Anti-aging medicine earns converts and critics

Dee Martin of Marietta leads an active life. At 51, she hits the gym five days a week. She eats organic foods. Her weekend activities include mountain hikes and bike riding. But for some reason, no matter how much she followed the rules, she never seemed to drop the little bit of weight she wanted to lose.

After a visit to Dr. Ken Knott for a shoulder injury led to a discussion about hormone levels and testing, Martin made the connection. She had an underactive thyroid.

To improve her thyroid function, she began taking a thyroid supplement. She also took bioidentical hormones hormones that are identical in molecular structure to hormones made in the body. She tweaked her diet, per Dr. Knotts suggestions. In two months, Martin lost 15 pounds. Her skin, which had been dry and loose a trait she had assumed shed inherited from her mother became smoother and firmer, with her wrinkles less noticeable.

Martin was hooked on a growing, if controversial, medical focus known as anti-aging medicine.

I just want to age gracefully the way I am supposed to, Martin said. With Dr. Knotts program, you dont feel as old or look as old.

Knott is one of more than 100 doctors in the state listed with the American Academy of Anti-Aging Medicine (A4M), an organization created in 1992 to advance technologies that prevent and treat age-related disease as well as support research on extending life. Anti-aging medicine is not recognized as a specialty by the American Board of Medical Specialties. Doctors who practice anti-aging medicine use a range of treatments and therapies, including bioidentical hormones and supplements, that continue to be the subject of debate in the medical community.

Using hormones to replace a deficiency is generally accepted by most physicians, said Dr. Lawrence Phillips, an endocrinologist at Emory University Hospital. But using hormones to battle old age or improve health in non-deficient individuals is unproven.

No research has shown that hormone therapies add years to life or prevent age-related frailty, according to the National Institute on Aging (NIA), part of the federal governments National Institutes of Health (NIH). Some hormones may have harmful side effects, according to the NIA, and the bioidentical hormones prescribed by many anti-aging doctors have not been subjected to rigorous testing for safety and efficacy.

It is easy to get seduced into the claim that there is something called anti-aging medicine, said S. Jay Olshansky, a longevity specialist and professor at the School of Public Health at the University of Illinois at Chicago. Exercise is about the only equivalent of a fountain of youth that exists today. It improves skin elasticity, muscle tone, bone density and you can do it for free, or pretty much free.

Anti-aging medicine has a long history, Olshansky said, with treatments such as caloric restriction and a precursor to hormone therapy surfacing in the pre-20th century. While many of todays anti-aging practitioners have their patients health and best interests in mind, Olshansky said, others are not far removed from the dollar-chasing hucksters of the past. I am optimistic that something is going to happen and happen soon that will allow us to slow the biological process, Olshansky said. But it is not anything that is out there today.

Read more here:
Anti-aging medicine earns converts and critics

Author Discusses How Metaphysical Concepts can Transform Lives

Harold Sherritt analyzes spiritualist principles in informative nonfictionSunrise, FL (PRWEB) September 22, 2012 Harold Sherritt sets out to enlighten readers about metaphysical principles and how to apply them in their daily lives in his nonfiction guide, “In Search Of Spiritual Understanding: A guide to spiritual enlightenment and health” (published by AuthorHouse).Applying the knowledge he ...

See the article here:

Author Discusses How Metaphysical Concepts can Transform Lives

Florida wants NASA land for commercial spaceport

CAPE CANAVERAL, Florida With an eye toward developing a commercial spaceport, Florida has asked NASA to transfer 150 acres of land north of the shuttle launch pads and the shuttle runway to Space Florida, the state's aerospace development agency.

"Florida believes that the properties identified in this request are excess to the needs of the U.S. government," Lieutenant Governor Jennifer Carroll, who is also chairwoman of Space Florida, wrote in letter to NASA chief Charles Bolden and Ray LaHood, secretary of Department of Transportation, which oversees commercial space transportation in the United States.

The letter, dated Sept. 20, was posted on the state's Sunburst public records website.

