2013 Fine Awards For Teamwork Excellence in Healthcare: Highmark AIS – Video


2013 Fine Awards For Teamwork Excellence in Healthcare: Highmark AIS
Sponsored by The Fine Foundation and the Jewish Healthcare Foundation, the Fine Awards reinforce the critical role teamwork plays in health care. The theme o...

By: Pittsburgh Regional Health Initiative

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2013 Fine Awards For Teamwork Excellence in Healthcare: Highmark AIS - Video

Burn Unit Series – "Stretching, Scar Management, and Compression" (UI Health Care) – Video


Burn Unit Series - "Stretching, Scar Management, and Compression" (UI Health Care)
Patient video education series for University of Iowa Health Care #39;s Burn Treatment Center. For more information, please call 319-356-2496 or visit http://www...

By: University of Iowa Health Care

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Burn Unit Series - "Stretching, Scar Management, and Compression" (UI Health Care) - Video

Amitabh Bachchan & Om Puri at The Inauguration of Surya Child Health Care Centre – Video


Amitabh Bachchan Om Puri at The Inauguration of Surya Child Health Care Centre
Amitabh Bachchan Om Puri at The Inauguration of Surya Child Health Care Centre Visit - https://www.unitezz.com . India #39;s Biggest Bollywood Entertainment We...

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Amitabh Bachchan & Om Puri at The Inauguration of Surya Child Health Care Centre - Video

Campos wants stricter rules on S.F. health care accounts

It looks like it's loophole closure time all over again.

Supervisor David Campos is once again proposing legislation to stop employers from pocketing millions of dollars that were supposed to pay for employee health care as part of the city's universal health care law.

The centerpiece of Campos' proposal is a requirement that money employers deposit in savings accounts to reimburse their workers for their health care expenses actually gets used for that. Now, employers may take back the unused portion of the money after two years, and some do.

In 2010, 860 employers put a total of $62.5 million into the accounts, paid out $12.4 million and kept the rest, officials reported.

Campos, who on Tuesday will ask the city attorney to draft this latest legislation, tried to close the loophole in 2011 by preventing employers from taking back money until 18 months after an employee had left the company. But after the Board of Supervisors approved his legislation, Mayor Ed Lee vetoed it amid concerns from businesses that said it would tie up millions of dollars and could force them to lay off workers or possibly close.

A draft report from the Office of Labor Standards Enforcement in July indicated that the situation had only improved somewhat.

The overall reimbursement rate to employees rose from 17 percent in 2011 to 25 percent in 2012, with actual payments jumping from $11.3 million to $26.4 million in 2012.

In 2011, 17 percent of employers who opted for the reimbursement accounts to comply with the city's Health Care Security Ordinance paid out absolutely nothing, the draft report said.

In 2012, after the loophole fix, 12 percent of employers with the accounts reported reimbursing nothing for employee health care, the report said.

With the city's economy humming amid growing frustration about income disparity, Campos may find a better reception at the Board of Supervisors for his legislation this time around and get eight votes to make it veto-proof.

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Campos wants stricter rules on S.F. health care accounts

Uninsured rate drops due to health care law, but signups lag among Hispanics

A bodega worker receives free care during a health clinic in the Bronx in 2010. Photo by Chris Hondros/Getty Images

With just three weeks left to enroll on the new insurance exchanges, the Gallup-Healthways Well-Being Index, finds that 15.9 percent of U.S. adults are uninsured thus far in 2014, down from 17.1 percent for the last three months or calendar quarter of 2013.

Released Monday, the survey based on more than 28,000 interviews is a major independent effort to track the health care rollout. The drop of 1.2 percentage points in the uninsured rate translates to about 3 million people gaining coverage.

Gallup said the proportion of Americans who are uninsured is on track to drop to the lowest quarterly level it measured since 2008, before Obama took office.

Its probably a reasonable hypothesis that the Affordable Care Act is having something to do with this drop, said Frank Newport, Gallups editor-in-chief. We saw a continuation of the trend we saw last month; it didnt bounce back up.

The survey found that almost every major demographic group made progress getting health insurance, although Hispanics lagged.

With the highest uninsured rate of any racial or ethnic group, Latinos were expected to be major beneficiaries of the new health care law. They are a relatively young population and many are on the lower rungs of the middle class, in jobs that dont come with health insurance. Theyve also gone big for Obama in his two presidential campaigns.

But the administrations outreach effort to Hispanics stumbled from the start. The Spanish-language enrollment website, CuidadodeSalud.gov, was delayed due to technical problems. Its name sounds like a clunky translation from English: Care of Health.

The feds also translated Affordable Care Act as Law for Care of Health at Low Price which doesnt sound too appealing.

A spot check of the Spanish site on Monday showed parts of it still use a mix of Spanish and English to convey information on such basics as insurance copays, risking confusion.

