Fish medicine not at Katedan

Programme may be shifted to Exhibition Grounds

With just two days remaining for the annual administration of fish medicine, the district administration is yet to identify an ideal' venue for it.

In-charge Collector of Ranga Reddy district Sudershan Reddy has made it clear that fish medicine will not be given at Katedan.

In all probability, the programme may be shifted to Exhibition Grounds again this year.

Already, the in-charge Collector has written a letter, seeking permission to administer fish medicine to people at the Exhibition Grounds, to General Administration Department (GAD).

In a co-ordination meeting on on Tuesday, in which family members of Bathini Goud, police and revenue authorities were present, the In-charge Collector said that police had expressed their inability to provide adequate security cover at Katedan.

Top Cyberabad police personnel, after conducting a thorough survey of the two venues at Katedan, concluded that the venues were not ideally located' to provide security to large number of visitors, expected to reach venue between June 8 and 9 from various parts of the country. Needless to say, the members of the Bathini family are on tenterhooks.

There are just two-days left. Already, the invites have been sent and we have even declared Katedan as the official venue. Now, authorities say that Katedan is unfit. We don't know about the government's intention towards administration of fish medicine. This is sheer harassment, Bathini Harinath Goud told The Hindu.

Cyberabad DCP Sudhir Babu said that the two venues at Katedan were not ideal for conducting fish prasadam programme. A detailed report highlighting the difficulties in providing security was submitted to the DGP, DCP Sudhir Babu said.

The in-charge Collector said that it would be risky to compromise on security at a venue where thousands from various parts of the countrywere expected to come.

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Fish medicine not at Katedan

21-year-old youngest MD from Univ. of Chicago

CHICAGO A 21-year-old Chicago man who began college at age 9 and medical school three years later is about to become the youngest student ever awarded an M.D. by the University of Chicago.

Don't miss these Health stories

Sometimes, a funny thing happens when Dr. Roberta Pagon looks directly into the sun. She sneezes. Not just once though, but usually three times.

Sho Yano, who was reading at age 2, writing at 3 and composing music at 5, will graduate this week from the Pritzker School of Medicine, where he also received a Ph.D. in molecular genetics and cell biology.

Yano earned his undergraduate degree from Loyola University at age 12, finishing in three years and graduating summa cum laude, the Chicago Tribune reported Sunday. The average age of students entering medical school in the U.S. is 23, and there were schools that refused Yano admittance because of his age. School officials worried that the rigors of medical school would hinder Yano's ability to have a normal adolescence.

"I never understood that," Yano said. "Why would being allowed to challenge yourself be considered more damaging than being totally bored?"

The University of Chicago admitted Yano in 2003.

"I remember interviewing him ... this nice, polite, 11-year-old boy, dressed in a little suit," said Dr. Joel Scwab, a professor of pediatrics who was on the admissions committee. "He was never going to be among typical 11-year-olds, where his mother would drive him to Little League. He was going to be a doctor."

The school made some accommodations because of Yano's age. Unlike most students, who begin their Ph.D. training after their second year of medical school, Yano began his after his first year. That way, he was about 18 when he began his second year of studies toward his M.D., which includes interacting with and examining patients.

Yano, who is an accomplished pianist and has a black belt in tae kwon do, told the paper he hopes his graduation will silence those who questioned his developmental aptitude when he entered medical school.

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21-year-old youngest MD from Univ. of Chicago

Former child genius graduates from medical school at age 21

A former child genius and Los Angeles resident who entered medical school at the age of 12 is graduating this week as the youngest student to receive a medical degree from the University of Chicago.

Born in Portland, Ore., Sho Yano, 21, has an IQ above 200 and spent most of his early years in California attending the Mirman School for Gifted Children in Los Angeles for a few years and getting home-schooled by his mother.

Yano, who has already completed his Ph.D. in molecular genetics and cell biology, was composing music by age 4, and scored 1,500 out of 1,600 possible points on the SAT by age 8. At 9, he attended Chicagos Loyola University, where he graduated in three years, summa cum laude, but still played with his pet rabbit and delighted in reading childrens books, the Chicago Tribune reported.

