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Los Angeles Times Examines Increase In Caesarean Births, Related Rise In Risk, Cost
Caesarean sections -- which are performed in 31% of births, up from 4.5% in 1965 -- often are considered an unnecessary risk and "an example of how the intensive and expensive U.S. brand of medicine has failed to deliver better results and may, in fact, be doing more harm than good," the Los Angeles Times reports. According to the Times, c-sections can increase a woman"s risk of complications, such as infection, blood clots and premature delivery. Even without complication, c-sections typically result in longer hospital stays and increased costs. Expenses related to c-section births account for 45% of the more than $79 billion in annual hospital charges that childbirth incurs in the U.S. annually. The average uncomplicated c-section costs about $4,500, which is about twice the cost for vaginal births. C-sections cost about $13,000 for privately insured patients. According to a 2008 report by Childbirth Connection, "The financial toll of maternity care on private (insurers)/employers and Medicaid/taxpayers is especially large." It also said, "Maternity care thus plays a considerable role in escalating health care costs, which increasingly threaten the financial stability of families, employers, and federal and state budgets." Addressing the Increase
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Siemens Launches 'Decibels For Life' - New Campaign Aims For Hearing Awareness And Instrument Innovation
"Decibels for Life", the new campaign from Siemens Hearing Instruments, has been launched to maintain awareness of hearing loss. It will also champion hearing innovations that help overcome impairments leading to an improved quality of life.
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Surfers Take Their Knocks, Doctor Says
Surfing under the influence of drugs or alcohol are two of the prime dangers facing surfing enthusiasts, according to information presented today at the 56th Annual Meeting of the American College of Sports Medicine in Seattle. Other factors include wave height, board length and interactions among surfers.
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Opinion: U.S. Should Double Global Maternal, Child Health Spending; Ban, Chan Want 'Global Solidarity'; Res For Diabetes, HIV/AIDS

U.S. Should Double Newborn, Maternal Health Spending, Encourage Other G8 Countries To Do The Same Although "child survival is improving - albeit way too slowly - in most regions of the world," sub-Saharan Africa "continues to have the world"s highest child-mortality rates," former U.S. Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist, who serves as the chairman of Save the Children"s Survive to 5 campaign, writes in a Washington Times opinion piece. Frist asserts, "We cannot continue to allow one of every seven African children to die when it is so readily within our reach to prevent those deaths." Frist writes that "African leaders have formally recognized that pursuing the greatest gains for children - and thus for the continent"s future - must go hand in hand with strengthening health systems that can deliver lifesaving interventions. ò€¦ Now African governments and the international community must unite to develop and support systems to deliver these proven interventions efficiently and widely." According to Frist, "For just $44, a package of these interventions can include immunizations; counseling on breast-feeding and newborn care; and treatment for childhood killers such as pneumonia, diarrhea and malaria." He writes that the U.S. should "at least double" the current $495 million that is spent on maternal and newborn health and "encourage other industrialized nations to do the same at next month"s summit in Italy of the Group of Eight leading industrial nations, and reinforce a desperately needed and African-driven organizing principle to bring health care to all children and communities in Africa" (Frist, Washington Times, 6/16). Ban, Chan Call For "Global Solidarity" In Fighting Disease An "effective response" to the spread disease must be "grounded in a sense of global solidarity and enlightened self-interest," because "the impact of disease in one country is ultimately felt by all," U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon and WHO Director-General Margaret Chan write in a Gulf Times opinion piece. The authors write, "Beyond this [H1N1] pandemic, there almost certainly lurks another down the road - potentially far more serious," and the "same principles of solidarity must guide us as we mobilise to meet the other health challenges that afflict the world populations, and the poorest in particular." Although health spending is "often among the first to be cut" during "hard times," entire societies pay a "high price" when governments cut back on "primary health care for their poorer citizens," Ban and Chan write. "In short, we must remain vigilant and continue actively to manage this pandemic. At the same time, the pandemic reminds us that we need to think and act beyond it. Only by doing so can we truly protect our people, our countries, our economy, and our global society," they conclude (Ban/Chan, Gulf Times, 6/16). Boston Globe Column Compares Res For HIV/AIDS, Diabetes In Uganda Res to treat patients living with diabetes in Uganda pale in comparison to HIV/AIDS res, Boston Globe columnist Derrick Jackson discovered during a recent trip to the city of Mbarara, Uganda, six hours southwest of the capital city of Kampala. In his column, Jackson writes that even though "[t]he World Health Organization has warned that diabetes, obesity, hypertension, and other diseases of development are well on their way to becoming entrenched worldwide," stark difference exist between the Mbarara HIV-AIDS clinic, with its "immaculate, brightly lit labs with blood-sampling equipment and computer data stations worthy of a Boston hospital" and the local diabetes clinic, where the clinic head Bitekyerezo Medaro said patients sleep in the grass and have said they would prefer to have HIV so that their treatment would be free. "When I see the treatment for HIV, I become inspired as to what we can do," Medaro said. "When I see what we have for diabetes, I feel defeated" (Jackson, Boston Globe, 6/16). 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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