Saturday, June 29, 2013

Feds Bust Drug Websites Masquerading As Big-Name Chains

More From Shots - Health News HealthAdministration Clarifies Insurance Rules For ContraceptivesHealthAfter Midnight, Night Owls Gorge, Piling On The CaloriesHealthPolio Outbreak In Somalia Jeopardizes Global EradicationHealthFeds Bust Drug Websites Masquerading As Big-Name Chains

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Friday, June 28, 2013

Test-Driving The Obamacare Software

More From Shots - Health News HealthMaine Once Again Allows Mail-Order Canadian Drugs To Cut CostsHealthHow Head Injuries Seem To Affect The Risk For StrokeHealthA Look At The Nastiest And Cleanest U.S. BeachesHealthTest-Driving The Obamacare Software

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Wednesday, June 26, 2013

How The End Of DOMA Will Affect Obamacare, Federal Employees

More From Shots - Health News HealthHow The End Of DOMA Will Affect Obamacare, Federal EmployeesHealthUltramarathoners: Faster, Higher, Stronger And SleepierHealthNIH Takes Another Step Toward Retirement Of Research ChimpsHealthMen Pick Robotic Surgery For Prostate Cancer Despite Risks

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How The End Of DOMA Will Affect Obamacare, Federal Employees

More From Shots - Health News HealthHow The End Of DOMA Will Affect Obamacare, Federal EmployeesHealthUltramarathoners: Faster, Higher, Stronger And SleepierHealthNIH Takes Another Step Toward Retirement Of Research ChimpsHealthMen Pick Robotic Surgery For Prostate Cancer Despite Risks

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Friday, June 21, 2013

With Health Exchanges Poised To Open, PR Push Draws Scrutiny

More From Shots - Health News HealthFDA OKs Prescription-Free Plan B For All Ages, Ending BattleHealthWith Health Exchanges Poised To Open, PR Push Draws ScrutinyHealthWHO Finds Violence Against Women Is 'Shockingly' Common HealthMacGyver Says: Don't Mix Teenage Boys And Homemade Bombs

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With Health Exchanges Poised To Open, PR Push Draws Scrutiny

More From Shots - Health News HealthFDA OKs Prescription-Free Plan B For All Ages, Ending BattleHealthWith Health Exchanges Poised To Open, PR Push Draws ScrutinyHealthWHO Finds Violence Against Women Is 'Shockingly' Common HealthMacGyver Says: Don't Mix Teenage Boys And Homemade Bombs

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Thursday, June 20, 2013

Outbreak In Saudi Arabia Echoes SARS Epidemic 10 Years Ago

More From Shots - Health News HealthWHO Finds Violence Against Women Is 'Shockingly' Common HealthMacGyver Says: Don't Mix Teenage Boys And Homemade BombsHealthPTSD Plagues 1 In 4 Survivors Of StrokeHealthOutbreak In Saudi Arabia Echoes SARS Epidemic 10 Years Ago

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Wednesday, June 19, 2013

Infections From Contaminated Injections Can Lurk Undetected

More From Shots - Health News HealthInfections From Contaminated Injections Can Lurk UndetectedHealthVaccine Against HPV Has Cut Infections In Teenage GirlsHealthAMA Says It's Time To Call Obesity A DiseaseHealthFDA Backs Off On Regulation Of Fecal Transplants

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House Passes Bill That Would Ban Abortions After 20 Weeks

More From Shots - Health News HealthInfections From Contaminated Injections Can Lurk UndetectedHealthVaccine Against HPV Has Cut Infections In Teenage GirlsHealthAMA Says It's Time To Call Obesity A DiseaseHealthFDA Backs Off On Regulation Of Fecal Transplants

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Friday, June 14, 2013

Scientists Go Medieval To Solve Ancient Leprosy Puzzle

More From Shots - Health News HealthDoctors To Vote On Whether Cheerleading Is A SportHealthScientists Go Medieval To Solve Ancient Leprosy PuzzleHealthHaiti Moves A Step Closer Toward Eradicating ElephantiasisShots - Health NewsSupreme Court Gene Ruling Splits Hairs Over What's 'Natural'

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Thursday, June 13, 2013

New York Hospitals Shelve Rivalries For Proton Beam Project

More From Shots - Health News HealthHaiti Moves A Step Closer Toward Eradicating ElephantiasisShots - Health NewsSupreme Court Gene Ruling Splits Hairs Over What's 'Natural'HealthJudge Reluctantly Approves Government Plan For Morning-After PillHealthPrevention Pill Cuts HIV Risk For Injecting Drug Users

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Prevention Pill Cuts HIV Risk For Injecting Drug Users

More From Shots - Health News HealthHaiti Moves A Step Closer Toward Eradicating ElephantiasisHealthJudge Reluctantly Approves Government Plan For Morning-After PillHealthPrevention Pill Cuts HIV Risk For Injecting Drug Users HealthCould Brain Scans Reveal The Right Treatment For Depression?

