Wednesday, October 30, 2013

Victims Of Tainted Steroid Injections Still Struggling

More From Shots - Health News HealthOnline Advice Can Hurt Teens At Risk For Suicide, Self-HarmHealthNotices Canceling Health Insurance Leave Many On EdgeHealthThe Long List Of Health Apps Features Few Clear WinnersHealthWhy Insurers Cancel Policies, And What You Can Do About It

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Tuesday, October 29, 2013

Short-Term Insurance Skirts Health Law To Cut Costs

More From Shots - Health News HealthFor A Longer Life, You Might Try Mowing The LawnHealth CareInsurance Cancellations Elbow Out Website Woes At Health HearingHealthShort-Term Insurance Skirts Health Law To Cut CostsHealthHow A Wandering Brain Can Help People Cope With Pain

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Monday, October 28, 2013

Some Health Screenings May Harm More Than Help

More From Shots - Health News HealthUnlikely Multiple Sclerosis Pill On Track To Become BlockbusterHealth CareMore Technical Issues For Obamacare, But Good News For MedicareResearch NewsEeek, Snake! Your Brain Has A Special Corner Just For ThemHealthSome Health Screenings May Harm More Than Help

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Judge Rules Texas Abortion Restrictions Unconstitutional

More From The Two-Way U.S.Sen. Feinstein: 'Total Review' Of NSA Activities NeededAround the NationTheme Park Called 'Insensitive' For 'Miner's Revenge' AttractionU.S.Judge Rules Texas Abortion Restrictions UnconstitutionalThe Two-WaySyrian Hackers Hit Social Media Accounts Linked To President

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Saturday, October 26, 2013

'Loyal Soldier' Sebelius Vows To Stay Put, Fix HealthCare.gov

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Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius speaks Thursday in Phoenix.

Laura Segall/Getty Images

Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius speaks Thursday in Phoenix.

Laura Segall/Getty Images

This has not been an easy month for Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius.

Republican Sen. Pat Roberts of Kansas � who learned the political ropes working for Sebelius' father-in-law, then a Kansas congressman � called for her to step down over the debut of HealthCare.gov, the problem-plagued website where people are supposed to apply for coverage under the Affordable Care Act.

Invited on the usually friendly-to-Democrats The Daily Show, Sebelius was lampooned by host Jon Stewart, who challenged her to a race of sorts: "I'm going to try and download every movie ever made, and you're going to try to sign up for Obamacare, and we'll see which happens first."

And while she was able to laugh off Stewart's opening gag, Sebelius had trouble clearly explaining why, if businesses have been given an extra year to implement Obamacare, individuals shouldn't have the same delay.

Sebelius served six years as the Democratic governor of largely Republican Kansas. She is the daughter of the late Ohio Gov. John Gilligan. University of Kansas political science professor Burdett Loomis says she remains popular at home, despite the hits she's been taking in Washington:

"This hasn't been an easy time for her. The Obamacare rollout has clearly been problematic; she pretty much got roasted on Jon Stewart; but she's been a loyal soldier to Barack Obama and I think she truly believes that Obamacare is in the best interest of the country."

Seven years ago the Bush administration unveiled Medicare Part D, which provides seniors with prescription drug benefits. The website for that program had a similarly rocky debut. The HHS secretary then was former Utah Gov. Mike Leavitt, who notes Sebelius did not make many of the key decisions regarding the rollout of Obamacare. Leavitt says he empathizes with Sebelius:

"It's much like being the pilot of an airplane full of passengers sitting on the tarmac with a series of complications you don't entirely control. It's better to say to the passengers, 'This is where we are. This is how much time we expect it'll take. ... Here's what we're doing to remedy it and here's how it's going to affect you. We're doing our best.' "

Before being elected governor, Sebelius was Kansas insurance commissioner. The Republican occupant of the job now, Sandy Praeger, says the glitches in the rollout of Obamacare are not Sebelius' fault.

"The complexity of what she's having to deal with is massive and in an environment that's been pretty politically charged, to say the least. So I have a great deal of sympathy for what she's having to work through," says Praeger. "I know she's probably very frustrated."

Praeger says calls for Sebelius to resign are totally inappropriate. And in an appearance in Phoenix, Sebelius rejected Republican demands she step down.

'The majority of people calling for me to resign I would say are people who I don't work for and who do not want this program to work in the first place," Sebelius said Thursday. "I have had frequent conversations with the president and I have committed to him that my role is to get the program up and running, and we will do just that."

Sebelius is expected to testify before a House committee investigating the Affordable Care Act's implementation as soon as Wednesday.

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Friday, October 25, 2013

Clinics Close As Texas Abortion Fight Continues

Listen to the Story 5 min 42 sec Playlist Download Transcript   Enlarge image i

In July, abortion rights advocates marched in Austin, Texas, to protest legislation that could shut down all but five abortion clinics and restrict abortion rights throughout the state.

