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Police Work Undermines Cardiovascular Health, Comparison To General Population Shows
It is well documented that police officers have a higher risk of developing heart disease: The question is why.
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Group Files Petition Over Enforcement Of Regulations In Adult Film Industry To Prevent Sexually Transmitted Diseases
The AIDS Healthcare Foundation last week filed a petition in Los Angeles County Superior Court asking "the court to order the Los Angeles County Department of Public Health to enforce regulations that require condom use in adult-film production or take other reasonable steps to stem the spread of disease," the Los Angeles Times reports (Yoshino, 7/17). In the petition, "the group claims that in the month since an actress tested positive for HIV, the county Department of Public Health has done little to address what it considers to be a serious health threat" (AP/San Jose Mercury News, 7/16). In a statement released last week, the department, said, "The county continues to strongly support state legislation and the regulatory role of the [California Division of Occupational Safety and Health] as the most appropriate means to regulate the practices in the adult-film industry that expose performers to unnecessary and preventable occupational risks of acquiring and transmitting these diseases," adding, "The department does not believe that litigation is the best means to deal with this issue" (Yoshino, 7/17).
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Shedding Light On Esophageal Disease
Canadian Light (CLS) staff scientist Luca Quaroni and Dr. Alan Casson, Head of the Department of Surgery at the University of Saskatchewan (U of S) used the synchrotron"s infrared microscope to identify tissue afflicted with a condition known as Barrett"s Esophagus from chemical fingerprints associated with the disease, which can lead to esophageal cancer. The finding is published in the June, 2009 issue of the Royal Society of Chemistry journal, The Analyst.
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Assembly Passes Legislation Protecting Patients From Losing Health Insurance When They Get Sick

Legislation requiring an independent review of decisions by health plans and insurers to rescind coverage for patients passed the Assembly on a 46-24 vote today. Assembly Bill 2, sponsored by the California Medical Association and authored by Assemblymember Hector De La Torre, D-Southgate, is designed to prevent the outrageous industry-wide practice of health plans wrongfully rescinding coverage for patients. "Insurance companies rescind a policy only after patients get very sick and generate expensive medical bills. This insidious practice leaves the patient, doctor and hospital holding the bag while the insurer makes profits," said Dr. Dev GnanaDev, CMA president. "Unfortunately, fines and lawsuits have not deterred such practices, and settlements amount to a slap on the wrist after the damage is already done. We need to stop health plans and insurers from leaving their patients stranded when they most need coverage." Under the measure, health care service plans would be subject to an independent external review before rescinding coverage. Consumers would keep their coverage until a decision is made. The legislation would also raise the legal standard for rescission by stipulating that in order to cancel coverage, the health plan or insurer must have completed medical underwriting for the patient involved and show that the patient willfully misrepresented information. This provision would prevent consumers who make innocent mistakes, such as forgetting to include information about long-ago medical conditions, from losing their coverage. In spite of a growing number of fines and lawsuits levied since 2006, HMO"s and insurers have blatantly continued the practice of denying coverage after the fact. The latest in a string of settlements came in January 2009. State regulators brokered a deal with Blue Shield of California, in which the insurer agreed to reissue medical coverage to nearly 700 Californians that the company dropped after becoming ill. Without AB 2, consumers unjustly cut off from coverage needlessly suffer emotionally and financially. AB 2 remedies the problem by taking a proactive approach. Unlike other proposals by the Department of Insurance or the Department of Managed Health Care, this bill would cover all health plans and insurers, not just those regulated by either Department. The legislation moves next to the Senate. The California Medical Association represents more than 35,000 physicians in all modes of practice and specialties. CMA is dedicated to the health of all patients in California. California Medical Association


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