Dean details plans for $220 million medical school building near UMC

By Conor Shine (contact)

Wednesday, Feb. 6, 2013 | 2:46 p.m.

Plans for a new 280,000-square-foot building in Las Vegas could significantly improve the University of Nevada School of Medicines academic offerings in the valley. But building the new space near University Medical Center will come with a steep price tag, the medical schools dean, Thomas Schwenk, told Clark County commissioners on Wednesday.

Currently, the medical schools academic spaces are spread across a series of leased buildings and jerry-rigged classrooms and conference rooms near the UMC, which is owned by the county, Schwenk said.

The proposed $220 million, six-story building, on county-owned land at the northwest corner of Charleston Boulevard and Shadow Lane, would provide a central location for the school that includes classrooms, offices, a library, lecture halls and some lab space.

During his presentation, Schwenk referred to the building as another campus for the medical school, noting that the proposed Las Vegas building covers as much space as the four buildings that make up the medical school campus in Reno.

I believe this is a major campus that establishes the school as a major presence in Las Vegas; its not just another building, Schwenk said. We have very strong clinical programs lots of physicians, medical students and residents but we dont have the academic space. Thats the issue in Las Vegas.

Construction of the building will require a mix of state and donor funding, Schwenk said, which could be a challenge at a time when the state budget is tight.

Planning for the building is still in the preliminary stages, but it will likely be at least five years before it is completed.

The new Las Vegas building would improve the quality of education students receive and also could be a place for UMC staff to receive continuing education, Schwenk said.

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Dean details plans for $220 million medical school building near UMC

John Stossel – Obama’s Reelection: What It Means For Liberty 11/8/2012 – Video


John Stossel - Obama #39;s Reelection: What It Means For Liberty 11/8/2012
Nov. 8th This video may contain copyrighted material. Such material is made available for educational purposes only. This constitutes a #39;fair use #39; of any such copyrighted material as provided for in Title 17 USC section 107 of the US Copyright Law.

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John Stossel - Obama's Reelection: What It Means For Liberty 11/8/2012 - Video

Liberty House offers help to homeless veterans

He keeps the flag flying outside the facility all the time, even in bad weather and at night.

"As long as a veteran is in the rain and snow, the flag is in the rain and snow," Evans said. "As long as they're in the dark, my flag is in the dark."

Evans is director of programs at Restoring Lives, a faith-based recovery and treatment organization in west Tulsa. Thanks to a $500,000 grant from the Department of Veterans Affairs, the organization renovated a facility to help veterans recovering from addiction or leaving the prison system.

"Working for three years, doing so much and having the work pay off has been wonderful," Evans said. "It's been a growth."

The Liberty House is the latest tool VA officials have in their goal to end homelessness among the veteran population, a goal the department hopes to achieve this decade.

"They put their money where their mouth is for sure," said Melanie Goldman, coordinator of homeless veterans programs for the VA in Tulsa.

The Liberty House fills an important gap in the process in Tulsa by providing that transition from veterans leaving the prison system, she said.

"Now we're working closely with them to help them transition out into some sort of stable setting so they're not going straight to the street or straight to the shelter," Goldman said.

For Evans, the Liberty House is a big step for Restoring Lives. His family has members who have served in the military for generations, including his brother who is a combat medic preparing for deployment to Afghanistan. Evans said he received a medical discharge after he was hurt in the military.

"This is our passion," Evans said.

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Liberty House offers help to homeless veterans

Liberty Ross ‘moves on with Iovine’

Liberty Ross appears to be getting serious about music executive Jimmy Iovine.

The model-turned-actress has moved on from her cheating husband Rupert Sanders and filed for divorce from the shamed director on January 25.

Rumours about her relationship with Jimmy have been swirling since.

TMZ reports that Liberty was seen leaving a New York City hotel with the producer on Friday morning.

The outing appears to have cemented speculation they are now a couple.

Jimmy carries weight in the music industry. He is the co-founder of Interscope Records and is known for grooming superstars like Eminem and Lady Gaga.

His date with Liberty comes just over six months after it emerged Rupert cheated on his wife with his Snow White and the Huntsman star Kristen Stewart.

Pictures of the pair kissing were published by Us Weekly last July.

The images led to Kristens split from boyfriend Robert Pattinson although the couple are believed to have reconciled.

Rupert and Liberty tried couples therapy but efforts to save their marriage were in vain.

