Popular Articles

Diabetes Amputees Converge On London's O2 Arena To Campaign For Better Foot Services
Diabetes UK is today bringing together 100 people, including 20 diabetes amputees, at the "Body Worlds and Mirror of Time" exhibition at London"s O2 Arena for a photo call to highlight the fact that diabetes causes 100 amputations a week in the UK.
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Sen. Baucus Says Health Care Overhaul Will Cover About 95% Of Citizens, Will Not Cover Undocumented Immigrants
Senate Finance Committee Chair Max Baucus (D-Mont.) on Thursday said that Congress" health care overhaul plan would cover 94% to 96% of the population but not undocumented immigrants, the AP/Las Vegas Sun reports (Alonso-Zaldivar, AP/Las Vegas Sun, 5/21). In remarks at a briefing sponsored by the Kaiser Family Foundation, Families USA and the National Federation of Independent Business, Baucus said, "There are always going to be some people ... you just can"t find" to enroll, adding that "we"re going to try to get as close as we can (to 100% coverage) and we"re working hard to accomplish that." He added, "[W]e"re not going to cover undocumented workers. That"s too politically explosive" (Reichard, CQ HealthBeat, 5/21). According to an analysis by the Center for Immigration Studies and the U.S. Census Bureau, undocumented immigrants make up between 15% and 22% of the estimated 47 million U.S. residents without health coverage. Baucus said, "I don"t have a good answer yet to undocumented workers, illegal aliens," adding, "There will still be charity care " (Landers, Dallas Morning News, 5/22). Baucus said that the bill his committee is working on and that he expects to mark up in mid-June will include "incentives" and possibly requirements for employers to pay for employee health insurance. Baucus mentioned the possibility of including an individual mandate and establishing a health insurance exchange (AP/Las Vegas Sun, 5/21). Baucus also noted that the plan most likely will include a public health insurance option in some form (Tumulty, "Swampland," Time Magazine, 5/21). "Everything"s on the table," Baucus said, warning that "because this is so big, so complex, there are going to be a lot of trade-offs. ... This is just so large" (CQ HealthBeat, 5/21). He said that he is very optimistic about the prospects of bipartisan support for the legislation, placing the odds at between 75% and 80% ("Swampland," Time Magazine, 5/21).
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News of the day
Autogenous Infrainguinal Bypass Outcomes Inferior In Hispanics
Researchers from the Brigham and Women"s Hospital and Harvard Medical School in Boston have released a 22-year study that reports Hispanic patients have poorer outcomes following infrainguinal bypass grafting for the treatment of peripheral arterial disease (PAD). Results showed that of all the study participants, Hispanics had a higher rate of bypass graft failure and amputation after revascularization compared to Caucasians. In an analysis that accounted for a myriad of important variables affecting limb salvage after bypass, Hispanic ethnicity was found to be independently predictive of eventual amputation. Details of the study appear in the Society for Vascular Surgery"s(R) June 2009 issue of the Journal of Vascular Surgery(R).
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Health Reform Plans Grab Spotlight As Specifics Emerge

President Obama"s carefully worded health care reform letter to key Senate Democrats last week highlighted the growing role the president is taking in overhaul efforts, Politico reports. Obama"s best chance at getting comprehensive legislation is this year, many advisers believe. To achieve that, Politico says, he"s ramping up the rhetoric. ""If we do nothing, everyone"s health care will be put in jeopardy," he said in his Saturday radio and Internet address."" For instance, in his insistence on a public plan without providing a specific vehicle to alienate Republicans, Obama "bucked up the progressive base, which is the glue of the grass-roots support he needs to mobilize. Although Obama backed a public plan during the campaign, his supporters wanted to hear it again - and reaffirming that pledge ahead of the kickoff on Saturday of a Democratic Party-led national health campaign had to have helped." Obama also touched in his letter on what reform could mean for the deficit, slowing the growth of health costs and mandating that Americans carry coverage (Brown, 6/9). Some other stories comment on where health care reform is going. Roll Call reports on looming challenges from business lobbyists waking up to reform they may not like: "Advocates for health insurance companies, hospitals, provider groups and employers have so far been engaged in a marriage of convenience, hoping that by maintaining radio silence in exchange for a seat at the negotiating table they could influence the process and obtain a reform bill to their liking. But as legislative details have emerged in recent days and suggested the business community could end up with mandates and a government-run, public plan option, lobbying groups are preparing to step up their opposition messaging" (Drucker and Ackley, 6/9). Wall Street Journal reports on the price tag for reform from the Congressional Budget Office: " Douglas Elmendorf, director of the Congressional Budget Office, said Monday his office has given lawmakers a "tremendous quantity of numbers" as they weigh how much it will cost to extend coverage to millions of uninsured Americans and how much revenue will be raised by proposed tax increases. The nonpartisan office"s numbers are critical because they are the basis for determining a bill"s price tag, and whether, as President Barack Obama has promised, the plan won"t increase the budget deficit" (Adamy and Hitt, 6/9). The Newshour reports on making the cost increases to offset reform"s budgetary deficit spending more palatable to Republicans: "Obama has suggested that he could support limiting the existing tax exclusion for employer-provided health benefits to the highest tax bracket - a concept he criticized Arizona GOP Sen. John McCain for proposing in the 2008 presidential campaign." MSNBC has more to say about the impact of changing the tax exemption on employer-provided health insurance: "While details of such an approach are still sketchy, it would likely involve employees paying tax on a percentage of their employer-provided health benefits. So if Congress decided that all such premiums in excess of $11,000 for family plans would be taxable income, and your company paid premiums worth $16,000 for your coverage, you"d have to pay taxes on $5,000" (Curry, 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.


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