Yano was admitted to the University of Chicagos Pritzker School of Medicine after he met with double the usual number of staff, the Tribune said. Several other medical schools had rejected his application, citing lack of maturity.

Although he was the subject of gossip and teasing in college, classmates at Pritzker have accepted him as part of their class. Peers and faculty told the Tribune that Yano is a "sweet" and "humble student who loves Bach and quoting Greek literature.

"Despite his age, Sho's the oldest soul in our class," one classmate told the Tribune.

He has a black belt in tae kwon do and is a noted pianist. But in the end, he said in 2003, he chose medicine because he wants to help people. He will spend his next five years doing a residency in pediatric neurology.

"I'd love to make a great contribution, he told the Tribune. We'll just have to see where life takes me, but really, I haven't done anything yet."

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Former child genius graduates from medical school at age 21

Liberty 79, Dream 74

UpdatedJun 5, 2012 10:22 PM ET

After the New York Liberty lost their first five games of the season, All-Star guard Cappie Pondexter found herself in totally unfamiliar territory.

''Being 0-5, I never experienced that before anywhere in any part of my career,'' Pondexter said. ''It was awful. I knew we had to turn things around.''

Pondexter scored 26 points to lead the Liberty to their second straight win, a 79-74 victory over the Atlanta Dream on Tuesday night.

Pondexter took it upon herself to carry the Liberty to the victory, making clutch shots in the fourth quarter. Her driving goal with 8:29 left gave the Liberty the lead for good and her three-point play with 4:36 left pushed the lead to 70-66.

''We had to refocus the last couple of days after we lost five in a row,'' said Pondexter, who had nine points in the final period. ''It was just a case of me being aggressive. The important thing for us is to focus on what we need to do to win.''

Leilani Mitchell added 18 points in the victory.

''Of course, we knew we were a better team than 0-5,'' Mitchell said. ''But it's a long season and the league is so good. Any game could go either way. It was very frustrating to lose those five games, but we had to remain positive.''

Atlanta dropped to 2-4 after losing its second straight contest

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Liberty 79, Dream 74

Dealpolitik: Liberty Media Steps Up its Complex Dance with Sirius

John Malones Liberty Media is trying to get permission from the Federal Communications Commission to use its near majority ownership of Sirius XM Radio to take control of its board of directors. Since a tussle started in March, Sirius has opposed Liberty at the FCC and so far the FCC has rejected Liberty, basically because Liberty had not announced specific steps on its plans to effect the director election. Last week Liberty asked for reconsideration and announced some of those steps.

There is more to this dance than meets the eye. This is not about your normal struggle to control a company. Liberty has enough shares to effectively control Siriusonce the regulators give their blessing. And earlier this year, a standstill agreementwhich prohibited Liberty from trying to get more directors or otherwise control Siriusexpired.

Libertys move is probably the opening gambit in a process to harvest for Liberty shareholders the massive gain it has in its investment in Sirius. In return for loaning around half a billion dollars to Sirius when it was in dire straits during the global financial crisis, Liberty was given preferred stock convertible into 40% of the common stock of Sirius, as well as minority representation on the Sirius board.

Based on current market prices, Siriuss current market capitalization will be almost $12 billion when all those convertible securities are converted. If Liberty sold its shares now, that would be a lot of taxes to pay. And simply spinning off Sirius shares to Liberty shareholders would trigger even more taxesunless Liberty spent billions of dollars buying a lot more Sirius shares first.

But there are other transactionscomplex as they may bewhich could be used to separate Sirius from Liberty and even effect a sale of Sirius with no significant taxes. Although Sirius cannot be spun off in a tax efficient manner, Liberty could spin off its other businesses as a whole (think of it as New Liberty) and leave Sirius as pretty much the sole remaining asset of Old Liberty. And voila, Libertys shareholders have effectively received the Sirius shares without paying any taxes. And in one more wrinkle, it is possible that Sirius could be sold immediately thereafter without incurring tax as long as it was in a stock-for-stock merger. You may have read about this referred to as a Reverse Morris Trust transaction, named after an ancient tax case. Liberty has experience in this type of transaction as the DirecTV deal had some of these elements in it.

