Popular Articles
Cellulite Treatment

Howard County Pharmacy Owner Indicted For Health Care Fraud
A federal grand jury yesterday indicted Pamela Arrey, age 48, of
generic viagra online
Researchers Develop Key Brake For Immune Cells In Petri Dish -- Hope For Easier Organ Transplantation?
Scientists from the Helmholtz Center for Infection Research in Braunschweig, Germany and the Medical School Hannover, Germany have succeeded in treating immune cells in a way that enables them to inhibit unwanted immune reactions such as organ rejection. Their results have now been published in the current issue of the scientific journal Journal of Cellular and Molecular Medicine.
News of the day
Insight Into How Brain Stem Cells Develop Into Cells Which Repair Damaged Tissue
The joint research, funded by the National Multiple Sclerosis Society and the UK MS Society as well as the National Institutes of Health and Howard Hughes Medical Institute, was conducted by scientists at the University of California San Francisco (UCSF) and University of Cambridge and was published in the journal Genes and Development.
Cardiovascular

Thousands Of New Mexicans Could Lose Private Insurance, Study Shows

An estimated 428,000 residents in New Mexico could lose their private, employer-based coverage if Congress passes a House health reform bill, according to state-specific analysis of The American Affordable Health Choices Act of 2009 released this week by The Heritage Foundation. Heritage commissioned The Lewin Group, a highly respected health care policy and management consulting firm, to examine the impact a newly created government-run health plan within the House bill would have on Americans with private health insurance, including employer-based coverage, as well as its impact on New Mexico"s doctors and hospitals. In addition to examining the national impact, Lewin analyzed several states including New Mexico to show how the major regions of the United States would be affected. Lewin"s estimates assume that all employers in the state become eligible for enrollment in the new public plan and health insurance exchange starting in the third year of implementation. Of the estimated 885,400 New Mexican residents with private health insurance, 45 percent would transition out of private coverage, Lewin reports. Plus, 51 percent of the state"s population who get their private insurance from the workplace could have their existing coverage change or disappear under the House health bill. "The data highlights the nasty, unintended consequences a government-run health insurance plan could have on states," said Heritage Vice President Stuart Butler. "Many employees will be pushed into a public plan as employers respond to the legislation"s incentives to drop coverage." Another key finding from Lewin: -- 49 percent of New Mexico"s uninsured population would still lack coverage. Of the estimated 318,000 people without health coverage, the legislation would only reduce the uninsured by 163,100, leaving 154,900 New Mexicans without coverage. The Heritage Foundation


Add your comment:
Name:
Site address: http://
Your message:
Enter today\\\\'s date, 2 digits
(spam protection):