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A Delay In Relief From Copays For Costly Drugs

More From Shots - Health News HealthIn Arizona, An Unlikely Ally For Medicaid ExpansionHealthChopped: How Amputated Fingertips Sometimes Grow BackHealthGo Easy On The Soy Sauce, Bro, It Could Kill YouHealthHands-Free Gadgets Don't Mean Risk-Free Driving

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Wednesday, June 12, 2013

Black men: Here’s your wake-up call

Ed. note: This article was first published on theGrio. You can see the original post here.

Have you received a wake-up call yet?

For too many of us, it takes a sudden wake-up call � in the form of a major or minor health crisis � to make us realize that we�re not invincible.� And tragically, for some, that call comes too late.

As black men, we often don�t talk about our health or seek help until something goes wrong. We may exercise and eat right. We may know how our habits today affect how we feel. But what about tomorrow? Are we making the right choices to stay healthy as we grow older? Most importantly, are we having the right conversations about health and well-being with our sons and our fathers, with our brothers, our colleagues, our neighbors, and our friends?

According to the Office of Minority Health at the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, black men are 30 percent more likely to die from heart disease and 60 percent more likely to die from a stroke than white men. And unfortunately, the list goes on � black men still suffer from higher rates of disease and chronic illness such as prostate cancer, diabetes and heart disease.

Unless we act now, these disparities will continue to affect generations to come.� Their existence should be a wake-up call for all black men. It�s time to invest not only in our own health, but in the health of our communities.

That starts by putting ourselves in the driver�s seat when it comes to our own care. The health care law signed by President Obama in 2010 is removing many of the obstacles to health care we�ve faced in the past. It provides access to preventive services � like screenings for blood pressure, cholesterol, and type 2 diabetes � at no cost to us.

It will protect those of us with pre-existing conditions like asthma or heart disease from unfair premium rates or outright denial of coverage. It makes major investments in America�s network of community health centers, where over a quarter of patients served are African-American. And on October 1st, the law will open the door to affordable coverage for millions of African-Americans, through the Health Insurance Marketplace.

That means brothers running their own businesses will have the opportunity to get coverage for themselves, their employees, and their families. That means men working in barber shops, body shops, and construction companies across America will have access to affordable coverage if they don�t have it now. That means when you hit a rough spot and are between jobs, you don�t have to sacrifice the well-being of your loved ones. It means greater peace of mind and financial security for our families and communities.

There�s a lot of great work being done in our community to close gaps in access to quality care. I�m encouraged by the tireless work that our faith- and community-based groups are doing every day to raise awareness and push policies that will make the health care system work for all Americans. They are leading the way � but it�s up to all of us to do our part.

The wake-up call that brings better health to our communities shouldn�t be a private alarm that we hear alone. It should be a chorus of voices that speaks to us, our families and our communities. This year, let�s put our health in our own hands, and create a brighter, more secure future together for all of us.

Sunday, June 9, 2013

'Not Fighting For Just Sarah': Rating Transplant Priorities

Listen to the Story 11 min 30 sec Playlist Download Transcript   Enlarge image i

Sarah Murnaghan, center, on May 30 as she and her parents marked the 100th day of her stay in Children's Hospital of Philadelphia. Her father, Fran, is at left. Her mother, Janet, is at right.

Murnaghan family/AP

Sarah Murnaghan, center, on May 30 as she and her parents marked the 100th day of her stay in Children's Hospital of Philadelphia. Her father, Fran, is at left. Her mother, Janet, is at right.

Murnaghan family/AP

Sarah Murnaghan's spirit can be summed up by her personalized Monopoly character: a three-legged silver pig that can stand on its own.

"Everybody sort of expects her to decline here, and she does, but she fights back every time," says her mother, Janet.

Sarah, who has cystic fibrosis, has a reason to keep fighting: She's another step closer to getting a lung transplant. Sarah has been waiting for a year and a half, and doctors say she could die soon without a transplant.