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Liberty Ross ‘moves on with Iovine’

Liberty scores points for 5A seeding with win

Thursday night's Class 5A nonleague game between Liberty and Abraham Lincoln didn't draw huge numbers at the gate.

Even the parents were somewhat relatively speaking quiet.

But there were some interested onlookers. Members of the CHSAA seeding committee were conspicuously perched at the top of the stands taking notes, and both head coaches, with their teams needing to make a positive showing, knew it.

"I didn't tell the guys they were going to be here," Liberty coach Ivan Chambers said. "We just came out and played our game."

The visiting Lancers played smart offensive basketball, defended well and continued to improve late in the season, walking away with a 75-62 win over the home- standing Lancers.

"We are finally seeing what we are capable of doing," said Chambers, a former Air Academy girls coach. "We kind of struggled early in the year, but we played a tough schedule ... and those games have paid off for us."

Liberty (10-7) trailed 39-37 midway through the third quarter when it made its run. A 13-0 spurt engineered by bench players Matt Love, Dallin Page and Garet Bohuslavsky put Liberty ahead 50-39 and gave the team's patient offensive set a comfortable lead going to the fourth.

"We didn't want to peak in December or even January," said Chambers, whose bench outscored Lincoln's 40-7. "We wanted to peak in February and we are starting to come out and put a lot of good minutes together."

Lincoln (12-8) clawed to within 67-60 with under three minutes to play, but cold shooting and an 8-0 run at the free-throw line put things out of reach for coach Vince Valdez's team.

"The ball didn't bounce our way because we didn't deserve it," said Valdez, whose team was led by Gabriel Vasquez's 21 points and Jonte Dotson's 15. "This game is so pure, that it seems the fortunate breaks favor the prepared. Liberty was prepared and we weren't."

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Liberty's Virgin Deal Sets Up Media Clash Between Malone and Murdoch

Jim Urquhart / REUTERS

Chairman of Liberty Media John Malone attends the Allen & Co Media Conference in Sun Valley, Idaho in this July 12, 2012 file photo. Malone's Liberty Global Inc struck a deal to buy British cable group Virgin Media, a move that would put the U.S. billionaire up against old rival Rupert Murdoch.

Liberty Globals$16 billion deal to buyBritish cable giant Virgin Media will create one of the largest broadband companies in the world, and sets up Liberty mogul John Malone, the famed U.S. cable financier, in a clash of the media titans against longtime rival Rupert Murdoch and his News Corp. conglomerate. The dealis yet another sign that the media and tech mergers and acquisitions market is revving up to levels not seen since the financial crisis. Earlier this week computer giant Dell announced plans to go private in a $24.4 billion deal.

Virgin Media is the second largest pay-TV company in the U.K. behind Europeansatellitegiant BSkyB, which is majority controlled by News Corp., so the merger instantly pits Malone against Murdoch in theEuropeanmedia market. The Financial Times was first to report news of the impending deal, which is worth a total of $23 billion including debt.Virgin Groups Richard Branson, the colorful billionaire impressario, stands to make about $316 million from the Liberty takeover, according to Bloomberg.

Liberty Global already has nearly 20 million customers, making it the second largest U.S. cable company after Comcast. By adding Virgin Medias 4.9 million subscribers, the combined entity would vault ahead of Comcast to become the largestbroadbandcompany in the U.S. and Europe.(BSkyB has 10.7 million customers.)

(MORE:What News Corp.s Breakup and the Demise of The Daily Mean for the Future of Murdochs Media Empire)

Malone has made no secret about Libertys plans to expand in Europe, where it is already a powerful player in over a dozen markets. For example, Liberty recently increased its stake in Belgian operator Telenet to 58%, although it failed in its attempt to take over the company outright. As part of the Virgin deal, Liberty plans to relocate its legal place of business to the U.K., though it intends to keep its Colorado headquarters as well as its presence on the Nasdaq stock exchange. Virgin Media will retain its brand name in the U.K.

Heres how Reuters describes Malone, a legendary figure in U.S. telecom and media markets:

Dubbed everything from the Cable Guy to Cable Cowboy and even Darth Vader by former U.S. Vice President Al Gore because of his perceived ruthless style, Malone made his fortune through a series of deals that transformed, and ultimately consolidated, the U.S. cable industry into one dominated by a few big players.

Liberty Global together with Virgin Media is a powerful combination, Liberty Global President and CEO Michael Fries said Wednesday on a conference call with investors, as cited by the Associated Press. In fact, it hits the mark on just about every strategic and operating criteria we have established for our company and provides significant benefits to Virgin Media subscribers and investors.In a statement, Freis said that80% of Liberty Globals revenue will come from just five attractive and strong countries the U.K., Germany, Belgium, Switzerland, and the Netherlands.