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Uninsured rate drops due to health care law, but signups lag among Hispanics

Syrian health care on brink of collapse

Syria's health care system is on the brink of collapse, with medics forced to engage in 'brutal medical practices' in order to save lives: knocking out patients with metal bars because of lack of anaesthesia, or amputating infants' limbs for lack of other ways to treat their injuries.

International charity Save the Children in a report published on Monday said newborns die in hospital incubators during power outages, while millions of children have been exposed to deadly diseases, some of which are preventable with vaccinations and basic medical equipment.

The conflict has ravaged Syria for three years and has hit the country's health facilities and health providers hard. Hospitals have been bombed by government forces in rebel-held areas. Armed men with the opposition have forced their way into clinics to have their fighters treated. Many doctors have fled the country to escape harassment from the warring sides.

'This humanitarian crisis has fast become a health crisis,' Save the Children's regional director Roger Hearn said in a statement.

'The desperate measures to which medical personnel are resorting to keep children alive are increasingly harrowing.'

Simply finding a doctor is a matter of luck, Hearn also said. Finding one with the necessary equipment and medication to provide proper treatment has become almost impossible, he added.

The report quotes a doctor saying that most children brought to his clinic suffer from burns and fractures. The doctor, who is not named in the report, says they need complicated operations that cannot be performed in his small facility.

'In some cases, we have to cut their limbs off to try to save their lives, because if we don't they will bleed to death,' the doctor told Save the Children.

Also worrying, is the re-emergence of deadly and disfiguring diseases such as polio and measles, which can permanently maim and paralyse, the charity said.

It estimates that up to 80,000 children are likely to be infected by polio's most aggressive form, and are silently spreading the disease.

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Syrian health care on brink of collapse

Endometriosis Cause And Development Linked To Unstudied Genes

March 10, 2014

Rebekah Eliason for redOrbit.com Your Universe Online

A study from Northwestern Medicine has led to a new theory regarding the development and cause of endometriosis. The chronically painful disease, which affects 1 in 10 women, has been linked to two previously unstudied genes.

This innovative research regarding endometriosis suggests that an integral part of the disease and its progression is epigenetic modification, which is a process that will either enhance or disrupt the reading of DNA.

Matthew Dyson, research assistant professor of obstetrics and gynecology at Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine, along with Serdar Bulun, MD, chair of obstetrics and gynecology at Feinberg and Northwestern Memorial Hospital, were able to recognize a novel role for a family of key gene regulators found in the uterus.

Until now, the scientific community was looking for a genetic mutation to explain endometriosis, said Bulun, a member of the Center for Genetic Medicine and the Robert H. Lurie Comprehensive Cancer Center of Northwestern University. This is the first conclusive demonstration that the disease develops as a result of alterations in the epigenetic landscape and not from classical genetic mutations.

Heather C. Guidone, Surgical Program Director at The Center for Endometriosis Care explains that, Endometriosis results when tissue similar to that which lines the uterus grows in other areas of the body. The persistent survival of these cells results in chronic pelvic pain, organ dysfunction, infertility and more. Although the cause of the disease has remained unknown on a cellular level, there have been several different models established to explain its development.

Since endometriosis is only found in menstruating primates, it is likely that the unique evolution of uterine development and menstruation are connected with the disease. Retrograde menstruation, the movement of cells up the fallopian tubes and into the pelvis, has long been considered by scientists as a probable cause of endometriosis. Since most women experience retrograde menstruation at some point, this model fails to explain why only ten percent of women develop the disease. In addition, this theory is insufficient at explaining instances where endometriosis arises independent of menstruation.

Bulun and Dyson theorize that there is an epigenetic switch that allows the expression of the genetic receptor GATA6 instead of GATA2. This results in progesterone resistance leading to development of the disease.

We believe an overwhelming number of these altered cells reach the lining of the abdominal cavity, survive and grow, Bulun said. These findings could someday lead to the first noninvasive test for endometriosis.

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Endometriosis Cause And Development Linked To Unstudied Genes

Genomic test to rule out obstructive CAD may reduce need for more invasive diagnostics

PUBLIC RELEASE DATE:

10-Mar-2014

Contact: Kathryn Ruehle kruehle@liebertpub.com 914-740-2100 Mary Ann Liebert, Inc./Genetic Engineering News

New Rochelle, NY, March 10, 2014Nearly $7 billion is spent each year in the U.S. on diagnostic testing of the estimated three million people with symptoms of obstructive coronary artery disease (CAD). A new blood test that detects specific genes activated in individuals with obstructive CAD could exclude the diagnosis without the need for imaging studies or more invasive tests, reducing health care costs, as described in an article in Population Health Management, a peer-reviewed journal from Mary Ann Liebert, Inc., publishers. The article is available free on the Population Health Management website at http://www.liebertpub.com/pop.