Space news from NBCNews.com

Science editor Alan Boyle's blog: Sending your child's toy train into the stratosphere is no mean feat, but turning that train into an animated character requires a special blend of magic.

A week earlier, Space Florida agreed to spend $2.3 million for environmental studies, land surveys, title searches, appraisals and other activities to lay the groundwork for Cape Canaveral Spaceport, a proposed state-owned commercial complex that would be licensed by the Federal Aviation Administration and operated like an airport.

"If we want to be satisfied with 10 to 12 government launches a year, I don't have to do anything," Space Florida president and chief executive Frank DiBello told Reuters.

But he said those launches would likely end when commercial sites elsewhere are able to offer affordable rates.

"What has existed for decades has been good, but the marketplace has been largely governmental. What commercial market there was, we have essentially lost overseas. I'm not only anxious to bring some of that back, but I'm anxious for the next-generation of providers, both the launch companies and the satellite owner-operators, to have Florida be the place where they seek to do business," DiBello said.

Similar commercial spaceports have been set up in New Mexico, where Virgin Galactic, an offshoot of Richard Branson's Virgin Group, plans to fly a fleet of suborbital passenger spaceships, as well as Alaska, Virginia and California.

Originally posted here:

Florida wants NASA land for commercial spaceport

NASA considers orbital outpost near moon as next big project

Top NASA officials have picked a leading candidate for the agency's next major mission: construction of an outpost that would send astronauts farther from Earth than they've ever been.

Called the gateway spacecraft, it would hover in orbit on the far side of the moon, support a small crew and function as a staging area for future missions to the moon and Mars.

NASA Administrator Charles Bolden briefed the White House earlier this month on details of the proposal, but it was unclear whether the agency had the administration's support. Of critical importance is the cost, which would probably be billions, if not tens of billions, of dollars.

Documents obtained by the Orlando Sentinel show that NASA wants to build a small outpost likely with parts left over from the $100-billion International Space Station at what's known as the Earth-Moon Lagrange Point 2, a spot about 38,000 miles from the moon.

At that location, the combined gravities of the Earth and moon reach equilibrium, making it possible to "stick" an outpost there with minimal power required to keep it in place.

To get there, NASA would use the massive rocket and space capsule that it is developing as a successor to the retired space shuttle. A first flight of that rocket is planned for 2017, and construction of the outpost would begin two years later, according to NASA documents.

Potential missions include the study of nearby asteroids or robotic trips to the moon that would gather rocks and bring them back to the outpost. The outpost also would lay the groundwork for more-ambitious trips to Mars' moons and even Mars itself, about 140 million miles away on average.

Placing a "spacecraft at the Earth-Moon Lagrange point beyond the moon as a test area for human access to deep space is the best near-term option to develop required flight experience and mitigate risk," the NASA report concluded.

From NASA's perspective, the outpost would solve several problems.

It would give purpose to the Orion space capsule and the Space Launch System rocket, which are being developed at a cost of about $3 billion annually. It would involve NASA's international partners, as blueprints for the outpost suggest using a Russian-built module and components from Italy. And the outpost would represent a baby step toward NASA's larger goal: human footprints on Mars.

Link:

NASA considers orbital outpost near moon as next big project

Florida wants NASA land to develop commercial spaceport

CAPE CANAVERAL, Florida (Reuters) - With an eye toward developing a commercial spaceport, Florida has asked NASA to transfer 150 acres of land north of the shuttle launch pads and the shuttle runway to Space Florida, the state's aerospace development agency. "Florida believes that the properties identified in this request are excess to the needs of the U.S. ...

Go here to read the rest:

Florida wants NASA land to develop commercial spaceport

NASA considers orbital outpost near moon

Published: Sunday, September 23, 2012, 12:01 a.m.

The "gateway spacecraft" would hover in orbit on the far side of the moon, support a small crew and function as a staging area for future missions to the moon and Mars.

At 277,000 miles from Earth, the outpost would be far more remote than the current space station, which orbits a little more than 200 miles above Earth. The distance raises complex questions of how to protect astronauts from the radiation of deep space - and rescue them if something goes wrong.

