Health & Human Services
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The government technology supplier says its new AI-backed tool can help states reduce costly mistakes on SNAP applications. Such mistakes could lead to even larger cuts in federal assistance.
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Public agencies use software from Libera for vocational rehabilitation. CiviCore, once part of Neon One, has government clients that include courts, schools and health and human services departments.
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The Affordable Care Act is bringing the government up to speed with the marketplace, according to one expert.
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Paper-based health records are sometimes lost or out-of-date as foster children are moved around, but a startup is looking to the cloud for a more coordinated solution.
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Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius wrote a letter to Republican governors extending the deadline to Dec. 14, 2012.
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Federally-run health insurance exchanges as well as some some state-run exchanges will be paid for using insurance premium surcharges, not separate taxes.
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Cities and their nonprofit partners should look to data visualizations to get a better sense of homeless populations and where resources are most needed.
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California's Bureau of Cannabis Control issued the first round of temporary licenses for commercial cannabis businesses a little over two weeks before its official Jan. 1 launch.
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A look back at highlights and happenings in the world of civic tech.
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Blind voters in some Michigan counties find that updated equipment makes it harder to cast a secret ballot unassisted.
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Kansas-based NIC Inc., a provider of more than 13,000 digital government services nationally, launched RxGov, a prescription drug monitoring program platform powered by a recent tech acquisition.
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A modular, cloud-based system positions Colorado on the leading edge of benefits management.
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The Harvard Kennedy School's Government Performance Lab will help six different state and local governments with pressing issues facing their communities.
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Founded in 1790, the Patent Office aimed to put innovation and entrepreneurship within reach of every citizen. Now, 10 million patents later, critics say an out-of-touch system is doing the opposite.
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Government agencies and education institutions have increased the use of smart technologies to assist the disabled. But federal funding remains an issue.
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Plus, the University of Wisconsin-Madison debuts a neighborhood map to help inform medical decision-making; San Francisco releases its annual open data inventory; and the Startup in Residence Program extends its application deadline.
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Toxic fumes from Hawaii's volcanic activity have started an effort to put various streams of air quality data into a centralized location.
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