Popular Articles
Stretch Mark

Genomic Medicine Institute Adds Seven Additional Illumina Genome Analyzers To Expand Capacity For Asian 100 Genome Project
Illumina (NASDAQ:ILMN) announced that the Genomic Medicine Institute (GMI) at Seoul National University College of Medicine in Korea, purchased seven additional Illumina Genome AnalyzerIIx sequencing systems, expanding the capacity of their recently established Asian Genome Center to 10 Illumina sequencing systems.
generic viagra online
Obama Announces Regina Benjamin As Surgeon General Pick
Dr. Regina Benjamin is President Obama"s pick for surgeon general. The Alabama family physician has been an advocate for universal care, and is expected to have a role "at the table" in health reform, which would be an unusual degree of influence over policy for a surgeon general. Obama said Benjamin "represents what"s best about health care in America."
News of the day
Test Detects Molecular Marker Of Aging In Humans
In 2004, researchers at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Lineberger Comprehensive Cancer Center announced a crucial discovery in the understanding of cellular aging. They found that as cells and tissues age, the expression of a key protein, called p16INK4a, dramatically increases in most mammalian organs. Because p16INK4a is a tumor suppressor protein, cancer researchers are interested in its role in cellular aging and cancer prevention.
Cardiovascular

States Offer Critiques, Advice On Reform

Various states weigh in about health care reform with particular concerns about financial difficulties and different reform models. Massachusetts looks to its own experience to offer advice. The Boston Globe reports: "If you want to know how the proposed overhaul of the US healthcare system may play out nationally, talk to top executives at the biggest medical and life sciences companies in Massachusetts. As the heads of leading hospitals, insurers, and biotechnology companies, they have dealt with the complexities of near-universal healthcare since 2006, when Massachusetts became the first state to mandate insurance coverage." As the debate over health reform continues in Washington, the executives offer warnings that two Obama administration goals - expanding insurance coverage and controlling spending - are potentially incompatible. "As Massachusetts strains to deal with the increasing costs of its successful healthcare program, they raise questions about who will pay for the projected $1 trillion cost on the federal level." The Massachusetts executives say that the health care system needs major surgery and have a range of concerns, including cost and unintended consequences of reform: "Hospitals and doctors say that lower federal reimbursements could hurt the quality of medical care, while insurers chafe at a proposed government-run health plan they argue would put them at a competitive disadvantage. ... At the same time, biotech and medical-device makers say the focus on cost savings could hinder their ability to develop life-saving drugs and innovative devices. ... Hospital executives said those steps [to increase coverage of uninsured] may eventually pare expenses, as will preventive care if more people sign up with primary care doctors." As the federal government proposes to reduce its reimbursement payments to hospitals, these facilities also may feel the pressure of more patients. According to Paul Levy, prseident of Beth Israel Deaconness Medical Center, "What you could get is a gradual degradation in the ability of hospitals to deliver services,"" (Weisman, 7/28). USA Today reports that Vermont took a different approach to reform from Massachusetts, but the state also could provide a model for the national level. State health care workers say Vermont has innovative approaches to prevention and care coordination, as well as new computerized records systems. "Massachusetts" health care overhaul included a costly mandate that nearly every resident have insurance, paid for by employers, insurers and taxpayers. Covering the uninsured is at the heart of the debate in Washington also as Congress struggles with whether to offer - and how to pay for - health care for more than 46 million in the USA without insurance coverage." Vermont took a different path. Officials there "focused on cutting costs and improving care, with the goal of insuring more people. They won over critics in the Legislature and the public by not raising taxes. Instead, the state convinced insurance companies and hospitals to kick in. The federal government gave Vermont flexibility in how to spend Medicaid dollars. The only hit to the public: a tax on cigarettes that is 80 cents per pack and a $365 per employee penalty for businesses that don"t offer health insurance. The program is new, and cost-savings results that might draw critics aren"t in" (Hall, 7/28). Meanwhile, the Houston Chronicle reports that executives of Texas Medical Center sent a message to Congress to "slow down." "Appearing at a news conference sponsored by U.S. Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison, R-Texas, many of the medical center"s biggest names said the issue is too important to rush through legislation that could have unforeseen harmful consequences. ... Afterward, some of the leaders acknowledged the time needed might extend past 2009 but said it"s more important to pass a good bill than to meet an arbitrary timetable." The Houston Chronicle reports: "Every major medical center institution was represented. Though each brought its own concerns, they were united that reform is necessary but that Congress needs to tread carefully to preserve the best of American health care while it tries to fix what"s broken. They complained that Congress has done little to solicit input from the medical community. ... Medical center leaders" criticism of reform efforts include: no mechanism to pay for the expanded coverage by cutting waste, fraud and errors; no attention paid to the role of illegal immigrants on health care costs; and no emphasis on prevention and graduate medical education" (Ackerman, 7/27). This information was reprinted from kaiserhealthnews.org with kind permission from the Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation. You can view the entire Kaiser Daily Health Policy Report, search the archives and sign up for email delivery at kaiserhealthnews.org. © Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation. All rights reserved.


Add your comment:
Name:
Site address: http://
Your message:
Enter today\\\\'s date, 2 digits
(spam protection):