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The search continues for Nancy Guthrie, the 84-year-old mother of TODAY co-anchor Savannah Guthrie, as investigators examine the legitimacy of reported ransom notes and offer a reward for information leading to her recovery. The Milan-Cortina Winter Olympics are underway in Italy, with opening ceremonies and early competition drawing attention to U.S. contenders in figure skating and hockey.

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The White House refuses to say if ICE will be at polling places in November. A bill to ease display of the Ten Commandments in schools stalls in Indiana and union leaders call for the restoration of federal worker employment protections.

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Silver mining made Northern Idaho wealthy, but left its mark on people's health, a similar issue affects folks along New York's Hudson River and critics claim rural renewable energy eats up farmland, while advocates believe they can co-exist.

Trump administration budget proposal threatens rural TN cancer patients

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Wednesday, June 4, 2025   

More than 1.5 million people in Tennessee, or 20% of the state's population, rely on health insurance provided by Medicaid.

Maddie Michael, Tennessee government relations director for the American Cancer Society Cancer Action Network, said access to health care coverage is one of the greatest predictors of whether someone survives their cancer diagnosis. She added cuts to Medicaid, also known as TennCare, could mean people lose access to routine cancer screenings and early detection tests.

"Without this insurance and without access to this care, there will be late-term diagnoses for cancer," Michael asserted. "Which are more costly to the patients, more costly to the state, and have lower survival rates, unfortunately."

Ten Tennessee advocacy groups, including the American Cancer Society Cancer Action Network, gathered Tuesday outside the offices of Sen. Marsha Blackburn, R-Tenn., and Sen. Bill Hagerty, R-Tenn., calling on them to protect Medicaid funding for Tennesseans. The Senate is set to vote on the proposed budget by the end of June.

Michael argued cutting Medicaid will have an especially big effect on cancer patients in Tennessee's rural and low-income areas, which rely heavily on the program for services.

"Rural communities already have higher cancer death rates than their urban counterparts," Michael pointed out. "That's often due to barriers to care, like hospital closures, which we've seen across Tennessee, and transportation issues. When you take away someone's health insurance, you're going to make those challenges in rural areas even worse."

Michael noted Tennesseans can express their concerns at FightCancer.org.


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