NASA Administrator Charles Bolden briefed the White House earlier this month on details of the proposal, but it was unclear whether it had the administration's support. Of critical importance is the cost, which would probably be billions, if not tens of billions, of dollars.

Documents obtained by The Orlando Sentinel show that NASA wants to build a small outpost -- likely with parts left over from the $100-billion International Space Station -- at what's known as the Earth-Moon Lagrange Point 2, a spot about 38,000 miles from the moon.

At that location, the combined gravities of the Earth and moon reach equilibrium, making it possible to "stick" an outpost there with minimal power required to keep it in place.

To get there, NASA would use the massive rocket and space capsule that it is developing as a successor to the retired space shuttle. A first flight of that rocket is planned for 2017, and construction of the outpost would begin two years later, according to NASA planning documents.

Potential missions include the study of nearby asteroids or robotic trips to the moon that would gather rocks and bring them back to the outpost. The outpost also would lay the groundwork for more ambitious trips to Mars' moons and even Mars itself, about 140 million miles away on average.

Placing a "spacecraft at the Earth-Moon Lagrange point beyond the moon as a test area for human access to deep space is the best near-term option to develop required flight experience and mitigate risk," the NASA report concluded.

From NASA's perspective, the outpost would solve several problems.

The rest is here:

NASA considers orbital outpost near moon

Society voices concern over proposed traditional medicine act

PETALING JAYA, (Bernama) - The Malaysian Society for Complementary Medicine (MSCM) has voiced concern over the proposed Traditional and Complementary Medicine (TCM) Act, saying its enforcement would force practitioners without paper qualifications out of the practice.

MSCM president Dr Lee Chee Pheng said there was no ''grandfather clause'' in the bill allowing TCM practitioners without certificates to continue with their practice.

A grandfather clause is a situation in which an old rule continues to apply to some existing situations, while a new rule will apply to all future situations.

"The Health ministry should not ignore them as this group of people has learned the traditional method of treatment from their forefathers and they do not carry any paper qualifications.

"There are many practitioners in the traditional massage industry who are blind and are over 60. How could they be possibly undergo formal anatomy and physiology classes in order to get certified?" he told Bernama in an exclusive interview.

Lee said that if the government felt that it was ready to enforce the law, then the act should be implemented gradually over time so as to ensure that the transition of the qualified and ''non-qualified practitioners was equalled out, or it would impose a problem for the practitioners.

MSCM treasurer Julian Leicester said Health ministry officials should include the grandfather clause in the bill to protect the originality of TCM and the practitioners of their livelihood and career and that the laws governing the industry should not be ''threatening''.

He said there were many senior aged practitioners who had learnt the traditional method of treatment from their forefathers, and the Health Ministry should not ''kill them'' totally.

"The grandfather clause in the TCM Act is important to give the opportunity to the senior practitioners without qualification to upgrade themselves as this group of people will not be able to go to school to get certificates.

The TCM Bill 2012, which was tabled for first reading in the Dewan Rakyat on June 27, among others, requires all practitioners to be registered with the proposed TCM council.

View original post here:

Society voices concern over proposed traditional medicine act

General : Parliament: Islamic Medicine Included In Traditional And Complimentary Medicine Bill 2012

KUALA LUMPUR, Sept 24 (Bernama) -- The Health Ministry has agreed to include Islamic medicine practices in the Traditional and Complementary Medicine (TCM) Bill 2012 after this was agreed upon by the Malaysia Islamic Development Department (Jakim) and all the states' Islamic religious departments.

Read the rest here:

General : Parliament: Islamic Medicine Included In Traditional And Complimentary Medicine Bill 2012

Proposed Traditional Medicine Act will drive some practitioners out of business

PETALING JAYA: Traditional medicine practitioners without paper qualification will be put out of business once the proposed Traditional and Complementary Medicine (TCM) Act is passed and enforced.

