OpEds: Ryan On ‘Welfare State;’ Wisconsin Health Care; Facing AIDS; Penn. Safety Net
Today's opeds come from news outlets including The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal and the Houston Chronicle.
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Today's opeds come from news outlets including The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal and the Houston Chronicle.
Massachusetts, four years into its own version of health reform, is now taking on the issue of spiraling health costs by attempting to change the health care payment system.
A new survey finds that health reimbursements and health savings accounts are picking up steam but still remain a small piece of the national insurance market. Meanwhile, leaders in the Texas health insurance and delivery system agree that paying for value in health care, rather than volume, is key. Finally, maternity insurance continues to be a challenge for some consumers.
The Supreme Court has agreed to hear a generic drug labeling case, Reuters reports.
Big employers and insurers continue to brace for health reform's changes and new rules. In other news, CalPERS gives the new health law positive early reviews while other reports focus on how reform could impact Medicare coverage.
Today's early morning highlights from the major news organizations, including reports about today's expected ruling by a Virginia federal court judge on a challenge to the health law's constitutionality.
"Detailed genetic tests confirm that the cholera strain that has killed more than 2,000 people in Haiti came from South Asia and most closely resembles a strain circulating in Bangladesh," according to a study published Thursday in the New England Journal of Medicine, Reuters reports (12/9).
"More than four months after the worst flooding in Pakistan's history, vast stretches of land are still under water in the province of Sindh, isolating many communities. ... The world's attention has long since moved on from the Pakistani flood story, but there are still more than 1 million people who remain displaced in Sindh alone, said U.N. humanitarian affairs chief Valerie Amos last Friday after touring the flood zone. Jackie Dent, a World Food Program spokesperson, said that although isolated outlying villages are becoming 'few and far between as waters recede and access improves' more are still being found," TIME reports in an article looking at the effects of flooding and the prospects for recovery.
On Friday, Indian Commerce Minister Anand Sharma and EU Trade Commissioner Karel de Gucht met to "present a status report on the ongoing free trade talks" that some health advocates fear could limit the supply of generic medications in developing countries, according to Business Standard. "An EU source said the report would signal that talks had made excellent progress and should be wrapped up by early next year," according to the news service (Aiyar, 12/10).
The rate of health care-associated infections in developing countries is more than three times the rate of cases in the U.S. and more than double the rate in Europe, according to a study published Friday in the Lancet, BBC reports (12/9).
The Department of Health and Human Services offers new guidance on "mini-med" health plans, requiring that insurers selling these limited coverage offerings must inform consumers "in plain language" how such plans fall short of the health law's minimum coverage standards.
In the midst of the lame duck session, House lawmakers approve a one-year Medicare pay fix for physicians - clearing the measure for the president's signature; meanwhile, the Senate falls short of votes needed to pass legislation to provide 9/11 Ground Zero workers with health benefits and other compensation.
A new rule will require hospitals to report infections the follow a patient's treatment in intensive-care units. Meanwhile, a new study finds mortality risks related to dialysis are higher at for-profit chains.
States address a variety of health policy issues and challenges.
Hospitals and health systems are the subject of proposed deals and acquisitions. Meanwhile, the concept of accountable care organizations continues to trigger interest and curiosity within the health care sector.
Insurers continue to "ponder" their future under the new order of the health law and, in California, rate increases trigger a blame game.
Politics continue to swirl around health overhaul and deficit reduction issues. A new Bloomberg poll, for instance, indicates that the public wants the deficit addressed, but still wants Congress to stay away from Medicare, Medicaid and other entitlement programs.
This week's research roundup includes studies from the Annals of Internal Medicine, Health Affairs and the Archives of Pediatric & Adolescent Medicine.
Today opeds come from The Washington Post, The Wall Street Journal, The Arizona Republic and The San Francisco Chronicle.
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