The problem is that these more complex transactions would require an extensive negotiation with the Sirius board. And because Liberty effectively controls Sirius (whether or not a majority of its directors are Liberty employees), Delaware law essentially requires Liberty to negotiate not with the full board, but with a committee of directors unrelated to Liberty.

So why is Liberty pushing so hard to get the FCC to let it grab a board majority? Because having control of a majority of the board could have significant practical implications even if Liberty couldnt cram a transaction down the boards throat. The whole dynamic of the negotiation can change once Malone has hands-on control of the company. Delaware law requires that independent directors still have the power to say no to a deal. But once Liberty has a majority of the board, it will have the power to control all other decisionsincluding what will happen if the independent directors cannot come to a deal with Liberty.

For example, the Liberty CFO appeared on CNBC last Friday and expressed support for current management. But then, in a very small shot across the bow, said that Liberty tends to make its weight known on issues relating to capital policy and that he expected Sirius to throw off a lot of cash in the future. That could be a sign that Liberty could decide to push for dividends or even a recapitalization if it does not get its way on a deal. As long as all shareholders are treated the same, Liberty could probably effect its will without the concurrence of those independent directorsonce it has a majority of the board.

At the moment it all seems to be about posturing. Liberty is trying to get itself into the best position it can to get what it will ultimately want, which is probably going to be a DirecTV type of transaction in which Liberty shareholders either receive the Liberty shares in Sirius or Sirius is sold in a tax efficient manner.

And the Sirius board has opposed Liberty so far apparently in an attempt to maximize its negotiating position.

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Dealpolitik: Liberty Media Steps Up its Complex Dance with Sirius

Pondexter leads Liberty over Dream

NEWARK, N.J. (AP) After the New York Liberty lost their first five games of the season, All-Star guard Cappie Pondexter found herself in totally unfamiliar territory.

''Being 0-5, I never experienced that before anywhere in any part of my career,'' Pondexter said. ''It was awful. I knew we had to turn things around.''

Pondexter scored 26 points to lead the Liberty to their second straight win, a 79-74 victory over the Atlanta Dream on Tuesday night.

Pondexter took it upon herself to carry the Liberty to the victory, making clutch shots in the fourth quarter. Her driving goal with 8:29 left gave the Liberty the lead for good and her three-point play with 4:36 left pushed the lead to 70-66.

''We had to refocus the last couple of days after we lost five in a row,'' said Pondexter, who had nine points in the final period. ''It was just a case of me being aggressive. The important thing for us is to focus on what we need to do to win.''

Leilani Mitchell added 18 points in the victory.

''Of course, we knew we were a better team than 0-5,'' Mitchell said. ''But it's a long season and the league is so good. Any game could go either way. It was very frustrating to lose those five games, but we had to remain positive.''

Atlanta dropped to 2-4 after losing its second straight contest

Liberty head coach John Whisenant believes that the difference in his team is on the defensive end. Atlanta routed the Liberty 100-74 on May 25.

''We knew we had to defend better,'' Whisenant said. ''We surrendered 26 points less than when they hammered us. We struggled with our defense in the first five games, but we were better tonight. This is the way we have to play to be successful.''

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Pondexter leads Liberty over Dream

A Party On The Rise, Germany's Pirates Come Ashore

Enlarge AFP/AFP/Getty Images

A member of the German Pirate Party, with its logo shaved in his hair, attends the party's two-day conference in Neumuenster, Germany, on April 28.

A member of the German Pirate Party, with its logo shaved in his hair, attends the party's two-day conference in Neumuenster, Germany, on April 28.

They don't have a plan to save the euro or draw down the war in Afghanistan, nor do they have clear policies on an array of issues, but the German Pirate Party is winning converts and elections with its vision of digital democracy through "liquid feedback."

Despite public relations mishaps and a haphazard organizational structure, the Pirate Party is shaking up the stolid, bureaucratic world of German politics and jolting rival parties with its rising popularity.

Supporters of the Pirate Party react after early results are announced during elections in Duesseldorf, Germany, on May 13.

Supporters of the Pirate Party react after early results are announced during elections in Duesseldorf, Germany, on May 13.