Tamir Kalifa/AP

In July, abortion rights advocates marched in Austin, Texas, to protest legislation that could shut down all but five abortion clinics and restrict abortion rights throughout the state.

Tamir Kalifa/AP

The fight over abortion in Texas is being played out in federal court, where abortion rights activists are challenging a new state law.

The measure bans abortions at 20 weeks, adds building requirements for clinics and places more rules on doctors who perform abortions. Some clinics have shut down, saying they can't comply with the law set to go into effect Oct. 29.

Abortion rights activists call the new law a dramatic change that will affect all clinics across the state, including a huge Planned Parenthood facility in Fort Worth that opened in June.

It's a $6.5 million center with three surgical suites and 19,000 square feet of space, built specifically to meet the building standards that activists saw coming.

"You know, we did not think the laws would come as quickly as they did," says Ken Lambrecht, president and CEO of Planned Parenthood of Greater Texas.

He says three nurses are required to be in the clinic when abortions are performed. The law also mandates the size of operating rooms, the type of ventilation systems and the width of the hallways.

"You could fit at least two gurneys in this hallway, and it's the size of many hospital corridors," he says. "And it's certainly not necessary for the procedure."

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Lambrecht says there's no medical basis for the new law. He thinks the law is intended to increase costs and shut down clinics, most of which do not meet the new building codes.

Abortion rights groups are challenging the law. At a hearing this week, the state's attorney argued that Texas has the right to regulate clinics and has an interest in protecting the rights of the unborn.

"If the woman chooses to proceed with the abortion, she should have the best care and best environment possible," says state Rep. Jodie Laubenberg, who sponsored the measure.

She says the law is designed to make abortions safer.

"Why would anyone argue against making it a better place and a better environment?" she asks. "If a clinic closes, that is their choice. We're not forcing anyone to close."

Laws like the one in Texas have passed in more than a dozen states. As a result, clinics have closed in states from Virginia to Ohio, and in Texas.

Another provision threatening to close clinics requires doctors to have admitting privileges at a hospital within 30 miles of a facility.

But hospitals do not have to grant admitting privileges. Some say doctors must live in the local community. Others require them to admit a certain number of patients. Some don't approve of abortion.

The doctor in Fort Worth does have privileges, but the hospital is too far from the clinic. That means the brand new Planned Parenthood center there would also have to stop performing abortions.

Across the vast Texas plains, more than 300 miles from Fort Worth, is the city of Lubbock, in the northwest part of the state. It's just an hour from the New Mexico border, and it's home to a much smaller Planned Parenthood clinic. The facility recently stopped scheduling appointments.

Annie Jones recently had an abortion. She's a single mother working and going to school in Lubbock, and she has a 2-year-old daughter, Molly.

Jones, who is 28, says she decided to have an abortion because it was best for her family.

"I knew that if I decided to have the second child, I would be doing it a disservice," she says. "I'd be doing my daughter a disservice because I wouldn't be able to care for them in the way that they deserved."

At least three Texas clinics have closed since the law passed, and Jones is worried that this center could close, too.

"I think that the people who are passing the bills ... are trying to legislate morality, and they see abortion as wrong," she says.

For abortion opponents, passing the measure after a filibuster was a big victory. When Republican Gov. Rick Perry signed the bill, he said it would further what he called "the culture of life in Texas."

"It is our responsibility and duty to give voice to the unborn � the individuals whose survival is at stake," Perry said.

But abortion rights activists say the right to an abortion was decided 40 years ago.

Angela Martinez, director of the Lubbock clinic, says if her facility closes, women seeking abortions would have to travel more than 300 miles.

"We are the only clinic in West Texas who sees patients and performs abortions," Martinez says. "It's frustrating for me. It's frustrating for my staff, just because ... we want to be available."

Just outside the clinic on a recent crisp morning, a few protesters stand holding signs. Krysten Haga says she sees the law as a first step, not as the end of this debate.

"I'd like to see abortion completely banned in the United States," Haga says. "That's ideally what we're looking for � is for abortion to not be an option at all."

A federal judge is expected to rule soon whether part of the new Texas law will go into effect next week.

Share Facebook Twitter Google+ Email Comment More From Health Fitness & NutritionAging Well: Keeping Blood Sugar Low May Protect Memory BusinessFor Obamacare To Work, It's Not Just About The NumbersHealthPennsylvania Governor Talks Up Plan To Expand Medicaid His WayHealthWhat If Husbands Had A GPS To Help Wives With Breast Cancer?

