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You may be asked to wear a mask the next time you visit a New Hampshire hospital or health care facility.
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The end of the public health emergency also triggered some changes for COVID-19 health insurance coverage.
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Fewer people are dying or becoming severely ill from COVID than when the virus first hit, but the health system and communities across the state are still grappling with its fallout.
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El estado está pidiendo que la gente entregue una prueba de elegibilidad lo más pronto posible, para que puedan seguir teniendo cobertura después que se finalice el reglamento en marzo.
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The state is encouraging people to submit updated proof of eligibility as soon as possible, so they can keep receiving coverage after the rules expire in March.
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The increase comes after two mild flu years due to COVID mitigation measures.
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Even as the number of COVID-19 patients has plummeted compared to the surges seen this winter, hospital beds remain in high demand.
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Durante la pandemia, New Hampshire y otros estados han sido requeridos de mantener a personas registradas en Medicaid durante la emergencia de salud pública —incluso, si no tenían los documentos completos o no cumplían con la elegibilidad por temas de ingreso, por ejemplo.
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State health officials say they're trying to find more sustainable ways to predict surges of the virus. But the transition has left a data gap for hospitals, who use rely on the state's numbers to help predict the toll the virus will place on their health system.
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When the state reported just seven COVID-19 hospitalizations, far fewer than the 20 to 25 reported over the prior week, it was good news – just not the whole picture.