The GOP Could Unintentionally Drive Up Obamacare Enrollment
January 7th 2015The Republican Party's strategy to attack the Affordable Care Act's employer mandate by redefining a full-time employee as someone who works 40 hours a week instead of 30 hours could increase dependence on government-provided health insurance.
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A paper published in Science Magazine this month, co-authored by a mathematician and a biologist, suggests that heredity and environmental factors account for only one-third of the risk for developing cancer. A majority of risk is associated with random mutations, a result of mistakes during normal cellular replication.
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Larger Share of People Had High Medical Cost Burdens Prior to ACA
January 6th 2015The percentage of people with high medical costs increased from 2007-2009 to 2011, but the Affordable Care Act's coverage provisions should substantially reduce cost burdens for many people, according to a Commonwealth Fund study.
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Cancer Patients Not Too Distressed by Advanced Directives
January 6th 2015A study conducted at the humanities and medicine departments at Penn State College of Medicine in Hershey, Pennsylvania, found that there's never an ideal time to talk to cancer patients about end-of-life decisions, and most patients are not too disturbed by these discussions.
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Harvard Ideas on Healthcare Hit Home, Hard
January 6th 2015For years, Harvard's experts on health economics and policy have advised presidents and Congress on how to provide health benefits to the nation at a reasonable cost. But those remedies will now be applied to the Harvard faculty, and the professors are in an uproar.
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Flu Virus Creates Havoc in the US
January 6th 2015With evidence that the current flu vaccine may not be effective on the predominant influenza A strain of the virus, hospital admission rates are the primary determinants of the severity of the epidemic that has claimed 6 young lives in the last week of December alone.
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Illinois the Latest State to Announce Milestone in Medicaid Managed Care
January 6th 2015Illinois passed a law in 2011 that called for moving 50% of its Medicaid population into managed care by January 1, 2015. The state came very close to meeting that goal, with the expressed mission of achieving the "triple aim" called for in the Affordable Care Act.
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Ongoing Costs of Infection Prevention Programs Pay Off
January 5th 2015Although infection prevention programs require ongoing investments, the money spent is worthwhile considering the costs saved as healthcare-associated infection rates fall, according to a study in the American Journal of Infection Control.
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School Lunch Changes for 2015 May Be Just the Start of Rollback
January 5th 2015Congress eased school nutrition standards championed by Michelle Obama in the final days of the last session, and some nutrition advocates believe it's just the beginning of a rollback of the 2010 law that put healthier foods on lunchroom plates. What happens if Congress' efforts to water down school lunch standards run counter to the ongoing work of the committee setting the nation's nutrition policy, whose work will be released in the next few weeks?
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CVS Chooses Harvoni Over Viekira Pak
January 5th 2015While Abbvie and Express Scripts announced their deal on Viekira Pak, which was approved in late December to treat hepatitis C, CVS/Caremark today announced that several of it's plans would provide exclusive coverage to Gilead's Sovaldi/Harvoni.
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Will Neupogen Prove the Poster Child for Increased Access to Cheaper Biosimilars?
January 5th 2015If the biological developed by Novartis to imitate Amgen's Neupogen is approved by the FDA, it'd open floodgates as other biosimilars find their way to the FDA's doorsteps. The cheaper alternatives would prove a tremendous cost-saving to the healthcare industry.
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Cardiac Outcomes Better When the Doctor Is Away
January 5th 2015Outcomes for certain cardiac arrest patients were better for those admitted to teaching hospitals during national cardiology meetings compared with patients admitted on non-meeting days, according to a new study in JAMA Internal Medicine.
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Success of Kentucky's Health Plan Comes With New Obstacles
January 4th 2015In many ways, Kentucky, a poor state with a starkly unhealthy populace, has become a symbol of the Affordable Care Act's potential. But as the first year of coverage ends, potential obstacles to the law's success are also coming into sharp relief here.
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Kaiser Permanente's 2600 California Mental Health Clinicians to Launch Strike
January 4th 2015Thousands of mental health clinicians with Oakland, California-based Kaiser Permanente are planning a statewide, weeklong strike on claims that Kaiser does not adequately staff its psychiatric departments.
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ACA Can Help Smokers Quit, Experts Write
January 3rd 2015A perspective published in the New England Journal of Medicine affirms that provisions of the Affordable Care Act will allow improved coverage of smoking cessation tools, which could be a big boost in the number of smokers planning to quit.
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NICE Uses Comparitive Effectiveness for Nab-Paclitaxel in Pancreatic Cancer
January 3rd 2015NICE has published draft guidance which recommends that nab-paclitaxel given with gemcitabine should not be funded by the NHS for previously untreated metastatic pancreatic cancer, because its limited benefits compared to current treatments do not justify its cost.
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Assessing Patient-Centered Care Abilities of Physicians
January 2nd 2015Researchers at the University of Missouri School of Medicine have developed a tool to test how well a doctor delivers patient-centered care by assessing whether medical students have learned and are applying the correct behaviors.
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Dilemma Over Deductibles: Costs Crippling Middle Class
January 2nd 2015The size of the average deductible more than doubled in 8 years, from $584 to $1217 for individual coverage. Add to this co-pays, co-insurance and the price of drugs or procedures not covered by plans - and it's all too much for many Americans.
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