Popular Articles
Teeth Whitening

$1.3 Million Grant Awarded To LSUHSC To Develop New Cancer Vaccine
Eduardo Davila, PhD, Assistant Professor of Pediatrics, Microbiology, and Immunology at LSU Health Sciences Center New Orleans School of Medicine and Stanley S. Scott Cancer Center, has been awarded a $1.3 million grant over five years by the National Cancer Institute of the National Institutes of Health to develop new immunotherapies, including a vaccine, for cancer. Two years of the research will be supported by the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA).
generic viagra online
Impact Of DNA Damage In The Developing Brain Tracked By Scientists
Switching off a key DNA repair system in the developing nervous system is linked to smaller brain size as well as problems in brain structures vital to movement, memory and emotion, according to new research led by St. Jude Children"s Research Hospital scientists.
News of the day
Nepean Dyspepsia Index Applies To Functional Dyspepsia In China
FD, a common non-organic disease in the world, greatly affects a patient"s quality of life. However, treatment of FD is still controversial and no single therapy is uniformly effective, due, in part, to absence of a reliable evaluation instrument. The Nepean Dyspepsia Index (NDI), measuring both symptom scores and impairment of the dyspepsia-specific health-related quality of life in FD patients, has been designed to diagnose FD and has been translated into several languages. Moreover, its utility has been proved to be validated by researches in western countries. However, DI has not been translated and validated in China.
Oncology

House Health Bill To Include Public Plan, Insurers Resisting

On Monday, House Ways and Means Committee Chairman Charles Rangel, D- N.Y., told reporters that the House bill will include a new public insurance plan, Reuters/The Boston Globe reports. "Similar to legislation being developed in the Senate, the House bill would establish an insurance exchange to help people without employer-sponsored insurance find medical coverage." The government-sponsored public insurance plan would be "one of the options available, lawmakers said." The bill would also establish a mandate that would "require individuals and businesses to obtain coverage." A government-sponsored public health insurance option remains one of the most contentious points in the health care debate. On Monday, Senate Republicans sent a letter to President Barack Obama "arguing against a new public plan, saying it would lead to "a federal government takeover of our healthcare system."" The President called for a public plan option last week "but also has said he wants healthcare legislation by October that enjoys bipartisan support." House Democrats will be briefed on the new legislation today, and Democratic members of the Ways and Means Committee are also scheduled to meet with Obama "to discuss the proposal" (Smith, 6/8). Meanwhile, GOP lawmakers in both houses, and some moderate Democrats, are voicing opposition to the inclusion of a government-run insurance plan: "[T]he dust-up may turn the once amicable health care debate into a partisan war," reports Utah"s Salt Lake Tribune. Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, a Finance Committee members, say the unraveling bipartisanship isn"t cut in stone: "I would be glad to help them, but not with a public plan" (Canham, 6/8). And Democrats are actively recruiting GOP Senators who might help, even with the public plan, USA Today reports. Maine Republican Senators Susan Collins and Olympia Snowe, the only current Senate Republicans who defected to support Obama"s stimulus plan, are possible supporters. ""There is more outreacḥ€¦ to Republicans than was the case during the early days of the stimulus," Collins said. "If Democrats want Republican support, they will probably need 60 votes, the threshold required to stop filibusters and proceed to a final vote," USA Today reports. "Democrats can count on 59 votes, but it is not clear whether all Democrats will vote for whatever proposal emerges," making it critical for Democratic leaders to assure support by moderates in their own party, like Sens. Evan Bayh, D-Ind., and Ron Wyden, D-Ore. Liberal advocacy groups are currently run ads in both Maine and Oregon to shore up support for reform (Fritze, 6/9). The insurance industry "is maintaining a conciliatory tone, while making clear its objections to such a plan, as it tries to shape" a health care overhaul, Dow Jones Newswires/CNN Money reports in a story headlined: "Health Insurers Aim To Shape Reform, Resist Public Plan." Insurers say "a public plan won"t be needed if reformers successfully expand coverage to the uninsured through mandated insurance and guaranteed issuance of policies, find ways to control medical costs, prohibit exclusions for pre-existing conditions, and provide subsidies to help people afford coverage." Bill Hoagland, Cigna Corp."s vice president for public policy and government affairs, told Dow Jones "the question we have to raise is, "Wait a minute, if the industry agrees to do all of that, what is it that a public plan achieves?"" He says the insurance industry has "stepped up, Cigna has stepped up we"ve tried to be good players." This is a major change from the Clinton health care debates, Hoagland says, when insurers took "the Harry-and-Louise position against reform." Hoagland says the problem with a public plan is "you end up having a significant cost shift from public plans to the private plans," because of the lower reimbursement rates that government-run plans such as Medicare pay providers. Elizabeth Hall, WellPoint Inc."s vice president for public policy, said the plan could be "very disruptive to the marketplace," but "she wasn"t ready to call the issue a deal-breaker. "We are definitely not supportive of that, but I think just like any other large piece of legislation, we are going to have to take it as a whole," Hall says (Brin, 6/8). 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):