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  • First Edition: March 7, 2012

    Today's early morning highlights from the major news organizations, including reports about the outcome of Super Tuesday primaries and other health policy developments.

  • Congress Must Protect International Family Planning Funding

    "Opponents of birth control don't just want to limit access in the U.S., they want to slash U.S. support for international family planning programs. It's a perennial debate, and it's about to start all over again," Chloe Cooney, director of global advocacy at Planned Parenthood Federation of America, writes in an RH Reality Check blog post. President Obama's FY 2013 budget "demonstrates the value the administration places on family planning," as "funding for international family planning programs is preserved," she writes, noting Secretary of State Hillary Clinton's recent testimony to Congress about the budget proposal, in which "she consistently reiterated the importance of development as a key pillar of our foreign policy and national security strategy" and "the administration's focus on women and girls as central to these goals." Cooney concludes, "The president's budget protects U.S. investments in family planning programs around the world. Now it's up to Congress to make sure those funds remain intact" (3/5).

  • World Bank Should Re-Evaluate Programs To Reduce Maternal Mortality

    "The World Bank boasts that it has positioned itself as a 'global leader' in reproductive health, especially for youth and the poor," but in 2011, it dedicated "just 0.2 percent of its $43 billion budget" to reproductive health projects, and much of that money was provided as loans, which can "leave poor countries indebted and threaten to divert domestic spending away from vital public health services," Elizabeth Arend, program coordinator at Gender Action, writes in the Guardian's "Poverty Matters Blog." In addition, "[t]here is a striking mismatch between countries' maternal mortality rates and the bank's spending on reproductive health," Arend states, citing the examples of Sierra Leone, where the lifetime average risk of dying from pregnancy or childbirth is one in 35 and the World Bank provides $7.43 per person, versus Niger, Liberia, or Somalia, where women "face an average lifetime one in 17 risk of maternal death, yet these countries receive no reproductive health funding from the bank at all."

  • South Africa Announces Initiative To Test Thousands Of Miners For TB

    "South Africa wants to test hundreds of thousands of miners for tuberculosis [TB] and ensure sufferers get treatment over the next year," David Mametja, head of South African National Department of Health's TB program, said Tuesday at a workshop organized by the Stop TB Partnership, the Associated Press/Washington Post reports. Mametja "said the government is concerned the high prevalence of the disease among miners is holding an entire region back in the fight against TB," and that while "it may be impossible to reach the nearly 600,000 miners in South Africa in one year, even those at highest risk in the gold industry, ... setting an ambitious target is a way to show 'it's not business as usual,'" the AP writes.

  • Health System Framework, Patterns Make Change From Within Unlikely

    The New York Times talks to Victor Fuchs, emeritus professor of economics and health research and policy at Stanford University, about the cost control challenges presented by the health system. Meanwhile, the National Journal reports on how individual health care choices also help drive costs.

  • Fla. Anti-Abortion Bill Stopped In Senate

    A poll commissioned by Planned Parenthood in Texas says voters want to keep the provider in the state's Women's Health Program while an anti-abortion bill in Florida is stopped in the Senate.

  • Oregon Seeks Federal Approval Of ‘Coordinated Care Plan’

    Oregon Gov. John Kitzhaber is looking for federal approval of a recently signed law there that provides care for Medicaid patients through new "coordinated care organizations." The Oregon Legislature also approved a health insurance exchange bill before it adjourned.