: Getty)
Mary Mayhew, is President of the Florida Hospital Association
Mary Mayhew, Secretary of the Florida Agency for Health Care Administration *Follow the agency at: @AHCA_FL
Mary Meyhew, President and CEO of the Florida Hospital Association, joins the Pensacola Morning News to discuss her visit to Pensacola today to meet with local leaders of area hospitals has COVID-19 hospitalizations are again on the rise.
Mary Mayhew, Secretary of the Florida Agency for Health Care Administration *Follow the agency at: @AHCA_FL, on the fight against COVID in Florida, keeping hospitals prepared for 2nd round.
Florida’s 2020 Legislative Session has officially ended, but there are some rumbles about it having to return to The Capitol later this year to respond to the impact of coronavirus. Also, on today’s Sunrise: — In a rare display of bipartisanship, the Florida House and Senate vote unanimously to approve their new budget … all $93 billion. But first, lawmakers had to pass a health screen to enter the House Chamber. Several lawmakers watched from home because they didn’t want to risk coronavirus infection. The legislative meeting itself was a violation of recommendations by the CDC for both social distancing and crowd size. — The Gov., Senate President and House Speaker are each taking victory lap at the end of the Session, despite a looming economic fallout from COVID-19. — Seniors face the greatest threat from the virus, so nursing homes and long-term care facilities are off-limits to visitors. Nevertheless, Agency for Health Care Administration Mary Mayhew says residents at more than 19 facilities have already tested positive or are presumed positive — And the latest with Florida Man, who has the power to infect Congress.
The state of Florida and several counties are in states of emergency as more Floridians test positive for COVID-19, the coronavirus. Mary Mayhew, Florida's secretary for the Agency for Health Care Administrations, which oversees nursing home and other assisted care facilities, said on Friday there was no community spread of the COVID-19 virus in Florida.
Mary Mayhew, Secretary of the Florida Agency for Health Care Administration *Follow the agency at: @AHCA_FL. update on effort to import prescription drugs from Canada.
On this episode of Pundits on the Porch, Sal Nuzzo interviews Florida's Agency for Health Care Administration Secretary Mary Mayhew. Secretary Mayhew is the the former Maine commissioner of Health and Human Services. Most recently, Mayhew served as the deputy administrator and director of Medicaid and the Children’s Health Insurance Program for the Centers for [...] The post Secretary Mary Mayhew appeared first on James Madison Institute.
"What we were trying to do at the time was change the mindset of the executives running these large organizations. And I, for one, think we succeeded far beyond my wildest imagination, in putting enough things into the Affordable Care Act that the people out in the field said, 'Whoa, the world is changing and we’ve got to respond to it.'" Peter Orszag is one of the intellectual godfathers of the Affordable Care Act, serving as President Barack Obama's top budget official during the health care fight. Now he's helping put together the health care giants of the future, advising on mega-deals like CVS-Aetna and Cigna-Express Scripts as a top investment banker at Lazard. Peter sat down with POLITICO's Dan Diamond to walk through his experience in the Obama White House, what he's learned on Wall Street and how he sees health care moving forward. (Starts at the 7:10 mark.) But first, Dan runs through some of the big stories from the week, including the Trump administration's plan to require that drug companies post prices in ads and the choice of Mary Mayhew to serve as director of Medicaid. MENTIONED ON THE SHOW HHS Secretary Alex Azar's speech announcing new requirements for drug companies to post their prices. PhRMA's pre-emptive move to announce they'll voluntarily disclosure about costs. POLITICO's Sarah Karlin-Smith recaps the dueling moves on pharma prices. The Trump administration chose Mary Mayhew to serve as director of Medicaid. Mayhew's January 2017 letter to then-HHS Secretary nominee Tom Price on her Medicaid wish-list for Maine. Peter Orszag's July 2013 defense of the Independent Payment Advisory Board (IPAB). Vanderbilt's Melinda Buntin talked to POLITICO about Medicare's spending slowdown. James Fallows' criticism of Orszag's move from the White House to Wall Street. Sign up for Dan's special newsletter from the Milken Institute's "Future of Health" summit next week.
In this episode, former DHHS commissioner Mary Mayhew talks about growing up in Pittsfield and her love of gardening.
NEWS CENTER Maine's Don Carrigan sits down with Republican gubernatorial candidate Mary Mayhew of South China. She is the former commissioner of the Maine Department of Health and Human Services. She was also vice president of the Maine Hospital Association and is currently a consultant working with states on welfare reform policy.
Rod Arquette Show Daily Rundown - Tuesday, March 6, 20184:20 pm: Michael Graham, host of Richochet.com’s “Michael in the Morning” podcast, joins the show to discuss why he says Planned Parenthood is the Democrat’s version of the National Rifle Association4:35 pm: Erika Sanzi, Senior Visiting Fellow with the Thomas Fordham Institute, joins Rod to discuss why she says neither side is telling the full story when it comes to the national debate over guns6:05 pm: Mimi Teixeira, a Graduate Fellow in Welfare Policy at The Heritage Foundation, joins Rod to discuss how work requirements have helped revolutionize welfare at the state level6:20 pm: Mary Mayhew, Senior Fellow at the Opportunity Solutions Project, joins the show to discuss what Utah should learn from the mistakes made by Maine in the Medicaid expansion arena
Editorial Page Editor Greg Kesich and columnist Bill Nemitz sit down with Roy Lenardson, a longtime Republican strategist. He has worked with conservative candidates and causes for more than two decades, and is currently sharpening the message for gubernatorial candidate Mary Mayhew and the anti-casino Vote No on 1 campaign. Lenardson explains his theories about why elections in Maine have become less predictable and pulls back the curtain on how he frames the issues that that will resonate with voters.