Ohio Hospitals Advertise ER Wait Times On Billboards, Internet
Akron hospital's effort is part of a growing trend, but doctors fear it may send patients in need of emergency care away from the closest hospital.
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Akron hospital's effort is part of a growing trend, but doctors fear it may send patients in need of emergency care away from the closest hospital.
The state Supreme Court said the 2005 law violated separation of powers because it allowed the legislature to interfere with a jury's efforts to set damages.
"The leading professional organization dedicated to radiation oncology has called for enhanced safety measures in administering medical radiation," The New York Times reports.
Our health policy research roundup today includes studies on regional variations in Medicare spending, the growth of Community Health Centers, interviews with hospital executives on reducing racial and ethnic disparities and the predicting the likelihood of children going to the dentist.
The uncertain future of the health care overhaul is leaving drug makers in limbo.
Largest for-profit insurer in the state told its 800,000 customers with individual coverage that prices will go up March 1.
Complaints of fraud connected to AIDS funding provoke requests from two Republican members of Congress for further investigation.
Today's early morning highlights from the major news organizations, including the latest on Democrats' efforts to regroup and move forward with their legislative agenda.
U.S. News & World Report offers an explainer on cutting premiums and other health care costs for people who have lost insurance.
Landrieu termed her effort "bipartisan" and said it was not a trade-off to secure her vote for sweeping health reforms.
Majority Leader Harry Reid plans to advance the first part of the package next week.
U.S. lawmakers on Wednesday introduced a congressional resolution condemning an anti-gay bill before Uganda's parliament, "calling it an attack on human rights and an obstacle to battling HIV/AIDS," Agence France-Presse reports. "The symbolic measure asserts that 'all people possess an intrinsic human dignity, regardless of sexual orientation, and share fundamental human rights,' and warns the Ugandan bill, if enacted, 'would set a troubling precedent,'" the news service writes.
An experimental vaccine was found to promote immune responses to malaria in young children in Mali, Reuters reports. According to the news service, "The vaccine, which uses an immune system booster called an adjuvant from British drugmaker GlaxoSmithKline, targets the malaria parasite as it is actively infecting red blood cells and causing fever and illness" (Steenhuysen, 2/3).
U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon on Wednesday asked former President Bill Clinton, currently the U.N. special envoy for Haiti, to oversee aid and rebuilding efforts in Haiti, CNN reports (2/3).
"Forty percent of the 12 million people diagnosed with cancer worldwide each year could avert the killer disease by protecting themselves against infections and changing their lifestyles, experts said on Tuesday," Reuters reports. Ahead of World Cancer Day on Thursday, officials at the International Union Against Cancer (UICC) released a report that demonstrates how scaling up immunization programs against the infections that cause some cancers and educating the public on prevention strategies could help drive down cancer rates (Kelland, 2/2).
A new report by federal actuaries shows government programs will pay for more than half of all U.S. health care spending by 2012, and that total spending on health grew as a share of the economy.
President Obama advanced this idea even as some think he's having a hard time holding Democrats together on a health bill.
News outlets report on health care developments in Virginia, Washington DC, California, Iowa, Maryland, Maine and Michigan.
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