Noam N. Levey
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Former staff writer Noam N. Levey covered national healthcare policy out of Washington, D.C., for the Los Angeles Times. A former investigative and political reporter, he is a Boston native and a graduate of Princeton University. He joined the newspaper in 2003 and reported from Washington from 2006 to 2021.
Latest From This Author
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President-elect Joe Biden on Friday outlined a more centralized federal push for vaccines against COVID-19, including a call to allow people over 65 to be inoculated now.
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Led by California Atty. Gen. Xavier Becerra, tapped to lead the Health and Human Services Department, Biden’s healthcare team is aiming for an ambitious agenda to reshape a healthcare system that still leaves millions of Black and Latino Americans with weaker insurance protections, less access to care and poorer outcomes.
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President Trump takes credit for COVID-19 vaccines, yet they’ll do little good if many people remain opposed to vaccinations.
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As California attorney general, Becerra battled the Trump administration over Obamacare and confronted rising healthcare costs.
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The COVID-19 vaccine campaign to reach the most vulnerable will depend not on public health departments but on pharmacy giants.
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California and other states are racing to finalize plans for who will get the first doses of COVID-19 vaccines and how they will be delivered.
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President-elect Biden faces the huge challenge of rallying a divided public to get behind a unified effort to wear masks and take other basic steps to control the coronavirus.
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The Supreme Court, with President Trump’s three appointees, hears arguments over whether to void the 2010 Affordable Care Act.
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The swift unveiling of the coronavirus advisory board signals the urgency of the issue and its importance in propelling Biden to the White House.
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In its response to the coronavirus, the administration has handed out billions to the healthcare industry, few strings attached.