On Tuesday night in Neukolln, a disheveled yet trendy Berlin district, the Kinski Bar buzzes like it's the weekend. The sparsely furnished tavern is filled with casually dressed 20-somethings chatting, laughing, smoking and debating in between bites of pizza and sips of cheap draft beer. As it is every Tuesday, it's Pirate Party night. It's a night for political discussion, not a party party, but it can sometimes be hard to tell the difference.

"Many things of the Pirates are so unprofessional and thereby so charming that you see, 'Well what they can do, I can do also; I can contribute to this,' " says 29-year-old Thorsten Fischer. Dressed in a casual, hip outfit of a pastel-colored T-shirt, skinny jeans and a smart haircut, Fischer belies the image painted in some of the German press that the Pirates are all computer nerds.

Fischer is now working on his second startup company, developing an app for mobile devices. In some ways his entrepreneurial spirit brought him to the Pirates. He says he was attracted by the party's tech savvy, libertarianism that stresses freedom of expression, transparency in government and Internet freedom.

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A Party On The Rise, Germany's Pirates Come Ashore

Focus on owner of sunken boat in Penn Cove

Libertarian hero living the dream

Rory Westmoreland seems a true Libertarian hero. Unfazed by government rules, the complaints of petty bureaucrats, meddling environmentalists and lesser businessmen, he pursues his capitalist destiny. [Junker boats owner often in hot water, page one, June 4.]

Hopefully, courageous tea-party, property-rights and, most of all, Ron Paul supporters will rally to the defense of someone who actually animates the philosophy they espouse: life unshackled by regulations and the social protections that only serve the weak.

So what if the rest of us law-abiding citizens are left to suffer the consequences. After all, which is more important, the health of society or economic freedom. Westmoreland is, after all, just living the dream.

Ron Paige, Bellevue

State agencies ineffective

Thank you for your well-written front page article today, regarding the fouling of Penn Cove after the sinking of the vessel Deep Sea last month.

Your watchdog article I thought made two points rather well.

The obvious one is bringing Rory Westmoreland out of the dark shadows he operates in and providing us with the ultimate definition of a scofflaw.

Just as important, you have illuminated the perfect storm that exists when you match a repeat offender of environmental laws with several state agencies including the departments of Ecology, Natural Resources and Health that demonstrate nothing more than institutionalized impotence and collective hand-wringing when it comes to dealing with these problems.

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Focus on owner of sunken boat in Penn Cove

Pitchfork-Wielding Swing Voters Do Not 'Admire Rich People'

The elite fantasy of a silent libertarian majority appreciative of success and yearning for the right David Brooksian candidate is a total delusion, as swing voters are just as populist as Democrats. Plus, white folks don't like Obamacare and middle income folks do like Mitt Romney. Here's our guide to today's polls and which ones matter.

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Pitchfork-Wielding Swing Voters Do Not 'Admire Rich People'

Libertarian candidates battle to gain share of voter interest

EVANSVILLE Libertarian party candidates acknowledge it's a battle for them to gain and maintain voter interest in the face of the country's fierce two-party system. And that point was driven home Tuesday afternoon when an hourlong meet-and-greet session for local and state Libertarian candidates at Evansville's Central Library attracted fewer than five nonfamily members or campaign workers.

The meet-and-greet is a start of a campaign series the local party hopes to continue through the general election, said Kurt Clement, the party's county co-chairman.

Clement, a Vanderburgh County Council at-large candidate, is a 23-year-old graduate of the University of Southern Indiana where he majored in biology. Clement said his area of focus at school will bring a different perspective to the office, unlike that of the typical "attorney politician."

Photo by Erin McCracken

ERIN McCRACKEN / COURIER & PRESS Rupert Boneham, Libertarian candidate for Governor, talks with Connie Whitman, an Evansville resident, about issues concerning the state of Indiana at a Libertarian Candidate meet -and-greet on Tuesday afternoon at Central Library. Whitman came out to show her support for Boneham and other Libertarians because she is not happy with the other two parties and believes that Indiana needs something different.

He says while it is difficult for Libertarian candidates to get their name out to the public, it is a little easier for those running in local races to meet more of the people that will be voting, than a state or national candidate could.

Gubernatorial candidate Rupert Boneham and his running mate, Brad Klopfenstein, who were in attendance, discussed the importance of job creation initiatives and "empowerment programs," to help people get jobs.

