Denmark’s Digital Health System Could Pave Way For U.S.
Denmark is leading the world in digital health care, The New York Times reports.
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Denmark is leading the world in digital health care, The New York Times reports.
During the holiday vacation, some Democratic lawmakers appeared to waver on health reform, faced with "tepid public support" for their proposal and "mounting electoral angst for the party."
A report from the Government Accountability Office (GAO) issued Monday finds that "[p]rices on a growing number of prescription medications have ballooned in recent years as consolidation in the drug industry leaves fewer companies manufacturing niche medications," The Associated Press reports.
Study shows that "cancer researchers who design clinical trials, analyze or interpret the data, or play other key scientific roles are four times more likely to have financial ties to industry than their counterparts who have lesser roles," Reuter reports.
Reuters reports that President Barack Obama and his White House team is considering ways to help states cover the increasing costs of health care reform legislation.
"Annual mammograms, seemingly on their way out under new federal guidelines last year, may be coming back," The Wall Street Journal reports.
News outlets reports on how the health care bill pending in Congress might affect pediatric specialists and pharmacists.
Today's early morning highlights from the major news organizations, including reports about President Obama's meeting with organized labor leaders to discuss the 'cadillac' tax.
Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton on Friday "reiterated the Obama administration's support" for universal access to family planning and maternal health care, All Headline News reports. Clinton spoke at an event marking the 15th anniversary of the International Conference on Population and Development Action Plan held in Cairo, Egypt.
In a story about polio vaccination campaigns in Afghanistan, the Wall Street Journal examines how the Taliban and international health agencies are working together to promote oral vaccination campaigns across the country. Vaccination campaign volunteers usually bring a "single-page letter requesting people to cooperate, 'for the benefit of our next generations.' The letter's signatory: Mullah Mohammad Omar, the one-eyed supreme leader of the Taliban," according to the Wall Street Journal.
"As the United States prepares to drastically increase civilian aid in Pakistan, [USAID,] the agency in charge has asked for help training the local organizations that will spend that aid money, saying those organizations 'do not meet the minimum standards for managing' U.S. government funds," ProPublica reports in a story that examines the challenges associated with channeling aid money for Pakistan away from American contractors and NGOs to Pakistani organizations.
H1N1 (swine flu) has killed 12,799 people worldwide since the virus first emerged, the WHO said on Friday, United Press International reports (1/8). According to the WHO, more than half of the H1N1-related deaths worldwide occurred in the Americas, China Daily reports (1/9).
California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger is planning cuts to health programs and has "warned more would come if the federal government does not increase program reimbursements," ModernHealthcare reports.
A woman with a $7,000 annual income and $67 in the bank was diagnosed with breast cancer, leading to a week of phone calls from her surgeon to state, federal and hospital officials before a charitable agreement was struck with a medical center.
A sampling of opinions and editorials from around the country.
Federal efforts to get doctors and hospitals to go digital are a cause for optimism from health IT supporters, but draw protest from some in the medical community.
As most sectors of the economy shed jobs last month, health care companies continued to hire more people in a trend that's spanned more than two years.
The Wall Street Journal reports that Republicans "are attacking the legal premise of the legislation, saying Congress has no power to make people carry health insurance or pay a penalty or tax."
Two new policies on HIV have been issued by the United States government with Medicare covering screening and foreigners with the virus being allowed to enter the country.
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