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Purdue-developed Tool Can Get Most Pollution Control For The Money
There may be thousands of things large and small that can be done to better control pollution on even the smallest waterways, and a new tool developed at Purdue University may help sort out how to choose the best ones.
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Cancer Survivors At Greater Risk Of Birth Complications; Special Monitoring Needed
Survivors of childhood cancer run particular risks when pregnant and should be closely monitored, the 25th annual conference of the European Society of Human Reproduction and Embryology heard today (Wednesday 1 July). Dr. Sharon Lie Fong, of the Department of Obstetrics and Gynaecology, Erasmus MC University Medical Centre, Rotterdam, The Netherlands, said that, although such women may have conceived spontaneously and considered themselves to be perfectly healthy, their deliveries should always take place in a hospital.
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Condom Distribution Program In Los Angeles County Jail Might Be Expanded
Los Angeles County Sheriff Lee Baca is considering expanding an eight-year-old program at Men"s Central Jail that distributes condoms in a unit for gay men, the Los Angeles Times reports. Under the program, an outreach worker from the nonprofit Center for Health Justice visits the jail once weekly to distribute about one condom per inmate to the unit"s 300 inmates. Baca is considering doubling the number of condoms being distributed. Sheriff Department officials acknowledge that HIV is a problem in county jails and spend about $2 million annually on HIV/AIDS medication and identify about 65 new cases of HIV each month, according to the Times. Steve Whitmore, a spokesperson for the Sheriff"s Department, said, "Sex in jails is against the law, but there is a public health issue that needs to be considered." A separate condom distribution program is being piloted at the California State Prison at Solano (Bloomekatz, Los Angeles Times 6/29).
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New England Journal of Medicine: Medicare Part D Update - Lessons Learned And Unfinished Business - "Since 2006, more than 40 million elderly and disabled people have had the opportunity to enroll in a Medicare Part D prescription-drug plan, as established under the Medicare Modernization Act (MMA) of 2003." At that time, lawmakers focused on several features of the proposed legislation. "Issues that received particular scrutiny were the unprecedented way that the benefit would be delivered (exclusively through private plans) and its design, featuring an unusual gap in coverage (sometimes called the "doughnut hole")." Four years into the program, "the Obama administration and the Democratically controlled Congress have an opportunity to review the program and identify areas for improvement." This study, The Medicare Policy Project of the Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation, returns to some of the key questions raised during the congressional debate and in the years that led up to the program"s start (Neuman and Cubanski, July 23). (Note: KHN is a program of the Kaiser Family Foundation.) Commonwealth Fund: Fund Failure To Protect: Why The Individual Insurance Market Is Not A Viable Option For Most U.S. Families -This policy brief compares the experiences of adults ages 19 to 64 who purchased coverage in the individual insurance market to adults covered by employer-based plans, as documented by the Commonwealth Fund 2007 Biennial Health Insurance Survey. In addition to highlighting the difficulty adults face when attempting to purchase insurance on the individual market -- "nearly half (47%) of adults who tried to purchase insurance in the individual market in the last three years found it very difficult or impossible to find a plan that fit their needs; 57 percent found it very difficult or impossible to find a plan they could afford; and 36 percent said they were turned down or charged a higher price because of a preexisting condition." The policy brief found "Adults who do purchase coverage in the individual market pay more out-of-pocket for their premiums, face much higher deductibles, and spend larger shares of their income on health insurance and health care expenses than their counterparts with employer-based group coverage." According to the study, "On average, adults with employer plans spend $2,250 out of pocket for health expenses including premiums" compared to "those with individual market insurance spend an average of $6,750" (Doty, Collins, Nicholson and Rustgi, 7/21). American Cancer Society Cancer Action Network: A Benchmark For Coverage: How The FEHBP Blue Cross Blue Shield Standard Option Plan Covers Medical Care For Patients With Serious Chronic Conditions - "[T]he most popular health insurance plan among federal employees offers adequate and affordable care for people with serious chronic diseases, making it a good starting point for defining minimum coverage benefits in health care reform legislation," writes an ACSCAN description of its recent report done in collaboration with the Georgetown University Health Policy Institute. When comparing "the adequacy and affordability of coverage held by most federal employees to people with cancer, heart disease and diabetes," researchers found "benefits covered under the Blue Cross Blue Shield Standard Option plan are comprehensive, and that cost sharing for routine care is modest. However, out-of-pocket costs for patients with a serious illness are substantial, totaling $5,000 per year for patients getting all of their care from a subset of network providers designated as "preferred" and reaching $7,000 per year for out-of-network care" (7/22). First Focus: Achieving Optimal Health and Healthcare for All Children: How We Can Eliminate Racial and Ethnic Disparities in Children"s Health and Healthcare - After compiling data on key racial/ethnic disparities across children"s health and health care, the report proposes evidence-based policies to target health disparities in children. Among other things, the author appeals for health care reform to "retain or enhance critical components of current Medicaid and CHIP programs, including consumer protections, language services, standards on access to care and cultural competency, comprehensive benefits, and limited or no cost sharing" and an extension of "insurance coverage to all children, including both documented and undocumented immigrants" (Flores, 7/20). 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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