Boneham and Klopfenstein said as Libertarian candidates, it is also a struggle to compete financially with Democratic and Republican candidates because they have interest group backing.

"It's oftentimes the people who put money into campaigns, they're buying influence as opposed to actually supporting someone that represents their interests," Klopfenstein said. "And when you have two candidates like us that are about giving power back as opposed to taking more power for our supporters, it's a little harder to get people to pony up."

The last Libertarian candidate for governor, Andrew Horning, received 2.1 percent of the statewide vote in 2008 against Gov. Mitch Daniels and Democrat Jill Long Thompson. Horning is currently running for U.S. Senate seat against Republican Richard Mourdock and Democrat Joe Donnelly.

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Libertarian candidates battle to gain share of voter interest

All Whites draw 1-1 with Solomon Islands

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Photosport Photosport Photosport Photosport Photosport Photosport Photosport Photosport Photosport Photosport Photosport Photosport Photosport Photosport Photosport Photosport Photosport

Chris Wood's 14th minute goal from a volley put New Zealand up 1-0.

Chris Wood (centre) is congratulated on his goal against the Solomon Islands. by Tim Payne (left) and Shane Smeltz.

All Whites captain Tommy Smith goes up for a header against Nelson Sale Kilifa of the Solomon Islands.

Midfielder Tim Payne sliders in to make a tackle on Jeffery Bule of the Solomons.

Chris Wood (right) celebrates his goal against Papua New Guinea with Shane Smeltz.

All Whites central defender Ivan Vicelich heads the ball away from danger.

Kosta Barbarouses chests down a ball against Papua New Guinea.

New Zealand's Tim Payne challenges Papua New Guinea's David Muta.

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All Whites draw 1-1 with Solomon Islands

Russia Proposes Kuril Islands Talks 'Without Preconditions'

Russia invites Japan to discuss the disputed Kuril Islands without preconditions, Russian Ambassador to Japan Yevgeny Afanasiev said at a news conference on Wednesday.

We are ready to talk on the basis of bilateral agreements, one of which is the Joint Declaration between the USSR and Japan signed in 1956 and on the principles of legitimacy and justice," Afanasiev said.

"Despite the different approaches (of our countries), movement forward is possible. But there is one condition: a rejection of unilateral preconditions and historical associations. I would like to emphasize that this is a two-way process, Afanasiev said.

Our goal is to find mutually acceptable solutions, the ambassador said, adding that he saw "a positive agenda" in relations between Russia and Japan.

The Kuril Islands dispute has clouded relations between Moscow and Tokyo for decades. Japan claims the four islands Etorofu, Kunashiri, Shikotan and Habomai, based on the 1855 Treaty of Shimoda, the first Russo-Japanese agreement addressing the status of Sakhalin Island and the Kurils.

The return of the islands is one of Tokyos conditions for finally signing a peace treaty with Russia to end World War II.

Moscow argues that the islands became part of the Soviet Union following the war and there can be no question about Russian sovereignty over them.

A 1956 Joint Declaration signed by the Soviet Union and Japan that ended the state of war between the two countries raised the possibility of the Soviet Union returning the two southernmost Kurils, Shikotan and Habomai, to Japan once a peace treaty was signed. But 56 years later, no peace treaty has been signed.

Afanasiev was recently appointed ambassador to Japan. He presented his credentials to Emperor Akihito on April 26.

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Russia Proposes Kuril Islands Talks 'Without Preconditions'

Maine hardwood flooring company sold

ASHLAND, MaineSeven Islands Land Co. says it has acquired MooseWood Premium Hardwood Flooring from Kelly Lumber Sales Inc. of Ashland.

Seven Islands, a family-owned forest and timber management company in Bangor, says it intends to keep MooseWood's current workforce of 16 employees while investing in operations and strengthening distribution of the premium hardwood flooring.

Lumber used in the production of MooseWood flooring is harvested from land managed by Seven Islands and milled by Maine Woods Co. in Portage Lake.

Seven Islands President John McNulty says the acquisition of MooseWood brings a value-added component to its timber resources and supports jobs in the heart of Maine's northern forest.