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Pennsylvania Governor Talks Up Plan To Expand Medicaid His Way

More From Shots - Health News BusinessFor Obamacare To Work, It's Not Just About The NumbersHealthPennsylvania Governor Talks Up Plan To Expand Medicaid His WayHealthWhat If Husbands Had A GPS To Help Wives With Breast Cancer?HealthWhy Engineers Want To Put B Vitamins In 3-D Printers

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Tuesday, October 22, 2013

The HealthCare.gov 'Tech Surge' Is Racing Against The Clock

More From All Tech Considered Digital LifeOnline Dating Is On The Rise (But There Are Still Haters)TechnologyThe HealthCare.gov 'Tech Surge' Is Racing Against The ClockScienceWhat's Creepy, Crawly And A Champion Of Neuroscience?BusinessCredit Cards Under Pressure To Police Online Expression

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Enrollments For Health Care Exchanges Trickle In, Slowly

More From Shots - Health News HealthWant Your Daughter To Be A Science Whiz? Soccer Might HelpHealth CareDoctors Enlist Therapists To Deliver Better, Cheaper CareHealthOnline Insurance Brokers Stymied Selling Obamacare PoliciesHealthHow Health Law Affects Fertility Treatment, Health Savings Accounts

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How Politics Set The Stage For The Obamacare Website Meltdown

More From Shots - Health News HealthWant Your Daughter To Be A Science Whiz? Soccer Might HelpHealth CareDoctors Enlist Therapists To Deliver Better, Cheaper CareHealthOnline Insurance Brokers Stymied Selling Obamacare PoliciesHealthHow Health Law Affects Fertility Treatment, Health Savings Accounts

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Monday, October 21, 2013

If A Tech Company Had Built The Federal Health Care Website

More From All Tech Considered Digital LifeOnline Dating Is On The Rise (But There Are Still Haters)TechnologyThe HealthCare.gov 'Tech Surge' Is Racing Against The ClockScienceWhat's Creepy, Crawly And A Champion Of Neuroscience?BusinessCredit Cards Under Pressure To Police Online Expression

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The HealthCare.gov 'Tech Surge' Is Racing Against The Clock

More From All Tech Considered Digital LifeOnline Dating Is On The Rise (But There Are Still Haters)TechnologyThe HealthCare.gov 'Tech Surge' Is Racing Against The ClockScienceWhat's Creepy, Crawly And A Champion Of Neuroscience?BusinessCredit Cards Under Pressure To Police Online Expression

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Friday, October 18, 2013

Why Scientists Are Trying Viruses To Beat Back Bacteria

More From Shots - Health News HealthWhy Scientists Are Trying Viruses To Beat Back BacteriaHealthTo Prevent HIV Infection, Couples Try Testing Together HealthPainkiller Overdose Deaths Strike New York City's Middle ClassHealthHow The GOP's Shutdown Over Obamacare Fell Short

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Wednesday, October 16, 2013

Hitches On Health Exchanges Hinder Launch Of Insurance Co-op

More From Shots - Health News HealthFamily Caregiving Can Be Stressful, Rewarding And Life-AffirmingHealth CareTo Reduce Patient Falls, Hospitals Try Alarms, More NursesHealthHitches On Health Exchanges Hinder Launch Of Insurance Co-opHealthBioethicists Give Hollywood's Films A Reality Check

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Tuesday, October 15, 2013

Why A Medical Device Tax Became Part Of The Fiscal Fight

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Among the bargaining chips in the budget crisis on Capitol Hill, there's the small but persistent issue of taxing medical device manufacturers.

The 2.3 percent sales tax covers everything from MRI machines to replacement hips and maybe even surgical gloves. The tax was imposed to help pay for the Affordable Care Act. It didn't attract much attention at first � at least, not outside the world of medical device manufacturers.

But they have waged a persistent campaign to undo the tax, and right now is the closest they have come to succeeding.

House Republicans have made repeated efforts to kill the tax, but Democrats had opposed any changes to the health care law.

Senate Finance Committee Chairman Max Baucus, D-Mont., last month dismissed changes in the medical devices tax. He told Politico that the industry had agreed to it when the bill was being written and "a deal's a deal."

But even Democrats have started softening that hard line.

Illinois Sen. Richard Durbin, the Senate's second-ranking Democrat, told CNN recently: "We can work out something, I believe, on the medical device tax � that was one of the proposals from the Republicans � as long as we replace the revenue."

Last week, a bipartisan compromise in the Senate included the idea of delaying the tax for two years.

Maine Republican Sen. Susan Collins spearheaded the proposal. She cited the lobbying campaign's work when she said the tax "will cause the loss of as many as 43,000 domestic jobs, according to industry estimates."

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Those estimates are crucial to the lobbying effort.

The CEO of one of the industry's giants, Medtronic, said last fall that the company likes to "focus on things we can control." Medtronic, which is based in Minnesota, did not respond to an interview request Tuesday.

But one of Minnesota's senators is a leader of the anti-tax campaign.

Democrat Amy Klobuchar gave industry advocates some advice this summer.

