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AMSA Celebrates 50th Medical Student Conference In Brisbane
The 2009 Australian Medical Students" Association (AMSA) Convention begins on Monday with 850 future doctors joining leaders in health and politics to debate the hot issues in healthcare.
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Campaign Reminds Doctors Of 14 August Deadline For Licensing Decision - General Medical Council (GMC), UK
Doctors are being reminded to contact the GMC with their licensing decision through an advertising campaign launched yesterday, 1 August. Adverts will appear in the medical trade press throughout the first half of August as a final push to encourage doctors to respond to the GMC.
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Genetic Risk Factor For Testicular Cancer Discovered By Penn Researchers
Researchers at the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine have uncovered variation around two genes that are associated with an increased risk of testicular cancer. Testicular cancer is the most common cancer among young men, and its incidence among non-Hispanic Caucasian men has doubled in the last 40 years -- it now affects seven out of 100,000 white men in the United States each year. The discovery, published in the May 31, 2009 online issue of Nature Genetics, is the first step toward understanding which men are at high risk of disease.
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Finance Committee Seeks To Trim Cost Of Bill

"A draft proposal in the Senate to overhaul the nation"s health-care system would require most people to buy health insurance, authorize an expansion of Medicaid coverage and create consumer-owned cooperative plans instead of the government coverage that President Obama is seeking," the Washington Post reports. The proposal, a preliminary version of legislation being shaped by the Senate Finance Committee, also contained "an array of coverage provisions that were drastically scaled back from earlier versions, as lawmakers seek to shrink the bill"s overall cost." Absent from the blueprint was was a "public option," which "marks perhaps the most significant omission." Obama and many Democrats had sought this option as a means to "expand coverage and reduce costs" but "as many as 10 Senate Democrats have protested the idea as unfair to private insurers. In its place, the draft circulated yesterday outlines a co-op approach modeled after rural electricity and telecom providers, subject to government oversight and funded with federal seed money" (Montgomery and Murray, 6/19). Other coverage of the Finance Committee: Wall Street Journal: "A key Senate committee, pressed to find ways to pay for a health-care expansion, is considering cuts in Medicare that would kick in automatically if other efforts to trim spending in the program fail." Sen. Max Baucus, D-Mont., the Finance chairman, suggested that Congress set a goal for lowering costs, such as by 1.5 percent a year, allowing the Medicare Payment Advisory Commission to implement policy changes that would help achieve that goal after their policies are approved by a yes-no vote in Congress (Meckler and Hitt, 6/19). Bloomberg: "U.S. senators seeking to lower the price tag of a health-care overhaul below a $1.6 trillion estimate are cutting back proposed subsidies to help low-income Americans buy insurance." Senators had earlier proposed subsidies to buy insurance for people making 400 percent of the poverty line or less. The new plan would only help individuals and families make 300 percent of the poverty line, or less (Litvan and Ronmoyer, 6/19). CongressDaily: The committee is also "weighing an alternative to an employer mandate to provide health insurance that would instead require a contribution on businesses" part if their employees participate in either Medicaid or an [health insurance] exchange." Under the alternative plan, "an employer would not have to provide healthcare coverage for their employees but would be forced to contribute the cost of tax credits for eligible workers in an exchange" (Edney, 6/19). A second CongressDaily story about progress in the HELP Committee notes that "still missing are the most controversial pieces of the bill: an outline for a public plan, a possible employer mandate and language dealing with generic biologic drugs. [Sen. Christopher] Dodd [D-Conn.] said he expected to release those details "probably in the next couple of days." He had previously said Republicans would receive the language by today so they could submit amendments by Monday" (Hunt, 6/19). 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.


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