Popular Articles

Next-Generation Mechanical Heart Pump Implanted In Heart Patients
Three patients at NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital/Columbia University Medical Center were among the first in the United States to be implanted with a next-generation artificial heart pump called the DuraHeart™ Left-Ventricular Assist System. The surgeries took place earlier this year. NewYork-Presbyterian/Columbia is one of only three centers in the U.S. currently enrolling patients in a clinical trial studying the device.
generic viagra online
Massachusetts, Tennessee Health Plans Might Offer Ideas On U.S. Health Care System Overhaul
Congressional lawmakers who are crafting a plan to overhaul the U.S. health care system might be able to look to state health insurance programs in Massachusetts and Tennessee for ideas, the AP/Minneapolis Star Tribune reports. Health reform legislation modeled after Massachusetts" near-universal health insurance law "is likely to emerge" in Congress, "although details remain unsettled," the AP/Star Tribune reports. The plan also could include components of Tennessee"s CoverTN program, which charges beneficiaries who smoke or are overweight higher premiums. Lawmakers in the Senate already have discussed a lifestyle tax funding mechanism, such as taxes on alcohol and sugary beverages. According to AP/Star Tribune, Massachusetts "chose to cover virtually everyone," while Tennessee "chose to get just a few more people bare-bones insurance at a budget price with limits on how much plans would pay for hospital stays."Alan Weil of the National Academy for State Health Policy said, "The belief that we should all have health insurance coverage is broadly held," but "there are tremendous differences around the country in beliefs on how to achieve that goal." He added, "We learn from Massachusetts that a bold objective matters. If it can be sustained, that"s terrific," and "[i]t would be nice if you had a southern state that had achieved universal coverage and did it in a different way, but we don"t have that" (Johnson, AP/Minneapolis Star Tribune, 5/28).
News of the day
Study: Breastfeeding May Reduce Likelihood Of Postpartum MS Attacks
Annette Langer-Gould, MD, PhD (Stanford University) and colleagues followed 32 pregnant women with MS, assessing their disease and breastfeeding status at intervals out to 12 months after giving birth. They found that women who breastfed their babies exclusively (without giving supplemental bottles) for at least the first two months post-partum were less likely to have an MS relapse than those who did not breastfeed or who did not breastfeed exclusively during the first two months (36% who breastfed exclusively experienced a relapse, as compared to 87% who did not breastfeed or who supplemented with formula).
Mental Health

Colorado Rural Co-Ops Provide Example For Health Care System Proposal

Rural utility co-ops in Colorado could provide an example of how a co-op would work nationally for health care, The Denver Post reports. "Strange as it sounds, the humble cooperatives that electrified rural America and serve as a foundation of the farm economy have suddenly landed at the center of the debate over Congress" effort to reform a health care system dominated by multibillion-dollar drug companies and hospital conglomerates." The Denver Post notes: "Although there are a few health insurance cooperatives, the idea has never been tested on a massive scale. Co-ops are most often small, community-based businesses that help farmers store grain or buy machinery. In rural areas, co-ops were often the only way to connect isolated farms to the electrical grid, because so few customers weren"t worth the investment to major utilities. (Ray) Clifton, of the (Colorado Rural Electric Association), said he believes co-ops did a better job at the task than a purely government-run program could have - and for similar reasons, so would health insurance co-ops." Among the attributes he listed: ""They are service-oriented. The whole concept of a co-op is to provide a service of the most reasonable cost," he said. "The directors live in the community, they meet their fellow ratepayers in the grocery store or at church. This is local control."" Some criticisms of the co-ops are that they are less efficient and unwieldy in practice (Riley, 6/24). 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):