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Does Preoperative Biliary Drainage Influence The Outcome Of Resectional Surgery For Ampullary Carcinoma?
A research article published in the World Journal of Gastroenterology addresses this question. This is believed to be the first study to investigate the effect of PBD in ampullary cancer. A team of gastroenterologists led by Dr Steven Joseph Mesenas and hepatobiliary surgeons at Singapore General Hospital divided 82 patients with ampullary cancer planned for surgical resection into those with PBD (n = 35) and those without (n = 47). The authors looked into various outcomes after surgery, such as pancreatic leakage, wound infection, bile leakage, infectious morbidity, intra-abdominal or gastrointestinal bleeding, intra-abdominal abscess, delayed gastric emptying and mortality. They found that the PBD group had a significantly reduced wound infection rate compared to the non-PBD group. More studies should be conducted to assess this benefit, especially in ampullary cancer patients.
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Discovery Of Gene Mutation Responsible For Hereditary Neuroendocrine Tumor
University of Utah researchers and their colleagues have identified the gene that is mutated in a hereditary form of a rare neuroendocrine tumor called paraganglioma (PGL). The gene, called hSDH5, is required for activation of an enzyme complex that plays a critical role in the chemical reactions that take place within cells to convert biochemical energy into usable energy. This study is published in the journal Science
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Dennis P. Whalen To Join Healthcare Association Of New York State
The Healthcare Association of New York State (HANYS) announced that Dennis P. Whalen, Director of State Operations in the Governor"s office, will join the Association on September 9 as Executive Vice President. Mr. Whalen will play a key role in shaping HANYS" overall policies and in helping prepare the membership for national health care reform.
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Md. County's Model Health Program For The Uninsured Faces Some Obstacles

One Maryland county"s tiny new health care programs for the uninsured could be a model for providing care nationwide, National Public Radio says in an ongoing series. The program is cheap, effective and heavy on preventive care, Howard County"s health commissioner, Dr. Peter Beilenson says. The program, called Healthy Howard, provides care for families of four earning up to $66,000 a year, and patients are required to pay $50 to $85 a month. But some of the enrollees are running into trouble. In return, they get six or seven primary care visits a year, access to cheap drugs and receive pro bono hospital services. The upfront costs guarantee that people prioritize their health care and are active participants in the program. However, Beilenson was concerned that about 10 percent of patients may be automatically disenrolled from the program because "the debit cards they had given us have been overdrawn or their credit card had exceeded its credit limit." When Beilenson considers the reform debate in Washington, his reaction is that an individual mandate would require patients like the ones he treats to pay up to five times as much for basic coverage. Before the program, he said he and his colleagues were in an "ivory tower" and failed to appreciate how strapped many low-income people seeking health care really are: "They"re bumping up against a financial ceiling, even with this very modest amount of outlay required each month" (Siegel, 7/16). 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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