The current system puts children at the bottom of the list for adult lungs. While they are eligible for child donor lungs, those are harder to come by. Wednesday, Judge Michael Baylson ruled that Sarah could be moved up on the adult list, and considered for a new set of adults lungs based on her need, not her age.

Sarah's family has new hope. Janet Murnaghan says Sarah's heart is under a lot of strain, but she's still a good transplant candidate. Now they're waiting for a match.

The case has triggered a swell of emotions, along with a wave of arguments criticizing and defending the current organ allocation system.

Setting Priorities

Janet Murnaghan says her family's legal fight for Sarah is one path toward revising the transplant selection process. "We're not fighting for just Sarah," she tells Tess Vigeland, guest host of weekends on All Things Considered. "There is a system here that is letting children die. The system needs to be fairer."

Murnaghan says adults are favored over children, even if that wasn't the original intention. She believes there shouldn't be an age cutoff at all � that organs should be given based on doctors' recommendations.

So how are those decisions made?

The first thing to note is that there just aren't enough organs available. More than 100,000 people are on the list for a new organ, according to the Organ Procurement and Transplantation Network, a nonprofit contracted by the federal government to regulate transplants in the U.S. And 18 die each day while still waiting.

Given the constraints, selecting an organ recipient comes down to priorities. Bioethicist Art Caplan says there are a number of factors that determine where you land on the waitlist, including: blood type, immune system, who's the sickest and who has the greatest need.

"Among that group, the system then starts to say, 'Who's going to do best? Who will survive with the greatest chance of living and living long? And then beyond that, you're starting to look at things like geography [to find out how far the organ needs to travel]," he says.

The under-12 rule evolved, Caplan says, from the medical complications that come with putting an adult organ in a child.

The Financial Factor

Caplan says, generally, the system "does a good job in trying to let medical factors and objective factors drive the distribution of organs.

"What isn't a good situation is admission to the transplant centers. One of the first tests that everybody does is a very thorough wallet biopsy," he says. "So the ability to pay counts. ... It's a major driver in access to transplants."

Dr. John Roberts, chairman of the transplant network's executive committee, disagrees with Caplan's assessment.

"I think there are people who have a harder time getting referred for a transplant, but I don't think it's necessarily an insurance, 'wallet biopsy' approach," he says.

He says Medicaid will cover transplantation for low-income patients, but not in every state. Transplants easily run hundreds of thousands of dollars, some even hitting seven figures.

Roberts says it's the post-surgery costs that can create the biggest financial hurdle for patients. "The medications are lifelong, and they are expensive," he says.

'No Great Solution'

As a result of the judge's decision, the allocation system is under review. Roberts says that doesn't mean change is inevitable, but he certainly has received a lot of feedback.

"I received I think almost 50,000 emails now from people that are concerned about whether or not we are giving children high enough priority for all organs," he says. "And that's sort of a societal decision. There's no great solution here."

What Roberts is concerned about is having transplant allocation decided by political or judicial systems working on behalf of specific children who have access to lawyers or the media. "On some level, we can't make a decision child by child," he says.

So far, the federal judge in Pennsylvania has ruled in favor of two children, putting both on the older-than-12 waitlist for lung transplants.

"I surely understand the judge," Roberts says. "He doesn't want to make a decision that the [organ transplant network] has to make of: this child is in a situation with a lot of other children, and how that is going to affect the other children. He's making a decision for the child that's in front of him."

'Just A Chance'

Now, Janet Murnaghan is looking at the child in front of her. She's not sure "optimistic" is the right word to describe how her family's feeling.

"I don't know what's going to happen in 10 days, and we still have a kid who's really seriously ill. And we have a kid who may not make it 10 days. I don't know," she says.

"I would just say, for the first time in a little while here, we have hope that she has a chance. Just a chance."

Share Facebook Twitter Google+ Email Comment More From Law Same-Sex Marriage And The Supreme CourtSame-Sex Couple Seeks Immigration Relief From High CourtU.S.Toll In Santa Monica Shooting Rises To Six, Including Gunman'Not Fighting For Just Sarah': Rating Transplant PrioritiesU.S.Police: Gunman Had Attended Santa Monica College

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Thursday, June 6, 2013

Fat Doctors Make Fat Patients Feel Better, And Worse

More From Shots - Health News HealthAs China Gets Richer, First World Diseases Take HoldHealthEven A Small Change In Habits Helps Fend Off StrokeScienceGirl's Need Breathes Life Into Debate Over Organ AllocationHealthHow Nature Builds A Pandemic Flu Virus

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Tuesday, June 4, 2013

CLCs to AFL-CIO: Act to Expand Social Security Financing & Pass Improved Medicare for All

Four central labor councils have passed an identical resolution calling upon the September AFL-CIO convention to organize an offensive campaign for expanding Social Security financing and passing improved �Medicare For All� legislation.