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Liberty's Virgin Deal Sets Up Media Clash Between Malone and Murdoch

Solomon Islands earthquake triggers tsunami 2013 – Video


Solomon Islands earthquake triggers tsunami 2013
Tsunami alerts across the south Pacific region cancelled following a magnitude-8 earthquake. Link to video: Tsunami alerts cancelled after Solomon earthquake A powerful earthquake off the Solomon Islands generated a tsunami up to 1.5 metres (5ft) high that damaged dozens of homes and left several people missing, presumed dead. Authorities cancelled tsunami warnings on more distant coasts in the Pacific. Officials on the chain of islands reported two 1.5-metre waves hitting the western side of Santa Cruz island on Wednesday, damaging 70 to 80 properties, said George Herming, a spokesman for the prime minister of the Solomon Islands. Many villagers had headed to higher ground as a precaution. The islands #39; police commissioner, John Lansley, said there were unverified reports from local patrols that several people were presumed dead. "At the moment we potentially know of four, but there may of course be more." One of those presumed dead was fishing in a canoe when the first wave hit, sweeping him out to sea, Herming said. Officials were searching for his body. Another woman was believed to have drowned when the water rushed into her village. Four villages on Santa Cruz were hit, two of which were severely damaged, Lansley said. Other areas of the Solomons did not appear to have been seriously affected. Officials were struggling to reach remote parts after the tsunami flooded the airstrip at the nearest airport, littering it with debris. The tsunami formed after a magnitude ...

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Solomon Islands earthquake triggers tsunami 2013 - Video

Solomon Islands villagers flee huge aftershock

A huge aftershock has rocked the Solomon Islands, sending villagers fleeing to higher ground two days after an 8.0 magnitude quake and tsunami killed 13 people.

The 7.1 magnitude tremor on Friday was the latest in a series of aftershocks that have been hampering relief efforts on Ndende island in the eastern Solomons, where Wednesdays tsunami inundated some 20 villages and left thousands homeless.

The latest quake, at a shallow depth of nine kilometres, and just 23 kilometres from the main town, Lata, rocked buildings for 30 to 40 seconds, national disaster management office spokesman Sipuru Rove said.

Rove, who was in the coastal town when the tremor hit, said villagers fled for higher ground.

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The aftershocks have prevented villagers from returning home and hampered their efforts to salvage supplies from damaged houses and bring them to makeshift camps in the rugged interior.

Planes attempting to fly aid to the area have been wary of landing at the damaged airstrip in Lata amid the continuing quakes.

Geoscience Australia said while the latest tremor was smaller than the one which caused the destructive tsunami, as it was much closer to the island of Ndende the intensity of the shaking would have been much greater.

Seismologist David Jepsen said there were no reports of a tsunami wave, and if one was generated it would be smaller than two days ago.

I was more worried about the shaking aspect, he said. This could have caused further issues.

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Solomon Islands villagers flee huge aftershock

Aftershocks hamper relief efforts in tsunami-hit Solomons Islands

SYDNEY Strong aftershocks rattled the Solomon Islands on Friday, hampering relief efforts to tsunami-ravaged villages and forcing the South Pacific nation's prime minister to forgo a visit to the stricken area, where nine deaths have been confirmed.

Prime Minister Gordon Darcy Lilo was on a plane to Santa Cruz Island in the eastern Solomons to assess damage when an aftershock hit, said Silas Lilo, a spokesman for his office, forcing his plane to return to the capital, Honiara.

9 Photos

The plane made a second attempt to reach the island and landed successfully late Friday, said Andrew Catford, the Solomon Islands director for the relief agency World Vision. The plane - the first to attempt to reach Santa Cruz since Wednesday's tsunami - was carrying shelter kits, water carriers, medical supplies and medical staff, though the prime minister was not able to join the crew on the second trip. A boat with more supplies was expected to arrive Friday night, Catford said.

Officials were already struggling to reach the isolated region when a magnitude-6.6 aftershock hit Friday morning, damaging roads in the island's main town of Lata and preventing aid workers stationed there from reaching people on the coast, Catford said. The aftershock, the most significant since the 8.0 earthquake that sparked Wednesday's tsunami, didn't produce any tsunami warnings itself.

