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Boston Launches Safer-Sex Campaign Targeting Teenagers Using Social Networking Sites, Other Outlets
The Boston Public Health Commission has allocated $100,000 to a new campaign that uses social networking sites and other media outlets to raise sexual health awareness among teenagers, the Boston Globe reports. The city is facing increasing rates of sexually transmitted diseases among those age 15 to 19, according to the Globe. The new campaign will include educational videos featuring teenagers that will air on the MTV, FX and BET television networks; radio and mass transit advertisements; and theater performances. Facebook, YouTube and other social networking sites also will be used to reach teenagers with safer sex messages. Officials hope to address teenagers" "casual attitudes" toward sexually transmitted diseases, the Globe reports. Lydia Shrier, an adolescent medicine specialist at Children"s Hospital Boston, said teenagers might say ""Hey, I may get HIV, but it"s treatable and I"m going to live." It"s not a death sentence to them" (Smith, 8/4).
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Picks For NIH Head, Surgeon General Side With Obama On Reproductive Issues, Despite Faith
Francis Collins, President Obama"s pick to head NIH, and Regina Benjamin, Obama"s surgeon general nominee, have spoken publicly about their religious beliefs but also have expressed views on issues such as embryonic stem cell research that conflict with church teachings, USA Today reports. Collins, who headed the Human Genome Project, is an evangelical Christian who supports the use of human embryonic stem cells in some medical research. Focus on the Family in a newsletter lauded Obama"s choice of an evangelical to lead NIH but said that abortion-rights opponents cannot support Collins" views, "particularly since he supports destructive human embryonic stem cell research."Benjamin is a Roman Catholic and sits on the board of the Catholic Health Association. She also is active in her local church and received a papal medal in 2006. According to USA Today, Catholic leaders from her native state of Alabama say they have not heard Benjamin voice support for abortion rights. The Bayou La Batre, La., medical clinic that she oversees does not perform abortions. Bill Donohue, president of the Catholic League, initially expressed support for Benjamin"s nomination, saying, "Her tireless and selfless efforts are a model for all physicians." He later said that he opposes any possible support she might give "mandated abortion coverage" in health reform.The White House has said that Benjamin agrees with Obama "on reproductive issues." Retired archbishop Oscar Lipscomb, who nominated Benjamin for the papal medal, said, "She is a practicing Catholic and faithful and, to the best of my knowledge, in all those questions that have arisen so far, there has never been a conflict in her practice and in her conversation with regard to what the church expects of medical practitioners." Former Surgeon General David Satcher, who taught Benjamin at Morehouse School of Medicine, said, "While the religion of the surgeon general may very well influence his or her ... approach, the message has to be the public health science," adding, "It"s not a religious message. It"s a public health science message."Emilie Townes, associate dean of academic affairs for Yale Divinity School, said that Obama"s choices represent his aim to "break the mold" of traditional politics, adding that Collins and Benjamin are examples of "big tent" evangelicalism and Catholicism (Banks, USA Today, 8/3).
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Japanese Ministry Of Health Approves Rasilez(R), A First-in-class Direct Renin Inhibitor (DRI), For The Treatment Of High Blood Pressure
Rasilez® (aliskiren), the first new type of high blood pressure medicine in more than a decade, has been approved for use in Japan. Rasilez directly inhibits renin9, an enzyme that triggers a process leading to high blood pressure and organ damage. The Ministry of Health, Labour and Welfare (MHLW) in Japan approved Rasilez for the treatment of high blood pressure alone or in combination with other high blood pressure medicines.
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Lawmakers Spar Over Health Reform

As the Senate Finance Committee prepares to unveil a health overhaul proposal this week, key players have been weighing in on aspects of potential legislation. Senate Banking Committee Chairman Chris Dodd, D-Conn., and Senate Finance Committee Ranking Member Charles Grassley, R-Iowa, sparred on the issue of whether to raise taxes on employer-provided health benefits during an appearance on Fox News Sunday, The Hill reports. "The idea of talking about taxing benefits at a time where people are already overwhelmed is, I think, a very bad idea," Sen. Dodd said. Sen. Grassley "said that taxes on benefits were a possibility, but added that it would take the intervention of the president, who railed against Sen. John McCain"s (R-Ariz.) favorability to taxes on benefits during the 2008 presidential campaign" (O"Brien, 6/14). In an interview on NBC"s "Meet the Press," Vice President Joe Biden "said Sunday that the Obama administration opposed taxing the medical benefits employers provide workers to pay for health care reform, but he refused to rule it out entirely," CNN Money reports. "We do not think that is the way to go; we think that is the wrong way to finance this legislation," Biden said. But he added that Obama "would consider the measure in total before making a decision" (6/14). Meanwhile, on "Face the Nation" Senate Minority Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., said Obama supports "a national rationing board, to determine what kind of treatments would be available for American citizens," Politico reports. "Typically, those in single payer countries like Canada and Britain involve delays in treatment, denial of care, those kind of things," McConnell continued. He said that Senate Republicans would oppose a government-sponsored health insurance option because "if the government is in the insurance business, there won"t be any other insurers. It"s inevitable because taxpayers will be backing the program" (Bresnahan, 6/14). Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius appeared on CNN"s "State of the Union," where she said a public option would increase competition and lower health-care costs, The Wall Street Journal reports. "Most Americans understand that choice and competition is what we wantò€¦ You can write the rules for a level playing field. The president does not want to dismantle privately owned plannedò€¦. He wants to strengthen the marketplace," she said (Spiegel, 6/14). Roll Call reports that Sen. Dodd "has indicated he would consider" a delay in marking up the Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee health care proposal, but that "if we"re just going to dance around each other, then we"re going directly to the markup" (Langel, 6/15). Former presidential candidate and DNC chairman Howard Dean is releasing a book called "Howard Dean"s Prescription for Real Healthcare Reform," CQ Politics reports. In the book, Dean "says President Obama and congressional Democrats shouldn"t compromise the public option away just for the sake of bipartisanship. Without it, he says, the private health insurance system will have no incentive to reduce costs and eliminate the gaps in patients" coverage." When Sen. Dodd "signaled a willingness last wee to consider alternatives to the public option," Dean responded that "I think Sen. Dodd is doing the best he can under the circumstances" but "at the end of the day, bipartisanship doesn"t do us any good if we end up with a crummy bill" (Nather, 6/15). 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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