Sharing Report: May 2025

Below is Solidarity HealthShare’s sharing report for the month of May 2025. From May 1, 2025 to May 31, 2025 inclusive, Solidarity HealthShare received $3,397,694.42 in eligible medical needs on behalf of our Members, which was re-priced and shared at $1,372,051.30. This resulted in a 59% savings on medical bills for our Members. Sharing Report… Continue reading Sharing Report: May 2025

Automated Insurance Claim Denials are Banned in Arizona due to a New Law

Arizonans are no strangers to a problematic insurance claim system plaguing patients in the state. Health companies have been using computer systems for automated insurance claim denials. A new law recently signed by Democratic Gov. Katie Hobbs will soon make this practice illegal, instead requiring physicians, not computers, to review automated insurance claim denials. House… Continue reading Automated Insurance Claim Denials are Banned in Arizona due to a New Law

New Research De-Bunks Claim that Abortion Drugs are Safer than Tylenol

If you’ve heard it once, you’ve heard it many times: abortion drugs are “safer than Tylenol.” Nothing could be further from the truth, and yet this falsehood is repeated over and over by abortion advocates to the detriment of women’s health. A recently released peer-reviewed article by the Charlotte Lozier Institute definitively debunks this talking… Continue reading New Research De-Bunks Claim that Abortion Drugs are Safer than Tylenol

Brain Health Starts with Awareness

Dr. John Oertle, Solidarity HealthShare’s Chief Medical Officer, joined The BS show to discuss brain health awareness month. Read the transcript below or listen to the interview. Bob Sansevere (00:00): We are joined by Dr. John Oertle, the Co-Founder and Chief Medical Officer for Solidarity HealthShare at solidarityhealthshare.org. Dr. John, as you well know because… Continue reading Brain Health Starts with Awareness

The Sick Get Sicker: United Health Uses Medical Coding To Rake in More

There is no question that medical insurance providers are out to get the most bang for their buck, profiting off of patients whenever they can. Now a study confirms the misuse of medical coding to rob patients of financial assets. A new study published in the Annals of Internal Medicine reveals that major players in… Continue reading The Sick Get Sicker: United Health Uses Medical Coding To Rake in More

North Carolina Leads the Charge for Price Transparency

2024 marked North Carolina the most expensive state for healthcare, no doubt due to a widespread lack of transparency in the industry. To combat this ongoing challenge of high costs and behind-the-curtain billing practices, the North Carolina Senate recently passed a comprehensive bill with 44-22 bipartisan approval to increase transparency in health billing. The bill… Continue reading North Carolina Leads the Charge for Price Transparency

The Inflation of America’s Giant Healthcare Bill

Americans of all walks of life suffer from outrageously high healthcare bill costs, but many patients misplace the blame for the steep prices on drug makers, insurers and other middlemen. U.S. hospitals are just as guilty. In 2023, hospitals took in $1.5 trillion in healthcare fees. Since the year 2000, hospital prices have soared by… Continue reading The Inflation of America’s Giant Healthcare Bill

Lessons in Catholic Bioethics: Restorative Reproductive Medicine: An Ethical Approach To Fertility

De-extinction, using genetic technology to bring back to life an extinct species, is now a possibility, and the bioethical questions surrounding this practice are therefore more urgent. Colossal Biosciences made headlines with its “resurrection” of the dire wolf recently after an estimated 10,000 years of extinction. The laboratory used AI-enabled genomic mapping, sophisticated gene-editing techniques, and cloning to create a wolf that is an approximate phenotypical match of the extinct dire wolf.

Sharing Report: April 2025

Below is Solidarity HealthShare’s sharing report for the month of April 2025. From April 1, 2025 to April 30, 2025 inclusive, Solidarity HealthShare received $4,457,616.99 in eligible medical needs on behalf of our Members, which was re-priced and shared at $1,768,887.78. This resulted in a 58% savings on medical bills for our Members. Sharing Report… Continue reading Sharing Report: April 2025

Sharing Report: March 2025

Below is Solidarity HealthShare’s sharing report for the month of March 2025. From March 1, 2025 to March 31, 2025 inclusive, Solidarity HealthShare received $4,461,681.27 in eligible medical needs on behalf of our Members, which was re-priced and shared at $1,639,086.46. This resulted in a 61% savings on medical bills for our Members. Sharing Report… Continue reading Sharing Report: March 2025