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Health Library
Sample Appeal Letter for Services Denied as "Not a Covered Benefit"
You can use this letter as a model for an efficient, effective appeal letter. You may also need to enlist the help of a legal professional. Make sure your healthcare provider knows any issues you have with insurance. Your provider may be able to help you.
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Health Library
Prostate Cancer: Erectile Dysfunction (ED) after Treatment
Erectile dysfunction is the inability for the penis to get or stay erect for sex. It's often a side effect of the treatments for prostate cancer. Read on to learn more.
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Health Library
Lung Cancer: Managing Shortness of Breath
Dyspnea is the technical word for difficulty breathing. It's a common symptom in people who have lung cancer or have cancer that has spread to the lungs.
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Health Library
The Facts on Chlamydia
Chlamydia is the most frequently reported infectious disease in the U.S. Anyone who has sex is at risk for chlamydia.
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Health Library
Easy Ways to Show Someone You Care
Whether you are a spouse, child, sibling, parent, or friend of a cancer patient, it is important that you never stop expressing your love. Showing how much you care is not only important on holidays and special occasions. It should be done every day of the year.
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Health Library
Fatigue and Cancer
Fatigue is a feeling of being tired, weak, or exhausted. It's the most common side effect of cancer and cancer treatment.
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Managing Cancer-Related Fatigue
Fatigue can come and go or stay constant for a while. Fatigue from chemotherapy tends to happen a few days after the treatment, peaks, and then gets better before the next treatment. Fatigue from radiation may not happen right away.
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Health Library
Using Investigational Medicines
Investigational medicines may be used if you are seriously ill but you're not enrolled in a clinical trial. These medicines are being studied but have not yet been approved as safe and effective by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA). Read on to learn more.
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Health Library
Learning to Speak Again After Laryngeal Surgery
Speech therapy usually begins before you leave the hospital. Once the doctor gives approval, the SLP will begin speech lessons with you. To speak, you may need esophageal speech, an artificial larynx, or a transesophageal puncture (TEP). Each is described here.
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Showing 1900 - 1908 of 12497 results