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Troubled Mental Health Trust Symptomatic Of Failings Nationwide, UK
A damning report from the Care Quality Commission has found multiple failings in inpatient care for patients at West London Mental Health Trust, ranging from sub-standard buildings, overcrowding, lack of staff and insufficient staff training, to failure to implement changes that could help prevent suicides on wards. In some areas, there were long delays in considering changes to help reduce suicide risk, and on one inpatient unit, bed occupancy was regularly running at over 110 per cent, resulting in patients sleeping on sofas due to lack of beds.
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Study Looks At HIV, Risk Behaviors Among Male Clients Of Sex Workers In Tijuana, Mexico
"A large percentage" of U.S. and Mexican men who regularly engage in sexual activity with sex workers in Tijuana, Mexico, do not use condoms and have a history of substance and alcohol use, according to a study published in the online journal AIDS, the Los Angeles Times" blog "L.A. Now" reports. The study, by researchers from Mexico and the University of California-San Diego, surveyed 400 men - both Mexico and U.S. residents - and found that half of the men had unprotected sex with a female sex worker within the last four months. Researchers noted that although Tijuana authorities require that sex workers be registered and tested regularly for HIV, "only about half of [sex workers] have registered or been tested," according to the blog. Thomas Patterson of the UC-San Diego"s department of psychiatry and the Veterans Affairs health center, said the findings indicate a need for an educational campaign targeting men who frequent sex workers (Perry, 7/11).
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Virus-Gene Therapy Combination Being Tested Against Melanoma
Researchers at the Moores UCSD Cancer Center are injecting a modified herpes virus into melanoma tumors, hoping to kill the cancer cells while also bolstering the body"s immune defenses against the disease.
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Medicare Reimbursement Issues Enter Health Reform Debate

New legislation introduced yesterday would attempt to shift Medicare reimbursement policy to reward patient health outcomes, rather than the volume of services provided, MinnPost, a nonprofit online news organization, reports. "We need to be sure to keep score," said Sen. Amy Klobuchar, D-Minn., who introduced the bill, according to MinnPost. "That means measuring outcomes and rewarding providers that deliver quality results." The site adds: "The Medicare Payment Improvement Act would create a value index for determining Medicare physician fees. The value would be calculated by a quality component, which would be determined by the secretary of Health and Human Services, divided by efficiency, which would be measured as total Medicare spending per beneficiary in the area. The legislation would also seek to link rewards to outcomes and reinforce coordinated health-care systems within communities" (Dizikes, 6/11). Meanwhile, another Medicare payment reform proposal was introduced this week by California Democrats Sen. Diane Feinstein and Rep. Sam Farr, the Santa Rosa, Calif. Press Democrat reports. That proposal would do away with some geographic designations that cause physicians in "rural" areas to receive lower reimbursement rates than their colleagues in "urban" areas. The change would "dump" the urban and rural designations of counties that are classified as falling into larger metropolitan areas, called "Metropolitan Statistical Areas ... Local medical providers have long protested that the rural designation for Sonoma County has short-changed area medical providers because the reimbursement is significantly lower than those of nearby counties, such as Marin, which is designated urban, despite the county"s economic growth and health care costs" (Espinoza, 6/11). Also in Medicare reimbursement news, UnitedHealth Group, the largest U.S insurance company, is poised to lose money as the result of an "aggressive" Medicare strategy, Associated Press/Forbes reports. The company has federal contracts to provide Medicare services through private managed-care plans. But, in an effort to expand its market share to make up for recently reduced rates for its contracts, analysts said the company had overreached. Shares in UnitedHealth dropped Thursday, as the analysts lowered their expectations for the company"s performance (6/11). 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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