The News Review:
- Planned Parenthood: False Prophet with Plans for US Health Care.
- Divorced Parents Disagree About Children’s Health Care
- ther states should use Michigan model to track child obesity
- When divorce affects a child’s health
Planned Parenthood: False Prophet with Plans for US Health Care.
Catholic nline
They have insinuated themselves into the global delivery of “medical services” receiving massive government funding. There is nothing “reproductive” about abortion it always kills. It is certainly not a service to the child the mother the father or society. Nor is it “health care”. Funding it is morally repugnant. Planned Parenthood is the leading institutional champion of a culture which has redefined “choice” to include killing young innocent human life and “freedom” to include the commission of unspeakable horrors against an entire class of people children in the first home of the whole human race.
Divorced Parents Disagree About Children’s Health Care
Washington Post
Everything is a confrontation with him and I expect it will just get worse as the years go on. Elayne Savage: You just provided a very good example of the extent of this problem. How a child’s health and well-being can suffer when there is stubbornness and animosity. It is important that it be dealt with now. Yes it could get worse as the years go on. Perhaps it is time to use the services of a professional counselor or mediator to help them navigate through this. Sometimes when there is this kind of stubbornness medical and or psychological needs of the child are being neglected.
Related from Insurancemonster: FACTBX: Groups agree and disagree on US health overhaul
ther states should use Michigan model to track child obesity
The Detroit News
com | The Detroit News. It is a public health epidemic with serious ramifications on health productivity and health care costs.
When divorce affects a child’s health
Chicago Tribune
?When I asked why he said he wasn?t my messenger? she said. ?Aaargh!?I?ve only heard her side of the story but she?s not alone in her frustration. Dealing with children?s health issues however small can be complicated when parents split up according to. ?Along with such minor issues as taking vitamins or not there are larger questions: Will co-pay costs be shared? Should doctor's appointments be at a time that works for both parents or go by the schedule of the parent who's with the child the majority of the time??The answers often depend on the kinds of custody and financial arrangements that have been reached but experts say ?the biggest contributing factor to successful coordination between separated parents is the quality of their co-parenting relationship? according to the Post story.