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New Hampshire Officials: Need For Mental Health Services Increasing
In New Hampshire, Foster"s Daily Democrat reports: "As unemployment statistics increase and the economic climate deteriorates, a large group of people who would otherwise likely not need mental health services are finding themselves at an increased risk for depression, anxiety, compulsive behaviors and substance abuse, according (to) the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, a division of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services."
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Mate Selection: How Does She Know He'll Take Care Of The Kids
Throughout the animal kingdom brilliant colors or elaborate behavioral displays serve as "advertisements" for the process of attracting mates. But, what do the ads promise and is there truth in advertizing? Researchers at Yale theorize that when males must provide care for the survival of their offspring, the males" "advertisements" will always be honest - and they may devote more of their energy to caring for their offspring than to attracting females.
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Physicians Can Lead Health Care Reform Through Payment And Delivery System Reforms
Physicians can and should play a leading role in achieving health care reform by working towards comprehensive reform of the way health care is paid for and delivered, helping achieve a guaranteed 1.5 percent annual savings in health care costs that would pay for covering all Americans, according to a New England Journal of Medicine Perspective piece published online.
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Mozambique's Health Minister Reviews Country's Health Status With Parliament

A nationwide vaccination effort in Mozambique helped to slash the number of reported cases of measles in Mozambique in 2008, Health Minister Ivo Garrido said Wednesday when addressing the country"s parliament, Agencia de Informacao de Mocambique/allAfrica.com reports. Garrido also reported that 2008 marked the year that leprosy "ceased to be a public health problem in Mozambique" and malaria cases and deaths fell while the number of patients receiving antiretrovirals continued to climb - growing "from 6,000 in December 2004 to over 140,000 at the end of May this year." During the same period, the number of doctors in Mozambique also rose 35 percent, allowing what equates to "one doctor for every 23,000 inhabitants," AIM/allAfrica.com writes. In Mozambique, health services are "essentially free of charge" -hospitalizations are free and consultations "cost the equivalent of 20 U.S. cents," according to AIM/allAfrica.com. "This was the case, [Garrido] declared, because the government "believes that health care is a duty of the state, and a fundamental human right"" (AIM/allAfrica.com, 6/3). This information was reprinted from globalhealth.kff.org with kind permission from the Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation. You can view the entire Kaiser Daily Global Health Policy Report, search the archives and sign up for email delivery at globalhealth.kff.org. © Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation. All rights reserved.


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