MooseWood Premium Hardwood Flooring was established in 2004.

Copyright 2012 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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Maine hardwood flooring company sold

Channel Islands profile

23 May 2012 Last updated at 09:33 ET

The Channel Islands are an archipelago in the English Channel off the Normandy coast of France. They are divided into two British Crown Dependencies, the Bailiwicks of Guernsey and Jersey. The former also includes the islands of Alderney, Sark and Herm, and smaller islands are divided between the two bailiwicks.

The islands are not part of the United Kingdom or European Union, but rather are possessions of the British Crown with independent administrations. Their inhabitants are British citizens.

The Channel Islands were owned by the Duchy of Normandy, and passed to the English Crown when William the Conqueror became King of England in 1066. While England lost mainland Normandy in 1204, the islands remained possessions of the Crown and were divided into the two bailiwicks later that century.

Since then the bailiwicks have maintained separate institutions, laws and media, with the exception of a common independent TV station, Channel TV.

Profiles compiled by BBC Monitoring

During the Second World War the islands were occupied by Germany, causing considerable suffering to the locals. Some were deported as slave labourers, Jews were sent to concentration camps, reprisals for partisan activities were harsh, and many were reduced to near starvation by the end of the war. Accusations of collaboration and cover-up poisoned relations between many islanders for decades.

The total population is about 160,000, of whom the overwhelming majority is made up of native islanders of Norman French and British extraction. There are also groups of European Union citizens, with a prominent community from Portugal.

As Crown Dependencies the islands are not part of the United Kingdom or European Union, nor are they colonies or overseas territories of the United Kingdom like Gibraltar. They are possessions of the British Crown with independent administrations. Their assemblies pass their own legislation with the assent of the Crown granted in the Privy Council.

The Crown is responsible for defence, diplomatic representation and citizenship, although the islands maintain their own controls over housing and employment that apply to British as well as other citizens.

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Channel Islands profile

White House Council on Community Solutions Summit – Video

04-06-2012 16:51 At the House Summit on Community Solutions for Disconnected Youth, Council members and leaders from a range of local and national non-profit, philanthropic, business, government, and national service organizations discuss innovative community-developed initiatives that connecting young people to critical education and employment opportunities. June 4, 2012.

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White House Council on Community Solutions Summit - Video

Push for health care professionalism progresses

Bill Roshon, healthcare focus group: Bill Roshon, Southwest Florida Works, discusses the healthcare industry focus group. By staff writer Tim Engstrom. Bill Roshon of Southwest Florida Works, was impressed by the speed at which educators focused on soft skils. / Terry Allen Williams/news-press.com

For more information on local programs organized by the Southwest Florida Workforce Development Board, log on to swflworks.org

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Push for health care professionalism progresses

Health Professionals Will Respond to Incentives, If We Only Let Them

Local exchanges and markets will be better for health care costs than Washington price-fixing.

Jim Bourg/Reuters

It is nobody's fault, but our health finance system has long been a disaster. Since World War II it has slowly evolved, with all the best intentions, into not one but at least three wholly separate entities--each with different infrastructures and different sets of perverse incentives for hospitals, doctors, and other providers. This nutty system of finance is the reason that health care expenses are swallowing the U.S. economy (and federal and state budgets), and that health care is our biggest domestic policy issue. The health care profession has always been quite honorable, but the reality is that these professionals--physicians, nurses, hospital administrators alike--aren't immune to financial incentives, and the incentives created by our current system are completely out of whack.

So what does the average local health care market look like?

1) Medicare: The almost 50 million Medicare beneficiaries (seniors and the disabled) make up about 16 percent of the U.S. population--but account for over 40 percent of the spending for the average health-care system, public or private. Medicare drives everything in local health economics, because seniors consume lots of health care and they are in the hospital often. For three-quarters of Medicare beneficiaries, traditional Medicare programs fix prices nationally. Think about that--every hospital and every doctor gets paid the same thing! Recently there have been minor variations through "Accountable Care Organizations" and other "pay-for-performance" models--but for the vast bulk of services, the worst hospital in town gets paid the same as the best.

