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Welsh Assembly Government Statement On Swine Flu
This statement updates Members on the Influenza A (H1N1) swine flu outbreak and the latest developments in Wales, across the UK and internationally.
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New York Times Column Examines Experiences Of Nurse-Midwife
Elizabeth Letts, an author and certified nurse-midwife, in the New York Times" "Cases" column on Tuesday reports on her first experience assisting in the delivery of a stillborn infant. Letts describes how witnessing a more experienced midwife comfort the pregnant woman and perform the delivery helped her to stop "believ[ing] that providing support meant sitting in a corner pretending that death could be covered up with small talk." The experience reminded Letts that "birth and death are right around the corner from each other, and that as a midwife I may be charged with bringing either one into the world" (Letts, "Cases," New York Times, 6/23).
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PARI Pharma Reports Successful Phase Ib Clinical Results For Inhaled Liposomal Cyclosporine A
This month"s Journal of Aerosol Medicine and Pulmonary Drug Delivery features positive Phase Ib clinical trial results for PARI Pharma"s L-CsA, inhaled liposomal cyclosporine A. In May, PARI Pharma received Orphan Drug Designation from the Food and Drug Administration for L-CsA, delivered via an Investigational eFlow Nebulizer System, for the prevention and treatment of bronchiolitis obliterans, a devastating, incurable disease of the small airways affecting approximately 60,000 patients worldwide.
Mental Health

Business Groups Note Faults In House Democrats' Overhaul Plan

House Democrats readying a health reform bill without a price tag or a budget analysis will hear from business interests today that their plan is irrevocably broken and that they need to start from scratch, CongressDaily reports. "With its strongest language yet, the business community today will condemn House Democrats" health reform proposal and tell lawmakers the bill is "broken beyond repair. ... Congress should take this legislation back to the drawing board," U.S. Chamber of Commerce senior vice president Randel Johnson said in testimony prepared for a House Ways and Means Committee hearing on health care today." Sticking points in the bill include the public plan that "would adhere to the same rules as private plans with pay rates similar to Medicare" and individual and employer insurance coverage mandates, the latter getting a decisive thumbs-down from the Chamber. "The shift comes after months of generally positive rhetoric on health care from a variety of interest groups, a tone that has shifted markedly as details of plans have emerged from both sides of the Capitol. ò€¦ The Chamber criticized the process used to develop the bill, echoing congressional Republicans who have complained that Democrats are moving too quickly and not allowing the minority adequate time to evaluate proposals" (Hunt, 6/24). The public plan remains contentious, The San Francisco Chronicle reports: "Sharp ideological divisions emerged at Tuesday"s hearing before Miller"s House Education and Labor Committee, with Republicans asking how a public plan would work better to contain costs than Medicaid and Medicare, and warning that any public plan would destroy the employer-based system of health insurance. Blue Cross/Blue Shield and the insurance industry trade group, America"s Health Insurance Plans, warned Tuesday that a government health plan would dismantle private insurers" (Lochhead, 6/24). Other groups are also criticizing parts of the House bill - like cutting Medicare payments for tests such as MRIs and other medical scans, The Associated Press reports: "Patients, rural doctors and advocacy groups who back the procedures will gather in the House Wednesday for a panel discussion." "Use of the procedures grew to 182 million in 2007, according to an industry study. The Obama administration cites figures showing Medicare"s price tag for the services doubled from $7 billion in 2000 to $14 billion in 2006. Though that spending dropped to $12 billion in 2007 as cuts enacted by Congress took effect, the administration says overly generous reimbursement rates and other factors encourage doctors to overuse imaging equipment. Obama has proposed reducing the Medicare payments by $5.9 billion over the next decade - a plan doctors and equipment makers say is based on flawed, outdated data" (Fram, 6/24). 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.


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