"My staff said it felt stronger than the initial earthquake and people are very concerned. Most of Lata town was evacuated. It's like a ghost town," Catford said. "We've had over 115 aftershocks, but unlike all the others, this one moved vertically up and down. For the first time, it's created cracks in the roads."

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A stronger magnitude-7.1 magnitude aftershock struck late Friday. There was no tsunami risk and no immediate reports of damage.

Australian Foreign Minister Bob Carr announced Friday that his government will help deliver emergency food and medical supplies and conduct aerial reconnaissance of disaster-affected areas. Carr plans to fly to the Solomons on Sunday to discuss the recovery effort.

Wednesday's earthquake triggered waves 1.5 meters (5 feet) tall that roared inland on Santa Cruz, damaging or destroying around 100 homes.

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New health care program for uninsured Cuyahoga County residents

CLEVELAND, OH (WOIO) -

The MetroHealth System has received approval from federal officials to launch a Medicaid waiver program that will provide a medical home and health coverage for up to 30,000 uninsured residents of Cuyahoga County. The program began Friday.

The program, called MetroHealth Care Plus, is the first in Ohio to provide healthcare coverage to more of the uninsured. It is designed to provide the high-quality services people need to maintain their health, while also reducing healthcare spending.

"We are grateful that the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, the State of Ohio's Office of Medical Assistance and our own Cuyahoga County government shared our commitment to reduce the uninsured rate in Cuyahoga County, and to improve the health status and quality of care for thousands of county residents," said Edward Hills, DDS, Interim President and CEO of MetroHealth.

"I particularly want to thank Ohio Medicaid Director John McCarthy, Cuyahoga County Executive Edward FitzGerald and Cuyahoga County Council for working with us to make this happen. I also want to thank U.S. Senator Sherrod Brown, Representatives Marcia Fudge, Marcy Kaptur, Jim Renacci, and former Representatives Steven LaTourette and Dennis Kucinich for expressing their support for the waiver with CMS."

The MetroHealth System will finance this care locally with the $36 million annual subsidy it receives from Cuyahoga County taxpayers, which allows the MetroHealth Care Plus program to leverage another $64 million in annual federal Medicaid matching funds. No state dollars are being used to pay for the demonstration project.

"MetroHealth will be on the forefront of expanding health coverage to uninsured Ohioans- helping to improve access to appropriate health care and reduce costs to taxpayers and businesses in Ohio," said Senator Sherrod Brown. "By covering up to 30,000 uninsured Ohioans, MetroHealth will improve the health of Ohioans while reducing costly emergency room visits."

"I commend all the parties at the federal, state and county level who worked with MetroHealth to bring expanded healthcare coverage to approximately 30,000 uninsured residents of Cuyahoga County," said Congresswoman Marcia L. Fudge.

"This decision will not only enable MetroHealth to provide the quality medical care they need but it will also help significantly reduce healthcare costs for everyone by reducing the use of emergency room care."

"As the first program of its kind in Ohio, MetroHealth has taken a leadership role in expanding health coverage for the uninsured and reducing the cost of healthcare," said Cuyahoga County Executive Ed FitzGerald.

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New health care program for uninsured Cuyahoga County residents

Harvard Pilgrim calculator helps monitor health care cost

Harvard Pilgrim Health Care is preparing to launch a cost and quality calculator, an online tool designed to allow members to figure health care costs and compare providers.

Eric Schultz, president and CEO of Harvard Pilgrim, said the Now I Know tool will give members a new level of transparency to compare cost and quality.

"We believe that knowledgeable and empowered members are the key to improving quality and reducing the growth in health care spending," Schultz said.

Set to be released later this year, Now I Know will give users financial information on their policy, displaying the deductible and how much of it has been paid. If a patient has paid $300 toward a $2,000 deductible, for example, the screen will show the $1,700 remaining deductible.

Choosing from more than 700 medical procedures listed on the Now I Know site, doctors and hospitals throughout Harvard's network of providers are listed. The user can see how much a provider charges for a given service, and how much they will need to pay out of pocket versus what will be covered.

Beth Roberts, senior vice president of regional markets at Harvard Pilgrim, said the site is a more developed version of a previous Harvard-Pilgrim site, which helped patients find low-cost providers.

"Let's say I needed knee surgery. I could go onto this tool and find out the approximate cost at multiple hospitals and be able to make an informed decision about a cost that feels comfortable to me," Roberts said.

She said what distinguishes the new tool is that it integrates cost and quality, two of the top health care considerations.