"I think that at the beginning of this battle, people didn't understand in Congress how many medical device manufacturers they had," she said. "I think just making the case at home and also back in Washington makes a difference."

And that is what the medical device industry has been doing, quietly but assiduously.

Cook Group, the largest privately owned maker of medical devices, boosted its lobbying outlays significantly in the past two years. It's also working with an industry consultant, Joe Hage, on a website called no2point3.com.

The website collects stories of anger and anguish from the small-business people who run a lot of the companies. It also has a petition to repeal with 11,000 signatures. It's all fueled by a LinkedIn group that Hage runs.

"The medical devices group is not in league with Washington lobbyists directly," Hage says, but he quickly adds: "We like to think that this effort complements their effort by giving them another bow in their quiver."

Still, it's hardly clear whether those efforts will move votes or whether the whole tax question will be just a pawn in the much larger debate over the budget and the debt limit.

Share Facebook Twitter Google+ Email Comment More From The Government Shutdown PoliticsShutdown Diary: Hope Turns Into Wall Street WarningPoliticsWhy A Medical Device Tax Became Part Of The Fiscal FightPoliticsOn Capitol Hill, A Flurry Of Activity But Still No Deal BusinessJPMorgan To Front Customers If Federal Shutdown Drags On

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Wednesday, October 9, 2013

Is Obamacare Enough?

Without Single-Payer, Patchwork U.S. Healthcare Leaves Millions Uninsured

From Democracy Now –

Despite helping expanding affordable insurance, “Obamacare” maintains the patchwork U.S. healthcare system that will still mean high costs, weak plans and, in many cases, no insurance for millions of Americans. We host a debate on whether the Affordable Care Act goes far enough to address the nation�s health crisis with two guests: Dr. Steffie Woolhandler, a primary care physician and co-founder of Physicians for a National Health Program; and John McDonough, a professor at the Harvard School of Public Health and former senior adviser on national health reform to the U.S. Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions. Between 2003 and 2008, McDonough served as executive director of Health Care for All in Massachusetts, playing a key role in the passage of the 2006 Massachusetts health reform law, known as “Romneycare,” regarded by many as the model for the current federal healthcare law.

Tuesday, October 8, 2013

House Ties Government Funding To One-Year Obamacare Delay

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Medicaid Looks Good To A Former Young Invincible

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Medicaid Looks Good To A Former Young Invincible

More From Shots - Health News HealthShifting Resources To Front Lines Could Protect Polio WorkersHealthMany Teens Admit To Coercing Others Into SexHealthDelaying Aging May Have A Bigger Payoff Than Fighting DiseaseHealthVeterinarians Say Health Law's Device Tax Is Unfair To Pets

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Lessons For The Obamacare Rollout, Courtesy Of Massachusetts

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Obamacare Day One: A Tale Of Two States

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How A Tax On Medical Devices United Political Rivals

More From Shots - Health News HealthDelaying Aging May Have A Bigger Payoff Than Fighting DiseaseHealthNobel Winners Decoded How Neurons And Cells Talk To Each OtherHealthFor Boys With Eating Disorders, Finding Treatment Can Be HardHealthIt's Time To Rediscover The IUD, Women's Health Advocates Say

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From Therapy Dogs To New Patients, Federal Shutdown Hits NIH

More From Shots - Health News HealthDelaying Aging May Have A Bigger Payoff Than Fighting DiseaseHealthNobel Winners Decoded How Neurons And Cells Talk To Each OtherHealthFor Boys With Eating Disorders, Finding Treatment Can Be HardHealthIt's Time To Rediscover The IUD, Women's Health Advocates Say

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Monday, October 7, 2013

Part-Time Workers Search New Exchanges For Health Insurance

More From Shots - Health News HealthDelaying Aging May Have A Bigger Payoff Than Fighting DiseaseHealthNobel Winners Decoded How Neurons And Cells Talk To Each OtherHealthFor Boys With Eating Disorders, Finding Treatment Can Be HardHealthIt's Time To Rediscover The IUD, Women's Health Advocates Say

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A Medicaid Expansion In Pennsylvania May Take Time

More From Shots - Health News HealthDelaying Aging May Have A Bigger Payoff Than Fighting DiseaseHealthNobel Winners Decoded How Neurons And Cells Talk To Each OtherHealthFor Boys With Eating Disorders, Finding Treatment Can Be HardHealthIt's Time To Rediscover The IUD, Women's Health Advocates Say

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In Florida, Insurer And Nonprofits Work On Enrollment

More From Shots - Health News HealthDelaying Aging May Have A Bigger Payoff Than Fighting DiseaseHealthNobel Winners Decoded How Neurons And Cells Talk To Each OtherHealthFor Boys With Eating Disorders, Finding Treatment Can Be HardHealthIt's Time To Rediscover The IUD, Women's Health Advocates Say

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