Louis Hochheiser (St. John's Medical Center, Jackson, WY), Jessie Juusola and Mark Monane (CardioDx, Palo Alto, CA), and Joseph Ladapo (New York University School of Medicine, NY), use a decision analysis model to compare the cost-effectiveness of "usual care" for obstructive CAD diagnosis with a strategy that includes "gene expression score (GES)-directed care." They present the results and potential value of this new diagnostic approach in the article "Economic Utility of a Blood-Based Genomic Test for the Assessment of Patients with Symptoms Suggestive of Obstructive Coronary Artery Disease".

"Work like this is vital to our understanding as we move from a world of volume to value," says Editor-in-Chief David B. Nash, MD, MBA, Dean and Dr. Raymond C. and Doris N. Grandon Professor, Jefferson School of Population Health, Philadelphia, PA.

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About the Journal

Population Health Management is an authoritative peer-reviewed journal published bimonthly in print and online that reflects the expanding scope of health care management and quality. The Journal delivers a comprehensive, integrated approach to the field of population health and provides information designed to improve the systems and policies that affect health care quality, access, and outcomes. Comprised of peer-reviewed original research papers, clinical research, and case studies, the content encompasses a broad range of chronic diseases (such as cardiovascular disease, cancer, chronic pain, diabetes, depression, and obesity) in addition to focusing on various aspects of prevention and wellness. Tables of content and a sample issue may be viewed on the Population Health Management website at http://www.liebertpub.com/pop. Population Health Management is the official journal of the Population Health Alliance.

About the Publisher

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Genomic test to rule out obstructive CAD may reduce need for more invasive diagnostics

Rice synthetic biologists shine light on genetic circuit analysis

PUBLIC RELEASE DATE:

10-Mar-2014

Contact: David Ruth david@rice.edu 713-348-6327 Rice University

In a significant advance for the growing field of synthetic biology, Rice University bioengineers have created a toolkit of genes and hardware that uses colored lights and engineered bacteria to bring both mathematical predictability and cut-and-paste simplicity to the world of genetic circuit design.

"Life is controlled by DNA-based circuits, and these are similar to the circuits found in electronic devices like smartphones and computers," said Rice bioengineer Jeffrey Tabor, the lead researcher on the project. "A major difference is that electrical engineers measure the signals flowing into and out of electronic circuits as voltage, whereas bioengineers measure genetic circuit signals as genes turning on and off."

In a new paper appearing online today in the journal Nature Methods, Tabor and colleagues, including graduate student and lead author Evan Olson, describe a new, ultra high-precision method for creating and measuring gene expression signals in bacteria by combining light-sensing proteins from photosynthetic algae with a simple array of red and green LED lights and standard fluorescent reporter genes. By varying the timing and intensity of the lights, the researchers were able to control exactly when and how much different genes were expressed.

"Light provides us a powerful new method for reliably measuring genetic circuit activity," said Tabor, an assistant professor of bioengineering who also teaches in Rice's Ph.D. program in systems, synthetic and physical biology. "Our work was inspired by the methods that are used to study electronic circuits. Electrical engineers have tools like oscilloscopes and function generators that allow them to measure how voltage signals flow through electrical circuits. Those measurements are essential for making multiple circuits work together properly, so that more complex devices can be built. We have used our light-based tools as a biological function generator and oscilloscope in order to similarly analyze genetic circuits."

Electronic circuits -- like those in computers, smartphones and other devices -- are made up of components like transistors, capacitors and diodes that are connected with wires. As information -- in the form of voltage -- flows through the circuit, the components act upon it. By putting the correct components in the correct order, engineers can build circuits that perform computations and carry out complex information processing.

Genetic circuits also process information. Their components are segments of DNA that control whether or not a gene is expressed. Gene expression is the process in which DNA is read and converted to produce a product -- such as a protein -- that serves a particular purpose in the cell. If a gene is not "expressed," it is turned off, and its product is not produced. The bacteria used in Tabor's study have about 4,000 genes, while humans have about 20,000. The processes of life are coordinated by different combinations and timings of genes turning on and off.

Each component of a genetic circuit acts on the input it receives -- which may be one or more gene-expression products from other components -- and produces its own gene-expression product as an output. By linking the right genetic components together, synthetic biologists like Tabor and his students construct genetic circuits that program cells to carry out complex functions, such as counting, having memory, growing into tissues, or diagnosing the signatures of disease in the body.

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Rice synthetic biologists shine light on genetic circuit analysis

The Temple of God in the New Covenant: Dispensationalism and Futurism Refuted – Video


The Temple of God in the New Covenant: Dispensationalism and Futurism Refuted
Download (Show 115) mp3 here: http://megiddofilms.podomatic.com/entry/2014-03-08T15_39_37-08_00 https://itunes.apple.com/ie/podcast/megiddo-radio/id737292372...

By: Paul Flynn

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The Temple of God in the New Covenant: Dispensationalism and Futurism Refuted - Video