"This is for folks who want to do more self-service, plan and get concrete information linked to their plan design," she said. "This gives you cost and quality, but the fact that it links to both is what sets it apart."

The site is intended to save money for both patients and Harvard Pilgrim. Roberts said the nonprofit, which serves more than a million members in Massachusetts, New Hampshire and Maine, will save because of lower payments to providers - the less money a procedure costs, the less money Harvard-Pilgrim is liable for. By choosing their own providers, patients will also be helping to reduce Harvard-Pilgrim's administrative costs, Roberts said.

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State proposals to expand health care coverage to poor deserve support: Opinion

OUR STATE has an opportunity to lead the nation in paving the way for improved access to health care for underserved and low-income citizens, who represent a disproportionate share of the nation's health care costs because they are unable to afford health insurance. This population also disproportionately faces environmental and nutritional issues, as well as chronic conditions, that themselves exacerbate health problems, creating a vicious cycle of growing health care needs without corresponding health coverage.

On Jan. 28, California lawmakers introduced a series of proposals to help implement the Affordable Care Act - President Obama's national health care overhaul - and to expand Medi-Cal, the state's public insurance program for the poor. The proposals were the first part of a special session, requested by Gov. Jerry Brown in his State of State speech on Jan. 24, that was dedicated expressly to implementation of the overhaul.

Arguably the most significant of these bills is one to streamline the enrollment process for Medi-Cal, with the aim being to enroll hundreds of thousands of Californians - up to perhaps as many as half a million - who are eligible for the program but have not signed up. Additionally, a proposal to expand the income levels for Medi-Cal eligibility could make another 1.4 million Californians eligible for the coverage.

Though the federal government foots most of the bill for Medi-Cal, implementation of these newest

It would be money well spent, in my view, as it would follow the "spending money to make money" philosophy. The costs for enhancing Medi-Cal coverage, and thus health care access, for up to nearly 2 million people pale in comparison to the health care costs, and potential care costs, that will be generated by that same, uninsured population over time. From a dollars-and-cents standpoint, it simply makes sense, even if an initial outlay of several million dollars is needed to make it happen.

Beyond and above the money, though, stand the people themselves. From a humanistic perspective, expanding coverage for this population is clearly the right thing to do, for it fulfills what I believe to be a social duty all of us carry to help those among us with the most limited means. Their challenges are of the very basic variety - feeding, clothing and housing themselves and their loved ones. A "luxury" like paying for health care coverage, or having the cash on hand for a trip to the emergency room, the dentist or the eye doctor, is beyond the realm of their daily existence.

Yes, some see them as the face of the health care "problem," but that is a deeply mistaken perception. What they truly represent is our finest opportunity to make the system work for everyone; the improved health and ease of care access they will one day enjoy is the benchmark by which we will gauge not only the efficacy of health care itself, but also the depth of our commitment to our fellow citizens.

Noble words and intentions cannot quickly solve the problems at our doorstep, to be sure. In addition to the funding issues attached to implementation of the ACA and an expanded Medi-Cal program, an ongoing shortage of physicians will make simply finding enough doctors for the larger pool of insured citizens a stiff challenge. Bureaucracies also simply do not disappear overnight, nor do the myriad rules and regulations that are their stock in trade. Navigating these waters will continue to be tricky, especially as the landscape changes.

But keep this in mind. Our country has the finest health care professionals in the world, expertly trained and blessed with access to superior technology and resources. The shining city on the hill that represents the best of our health care system has welcomed millions of us, offering healthier todays and brighter tomorrows through education, innovation, compassion and caring.

But that city cannot be reached by millions more of us. Now is the time to help them successfully make the journey.

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State proposals to expand health care coverage to poor deserve support: Opinion

Nonprofit touted as key to cutting cost of public health care

The hospital districts in Travis and Nueces counties have publicly owned, privately operated hospitals, setting them apart from their urban peers across Texas. But as the two communities begin an overhaul of the way they provide health care to low-income and uninsured residents, they are taking different paths.

Both counties, along with the rest of the state, are participating in the so-called 1115 Medicaid waiver program a sweeping overhaul of the federal-state program that covers health care for poor, elderly and disabled people. Medicaid has become increasingly expensive, and Texas sought the federal waiver to find creative ways to do Medicaid care better and cheaper.

Travis County has devised a one-of-a-kind plan that gives the hospital district board new authority to hold hospitals and health care providers accountable for the dollars they get, Seton and Central officials said.

