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Commercial Manufacturing Of H1N1 'Swine Flu' Vaccine Underway
Protein Sciences Corporation (PSC) announced that it commenced manufacturing of a vaccine to protect humans against the H1N1 "swine flu" virus. The Company estimates that it can produce 100,000 doses this week and at least 100,000 doses per week thereafter. The vaccine, called PanBlok(R), is made using PSC"s proprietary baculovirus and insect cell manufacturing technology. PSC believes that PanBlok is the first and only vaccine that could be used to protect against the escalating worldwide pandemic, at least for the next few months.
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Senate Panel Advances Health-Care Overhaul, But Battle Lines Sharpen
"President Obama"s ambitious drive to overhaul the nation"s $2.3 trillion health-care system cleared a key Senate committee yesterday. But the administration was promptly buffeted by criticism from some of the industry players and moderate Democrats it has courted for months, calling into question the prospects for a bipartisan landmark bill," The Washington Post reports. This is the "the first time in 15 years a congressional panel has endorsed coverage for all. ò€¦ But the 13 to 10 party-line vote, after rancorous comments by the top Republican on the committee, underscored the mounting tensions in Congress and the country over the president"s signature item. From one end of Pennsylvania Avenue to the other, lawmakers, lobbyists and the president himself all moved quickly to position themselves for the intensifying battle."
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Biogen Idec Announces First Patient Enrolled In The Global Phase III Study Of PEGylated Interferon Beta-1a For Relapsing Multiple Sclerosis
Biogen Idec (NASDAQ: BIIB) announced enrollment of the first patient in a Phase III, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial designed to evaluate the efficacy and safety of PEGylated interferon beta-1a (BIIB017) in patients with relapsing multiple sclerosis (RMS). The trial, called ADVANCE, will determine the efficacy of PEGylated interferon beta-1a in reducing relapse rates in patients with RMS.
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Admin, Dems Face Challenge In Showing Voters What Reform Means For Them

As health reform proposals emerge from congressional committees, partisan fighting boils and the president wades into the debate with a series of televised addresses, news reports turn to an unanswered question. "What"s in it for me?" asks David Leonhardt, the New York Times business columnist. "On the subject of health care reform, most Americans probably don"t have a good answer to the question. And that, obviously, is a problem for the White House and for Democratic leaders in Congress," he writes. A disproportionate share of voters carry insurance, and while Congress has said the reform would cut costs to consumers, experts remain skeptical. "The immediate task facing Mr. Obama - in his news conference on Wednesday night and beyond - is to explain that the health care system doesn"t really work the way it seems to," Leonhardt writes. "[H]e will need to explain how a typical household, one that has insurance and thinks it always will, is being harmed." According to a series of news reports that orbit around this topic, here are some ways the effort could affect "you": Leonhardt: "Over the last 20 years, health costs have soared, and incomes have grown painfully slowly. The two trends are directly connected: employers had to spend more money on benefits, leaving less for raises." If you get insurance from your job, you are likely paying a "stealth $6,500 health care tax" - the difference between U.S. health spending per household and the average of the industrialized world - that earners could hope to see reduced by effective reforms (Leonhardt, 7/21). CNN Money: A new surtax on the rich in a House proposal "would run as high as 5.4% on income over $1 million," and people who already have insurance, especially through their job, would likely see little change. Those who buy their own insurance stand to save money because of a new "insurance exchange," requirements for insurers to provide coverage regardless of health conditions and the possible added competition of a public plan, based on a reading of the House proposal (Sahadi, 7/21). Washington Post: "For the first time ever, every American would be required to carry health insurance." For insured Americans, the requirement would "mean little more than submitting a form with their tax returns proving that the plan they carry meets certain minimum standards." For others, it would mean buying a policy or paying penalties (Connolly, 7/22). Reuters/Boston Globe: "Some of the ideas proposed for U.S. healthcare reform could cost patients thousands of dollars a year out of their own pockets, and premiums could end up being too high, according to two reports." A health plan offered to federal employees is a likely candidate for setting the baseline requirements for all plans under the overhaul, but recent reports show the plans" policyholders may spend up to $7,000 a year out-of-pocket (Fox, 7/22). National Public Radio: "Insurers would be forbidden from rejecting clients with pre-existing health conditions. Premiums couldn"t be based on past health claims, age or health habits." New taxes are also a likely part of the picture, including a proposed tax on employer-sponsored health benefits that cost, perhaps, $17,000 or more a year (Neel, 7/21). 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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