Popular Articles

Diabetes Wounds Healed With Oxygen Under Pressure
Every 30 seconds a person somewhere in the world loses a lower limb to amputation due to diabetic foot disease.
generic viagra online
Public Backs New Plans To Protect Children From Tobacco
New research shows that 70 per cent of adults in the UK back proposals to protect children from tobacco by putting it out of sight in shops and 76 per cent support abolishing cigarette vending machines according to Cancer Research UK today (Wednesday) - on the second anniversary of the smoking ban in England.
News of the day
WHO To Recommend Countries Stop Testing For H1N1
Within the next few days, the WHO "will recommend that countries stop trying to test all suspected cases of swine flu, said Keiji Fukuda, the agency"s assistant director-general of health security and environment," Tuesday during a conference call with reporters, Bloomberg reports. Instead, countries who have previously confirmed cases of the H1N1 virus in their population should diagnose the flu based on symptoms alone, opening up "laboratories to test samples in unusual or severe cases, clusters of illnesses and cases with odd symptoms, he said," Bloomberg writes (Serafino/Hallam, 7/7).
Medical Devices

AMA President Calls For Congress' Insurance Plan For All Uninsured Americans

While CNN reports that the American Medical Association"s new president, J. James Rohack, is open to a government-funded health insurance option, others report that the system the AMA now endorses is not a public plan, but the heavily managed private plan that federal employees participate in. He "told CNN the AMA supports an "American model" that includes both "a private system and a public system, working together." In May, the AMA told a Senate committee it did not support a government-sponsored public health insurance option." "Rohack, who recently became AMA president, suggested Wednesday that the (Federal Employees Health Benefits Plan) available to Congress members and other federal employees could be expanded as a public option. That would avoid having to create a new program from scratch, he said. "If it"s good enough for Congress, why shouldn"t it be good enough for individuals who don"t have health insurance provided by their employers?" Rohack said" (7/1). But TPMDC reported Wednesday that Rohack"s comments aren"t an endorsement of a public plan at all: "He"s endorsing a system of managed competition that provides members of Congress and other federal employees a choice of heavily regulated private insurance plans. In the FEHBP, the government is not the insurance provider as it would be in the case of a public option--and that"s a substantial difference" (Beutler, 7/1). Daily KOS: "(I)f you listen closely to Rohack, he studiously avoids using the word "Public" in response to his questioners or in his own description of the AMA"s "new" (not) position" (Wbramh, 7/1). 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.


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