Central Health, the hospital district, is creating a new nonprofit group with its partner, the Seton Healthcare Family. The new group will be called the Community Care Collaborative. Over the next four years, the collaborative will distribute several hundred million dollars in public money to projects that the state has judged to be successful at improving health care and increasing efficiencies. The public Central Healths board will oversee the nonprofit by setting policy and maintaining ultimate control over the money, district officials said Thursday.

Government authorities in Nueces and other counties wont have that same power.

The hospitals in Nueces County, like those elsewhere in Texas, will be paid directly for their performance and are not required to share information with the hospital district, said Jonny Hipp, the Nueces hospital districts CEO. That means the hospitals will have control of the money without another local board looking over their shoulders.

Hipp called Central Healths approach innovative.

I think a lot of folks are going to look at Travis County, and I genuinely think that, once the things are in place, if they work the way they say theyre going to work we might consider a nonprofit model, he said.

The Central Health-Seton collaborative will provide regular financial reports to the Central Health board, which also will publicly approve its budget. Central Health will receive reports on how well the changes are going, and it will set up an electronic network of information about patients aimed at cutting duplication of services.

The 1115 waiver requires hospitals and other providers to report more information than ever before, said Seton executive Greg Hartman, president and CEO of the publicly owned, Seton-operated University Medical Center Brackenridge.

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Beaufort County business owners sweating new health care laws

Vicki Head, co-owner of Hilton Head Auto Body, and about 40 other Beaufort County business owners turned their heels on sunny, warm weather on a recent Tuesday and instead piled into a dark conference room.

Their hope: figure out what new federal health care changes will mean for them and others.

"It's scary, and there's so much uncertainty about what it will mean for us," said Head, who provides health care coverage for her 24 employees at two Hilton Head locations. "Our employees work hard. They're on their feet all day. They're bent over. They need and deserve good coverage. But we need information on how to do it with all of these changes."

Business owners across the state echo the sentiment Head and others voiced during a seminar in Bluffton by Beacon Insurance Group, a local agency. With the reelection of President Barack Obama and talk of a quick overturn of federal health care reform muted, business owners are scratching their heads over the new health care law that many deem complicated and possibly costly.

There's still time for them to figure it out.

Some provisions have already taken effect, but the major changes will be phased in starting in 2014, according to state health care experts working with the S.C. Department of Health and Human Services.

Those changes will create winners and losers, according to the president of Carolina Care Plan, one of the presenters at the seminar Head and others attended.

"We'll see premium rates that increase for some and will decrease for others," Carson Meehan said.

The number of employees and the age of those employees are among the factors that dictate just how much the new law affects a business, Meehan added.

SMALL BUSINESS VS. BIG BUSINESS

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Beaufort County business owners sweating new health care laws

The Hottest Jobs In Health Care Right Now

The health care industry has boomed over the last few years,growing twice as fast as the national economy.

As the industry continues to grow, there will be a high demand for quality health care professionals.

According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics , the health care and social assistance industry is expected to generate the "largest number of jobs, 5.6 million, at an annual rate of 3.0 percent" between now and 2020 the most dramatic growth compared to any sector in the country.

And this growth won't be slowing down any time soon. A recent paper by Georgetown Universityreported that around 78 million baby boomers will be older than 65 by 2030, which means that the need for health care professionals is higher now than ever before.

As a huge proportion of the population gets older, there will be a high demand for better health care services, cutting-edge technology, and new drugs along with the doctors, nurses, lab researchers, technicians, and administrators who can propel the industry forward.

Robin Singleton,Executive Vice President and the national health care practice leader for DHR International, a recruiting firm responsible for placing executive s, explained how the health care industry is transforming, especially under President Obama's health care reforms.

"The days of the independent, not-for-profit community hospitals are shrinking because they don't have the resources for the technology, medical devices and the technology to capture all of this data they have to capture that will satisfy under the new health reform," Singleton said.

Instead, health care providers the hospitals, pharmaceutical, life science and biotechnology companies are consolidating together to create large self-sustaining systems.

There's also a greater emphasis on service and patient satisfaction within these new health care mega-systems.

That's partially because the Meaningful Use Act under Obama's reform says that these organizations are going to have to demonstrate "meaningful use" in order to get paid the maximum amounts allowable from the government(for Medicare and Medicaid patients) and the insurance companies. This means that providers can only fully get reimbursed if they have demonstrated through their outcomes data that the services they provide are appropriate and satisfactory to the patients.

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The Hottest Jobs In Health Care Right Now