Popular Articles
Cellulite Cream

'Myths, Half-Truths, And Outright Lies About Health'
Fact or fiction? Chewing gum stays in your stomach for seven years. Cold weather makes you sick. You should never wake a sleepwalker. A dog"s mouth is cleaner than a human"s.
generic viagra online
Milestone Study On Blood Pressure Meds Confirmed By New Research
New research supports the findings of a landmark drug comparison study published in 2002 in which a diuretic drug or "water pill" outperformed other medications for high blood pressure. A scientific team including investigators from The University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston reports the findings in the May 11 issue of the Archives of Internal Medicine.
News of the day
British Researchers Call For WHO To 'Condemn Homeopathy' For Serious Diseases
British researchers on Monday requested the WHO "publicly condemn homeopathy as a treatment for serious diseases, such as HIV/AIDS, TB and malaria," amid growing concern that some patients are dying as a result of choosing homeopathy over effective medicines, the Mail & Guardian reports. "The WHO works with national organisations that promote homeopathy and other alternative medicines in their public health programmes," according to the Mail & Guardian.
Health Insurance

Hospitals, White House Reach Accord On Cuts To Pay For Reform

Major hospital groups reached an agreement Monday with the White House and Senate Democrats to accept $155 billion in payment cuts over ten years, a concession that would help pay for proposed health care reforms, the Washington Post reports. Government savings would come mainly from lower Medicare and Medicaid payments to the hospitals, and smaller subsidies for providing care to the uninsured. Hospitals expect to make up some of the losses by increasing their volume as anticipated reforms bring health insurance to many of the 47 million Americans who don"t have coverage. "A close to the negotiations said a deal was struck after discussions about the "shared responsibility" of the entire health-care system -- including doctors, insurers, individuals and the government -- and an understanding that each part of the system would sacrifice to make it work," the Post reports (Connolly and Shear, 7/7). The agreement is "the latest step in an on-going effort by the White House to win concessions from major industry groups" to pay for an overhaul expected to cost around $1 trillion, the New York Times reports. "In addition to controlling costs and helping [President] Obama achieve his goal of providing coverage to more than 40 million uninsured Americans, the administration"s tentative agreements with drug companies and providers, including hospitals and doctors, are also intended to bring pressure on the private health insurance industry." The hospital groups involved - the American Hospital Association, the Federation of American Hospitals and the Catholic Health Association - had earlier protested Obama"s plan to slash $220 billion from their payments over a decade, Kaiser Health News reports. In exchange for their support, the hospitals negotiated the smaller cut and assurances from the administration and Senate officials that the cuts would be "timed to coincide with expanded insurance coverage. However, the pact doesn"t prevent the House from demanding bigger cuts, according to people who are familiar with the negotiations. Still, industry insiders are hoping that, by reaching agreement and creating good will with the White House and Senate Democrats, they"ll have influential allies arguing on their behalf when the House and Senate meet in a conference committee this fall" (McGinley and Galewitz, 7/7). 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):