Not surprisingly, this crazy pricing scheme incentivizes volume. Physicians try to see more patients; therapists try to do more therapy; hospitals try to book more surgeries. It is predictable human nature, and has been in every society in history. Health care is the only service in the U.S. where the government fixes prices--is it a surprise that volume has exploded?

2) Medicaid: Medicaid is the program for low-income Americans, including the disabled and the elderly (usually in long term care). Actually, Medicaid is not one program, it's 50 totally different state programs. Seventy-seven million Americans were on Medicaid at some point in 2011--almost 25 percent of the population, at a cost of $440 billion. And we plan to begin adding 18 million more Americans on January 1, 2014, for another $120 billion a year, under the Affordable Care Act.

Talk about a mess! Every state provides different coverage, and Medicaid is a chaotic hodgepodge of policy. Even worse, virtually all the states have succeeded in transferring much of the cost to the federal government over the past 25 years through "provider taxes," "intergovernmental transfers," and "upper payment limits," so that no state actually pays anything remotely close to its statutory "match rate." The entire program is a giant state refinancing scam. What initially was a 50-50 federal program, is now more than 70 percent federally financed, with some states, most notably New Hampshire, not contributing a single nickel of state general revenue. This lack of program integrity is a problem, because it makes the program unreformable. There is no policy equity among the states, so any reform proposal will create some winners and some losers, unless you spend even more money. So it will never happen.

States have increasingly moved to Medicaid managed care, but the bulk of daily health services are still paid in the old "fee-for-service" methodology. And guess what: those states also fix prices and pay all providers the same amount, almost always using the Medicare system as the reference payment. If you are a hospital or a health system, you already have 40 percent of your payment coming from Medicare, and in addition you probably have another 12-15 percent of your revenue coming from Medicaid. So 50-55 percent of your payments come from two giant price-fixed national programs--and you get paid the same rates, no matter the performance. How's that for an incentive structure?

3) Commercial Insurers/Blue Cross/Employer Plans: Private insurance generally makes up another 35-40 percent of the health care spending total (the uninsured fill in the remainder). There are a few markets with dominant Blue Cross plans that actually have leverage. But in most markets there are a handful of insurers: rarely does any one player have more than 20 percent of the market, and often it is far less. So why would a hospital care intensely about improving performance, or cutting prices to meet the demands of Aetna, Cigna, or United, when those companies rarely wield significant market share and are bit players compared to Medicare and Medicaid? In fact, most commonly, insurers still pay a percentage of--you guessed it--the Medicare fee schedule. Ask a doctor or hospital what an insurer pays them, and you will likely get "105 percent of DRGs" (the Medicare hospital fee) or "103 percent of RVUs" (the Medicare doctor schedule).

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Health Professionals Will Respond to Incentives, If We Only Let Them

Mayor vows veto on health benefits

Home News Local Loading

Published: 6/6/2012 - Updated: 33 minutes ago

BY CLAUDIA BOYD-BARRETT BLADE STAFF WRITER

A clear victory for legislation to extend health-care benefits to the domestic partners of city employees unexpectedly crashed Tuesday after Toledo Mayor Mike Bell threatened to veto an ordinance for which he spent more than a month lobbying.

The mayor's surprise turnaround came after City Council voted to amend his original proposal to include a clause allowing Toledo's main firefighters' union to reopen negotiations on its health-care contract with the city.

The vote to amend came despite vigorous opposition from city law director Adam Loukx, who said the amendment went beyond council's authority under city law.

Local 92, which represents more than 500 firefighters, operates its own health-care fund and could become financially stretched by the extension of coverage to domestic partners, councilman D. Michael Collins argued. Eight of 12 councilmen agreed with him and voted to allow renegotiation of what the city pays per employee into the union's health-care fund.

"I believe it's only fair," Mr. Collins said. He chided the administration for not telling the union during contract negotiations this year that it was considering the extension of benefits to domestic partners. "They should have known that there was going to be a policy change."

Council then approved the domestic partner legislation, 9-3. Councilmen George Sarantou, Rob Ludeman, and Tom Waniewski voted against it.

They needn't have bothered.

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Mayor vows veto on health benefits

Doubts raised as House looks to cut health costs

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Doubts raised as House looks to cut health costs