The resolution, which was initiated by the Troy Area Labor Council, has also been passed by the Greater Louisville Central Labor Council, the Greater Green Bay Central Labor Council and the Capital District Area Labor Federation in Albany, NY.

The resolution calls upon the AFL-CIO to organize a Solidarity Day march on Washington and on the West Coast �to demand an expansion of Medicare to cover everyone and to defend Social Security by removing the cap on income and tax all income in a similar fashion.�

The resolution calls for taxing all income for the purpose of Social Security including dividends, interest, capital gains, and rental income as well as removing the cap on wages and salaries now set at $113,700. Currently, those who earn up to $113,700 pay 6.2% in Social Security taxes on every dollar. Those who earn over that amount do not pay taxes on their earnings above that level even if they make millions. Currently the income of the wealthy in dividends, interest, capital gains, etc. is not taxed at all for Social Security.

On Medicare the resolution calls for �implementing a single Payer Medicare for All system as outlined in HR 676,� Congressman John Conyers� single payer legislation which has 42 House co-sponsors. The legislation would cover everyone for all medically necessary care without co-pays, deductibles or premiums. The removal of the private health insurance industry would bring costs under control while expanding care.

In Minnesota, the Machinists� State Retirees� Council (IAM) is sending the resolution to all central labor councils in that state. In Pittsburgh, the president of a steelworkers local (USW) is submitting it to the Allegheny County Labor Council.

The AFL-CIO convention opens September 8th in Los Angeles, CA. Central Labor Councils, Area Labor Federations, and State AFL-CIO Federations as well as international unions may submit resolutions. Resolutions can be sent to Elizabeth Shuler, Sec.-Treas. AFL-CIO, 815 16th St. NW, Washington, DC 20006.

The resolutions can be found here.

Text of resolution:

Resolution for Action in Defense of Social Security and Medicare

Whereas: Both Social Security and Medicare are hard fought fundamental gains for all working people.

And Whereas: Cutting Social Security and Medicare benefits would mean destitution for millions of workers and their families.

And Whereas: The social insurance Social Security and Medicare provide is now under sustained attack by Wall Street interests which seek to direct these funds into private hands for private profit.

And Whereas: Removing the cap on income taxed for Social Security would both solve any financial issues the fund might have and end the unfair advantage of those making over the current capped level.

And Whereas: Implementing a Single Payer Medicare for All system as outlined in HR 676 would both cover everyone and save billions of dollars over the current private health insurance industry.

Therefore: The Troy Area Labor Council AFL-CIO urges that the AFL-CIO, within this calendar year, organize a Solidarity Day of Action in Washington and on the West Coast which calls all affiliates and labor allies to mobilize their members to demand an expansion of Medicare to cover everyone and to defend Social Security by removing the cap on income and tax all income in a similar fashion.

Saturday, June 1, 2013

Affordable Care Act saves young adults millions in emergency room care

Thanks to the Affordable Care Act, 3.1 million previously uninsured young adults have health coverage through their parents� plans.� The New England Journal of Medicine recently published a first look at how health insurance coverage is protecting young adults and their families from the costs of a serious medical emergency.

According to the study, newly insured young adults made over 22,000 visits to hospital emergency rooms in 2011, at a cost to health insurance plans of $147 million.� That�s nearly $7,000 per visit that those young adults and their families would have paid out of pocket, or that would have been shouldered by hospitals, charities, and other health care consumers through uncompensated care.

This is just one more way the health care law is protecting families from the financial damages of a serious illness or injury.� Starting October 1, 2013 consumers will be able to enroll in coverage through the Health Insurance Marketplace, where they can shop for and compare insurance options. Visit HealthCare.gov to get all the information you�ll need to get ready for open enrollment.

To read the study in the New England Journal of Medicine, visit� http://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMsa1212779

To learn more about coverage for young adults under the Affordable Care Act visit http://www.healthcare.gov/law/information-for-you/young-adults.html

D.C. Agency Approves 2 High-Tech Cancer Centers

More From Shots - Health News Health D.C. Agency Approves 2 High-Tech Cancer CentersHealthSurvivor Of Boston Marathon Bombings Has Long Road AheadHealthYoung Women With Breast Cancer Opting For MastectomyHealth CareProton Beam Therapy Sparks Hospital Arms Race

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