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New York Times Examines Varying Definitions Of 'Pandemic'
"The new swine influenza virus [H1N1], which appeared suddenly after years of warning about a potential pandemic of avian influenza, upset the WHO"s assumptions that most people have the same understanding of the word pandemic," says the New York Times in a report that examines the difficultly health experts have had when attempting to agree upon what constitutes a pandemic.
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Sylvester Breast Cancer Researchers Win Prestigious Department Of Defense Grant To Expand Study Of African-American Women
Breast cancer researchers at Sylvester Comprehensive Cancer Center at the University of Miami Miller School of Medicine have been awarded a prestigious Department of Defense Synergistic Idea Award, one of just 12 such grants in the United States. The $725,000 research grant over two years will allow Lisa Baumbach, Ph.D., associate professor of pediatrics at the Miller School, and Mark Pegram, M.D., professor of medicine and associate director for clinical and translational research at the Braman Family Breast Cancer Institute at Sylvester, to expand their work examining the genetic differences found in African-American breast cancer patients.
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Nanodiamonds, The New Tool For Next-Generation Cancer Treatments
A research team at Northwestern University has demonstrated a tool that can precisely deliver tiny doses of drug-carrying nanomaterials to individual cells.
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Taxing Health Benefits Could Be Used To Pay For Expanded Coverage, Drive Out Unnecessary Care, Some Say

Economists say taxing health benefits not only could raise billions per year for health care reform efforts, but also could make the system run better, NPR and KHN report. The reasoning: "When you tax an activity, you get less of it. When you subsidize an activity, you get more. "We"re subsidizing health insurance," said Katherine Baicker, an economist at Harvard"s School of Public Health. "So we"re getting more and more and more health care consumed."" Discounts skew decision making, NPR reports, and getting rid of the tax breaks for employer-provided health benefits could help rein in unnecessary treatments while boosting enrollment. ""Some estimates suggest 30 percent of health care dollars are going to care that does very little to promote health," Baicker said. "Meanwhile, uninsured people don"t have access to care that would very much improve their health."" But union leaders are fighting hard to keep the tax break they say they"ve won for their workers over years of hard negotiation and that taxing the benefits could provide a political torpedo to those seeking to derail reform. "Supporters say any tax could be limited to affect only the most generous insurance policies and perhaps only wealthier workers. Such a limited tax could still raise significant revenue to expand health care and could still make the system more efficient. In the coming weeks, though, as plans are debated on Capitol Hill, what"s efficient is likely to take a back seat to what"s politically doable" (Horsley, 6/8). Lawmakers are considering varied approaches to taxing employer-provided health insurance as a means of paying for an overhaul of the health system, Kaiser Health News reports: "Currently, workers who get health insurance from their employers don"t pay income or payroll taxes on the cost of the policy. Self-employed people can deduct the cost of their insurance premiums. But workers who buy their own policies because they don"t get coverage through their jobs generally don"t get the tax break. Ideas for changing current policies fall into three broad categories: Taxing health benefits above a certain dollar amount, taxing only wealthier people or replacing the tax break with a tax credit" (Appleby, 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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