To safeguard the livelihood of these practitioners, the Malaysian Society for Complementary Medicine (MSCM) wants a clause that allows existing practioners without paper qualification to continue practising and the requirement for paper qualification be applied to newcomers.

MSCM president Dr Lee Chee Pheng said Monday there was no 'grandfather clause' in the bill allowing TCM practitioners without certificates to continue with their practice.

A grandfather clause allows an old rule to continue to apply in certain existing situations while the new rule is set apply in all future situations.

"The Health Ministry should not ignore this group of people who have learned the traditional method of treatment from their forefathers. However, they do not carry any paper qualifications.

"There are many practitioners in the traditional massage industry who are blind and are over 60. How can they possibly undergo formal anatomy and physiology classes in order to get certified?" he asked in an exclusive interview with Bernama.

Lee said that if the government felt that it was ready to enforce the law, then the act should be implemented gradually over time so as to ensure that the transition of the 'qualified' and 'non-qualified' practitioners was balanced out.

Otherwise, it would impose a problem for the practitioners who are skilled but have no paper qualification, he said.

The TCM Bill 2012, which was tabled for first reading in the Dewan Rakyat on June 27, among others, requires all practitioners to be registered with the proposed TCM council.

Under the act, TCM practitioners must be provisionally registered and must undergo a residency of not less than one year with any hospital or institution identified by the council.

See the original post:

Proposed Traditional Medicine Act will drive some practitioners out of business

Islamic medicine included in Traditional and Complementary Medicine Bill 2012

KUALA LUMPUR: The Health Ministry has agreed to include Islamic medicine practices in the Traditional and Complementary Medicine (TCM) Bill 2012 after this was agreed upon by the Malaysia Islamic Development Department (Jakim) and all the states' Islamic religious departments.

Minister Datuk Seri Liow Tiong Lai said the amendment notice to include Islamic medicine in the Bill would be issued during the debate session in the Dewan Rakyat.

"Prior to this, we did not include Islamic medicine in the Bill as we did not have Jakim's approval, but now Jakim and all the states' religious departments have agreed.

"After this, Islamic medicine practitioners and bomohs will have to be registered through a council to be established," he told Bernama at at the Parliament lobby.

Earlier, Liow had tabled the Traditional and Complementary Medicine Bill for the second reading in the Dewan Rakyat.

Barisan Nasional and opposition lawmakers have asked the ministry to consider including Islamic medicine in the Bill as modern medicine and Islamic medicine were equally important, besides the increasing popularity of Islamic or traditional medicine among patients.

Federation of Islamic Medicine Practitioners' Associations (GAPPIMA) chairman Mohd Fauzi Mustaffa had also expressed concern over the future of Islamic medicine and increasing cases of using black magic (by bomohs) to treat patients.

Under the TCM Bill, Liow said his ministry, with the cooperation of Jakim, would be monitoring the registration process for Islamic and Malay, Chinese and Indian TCM practitioners through a council that would be set up.

He said such practitioners who failed to register themselves could face a jail term of up to two years and a fine of RM30,000 to RM50,000.

When tabling the Bill, the Health Minister said nearly 15,000 TCM practitioners would not escape stern action if found to have cheated patients or have contravened the law.

Visit link:

Islamic medicine included in Traditional and Complementary Medicine Bill 2012

Taiwan Fishing Vessels Head for Disputed Islands

Over 70 Taiwanese fishing vessels are heading for two disputed islands in the East China Sea to protest their nationalization by the Japanese government, Kyodo News reported.

The vessels left the port of Yilan in northeastern Taiwan earlier on Monday and are expected to be within 37 kilometers of the islands by 5 a.m. local time on Tuesday, Kyodo said. It had no information concerning further moves by the Taiwanese vessels.

Kyodo said that three Chinese navy ships briefly entered Japanese territorial waters around the islands on Monday morning. Two of the ships were equipped with long-range sonar equipment, according to Japanese coast guard information.

Within a few hours all three left, to join three others on station just outside the territorial waters.

The islands, known as the Senkaku to Japan and Diaoyu to China, have been at the center of a dispute recently that has triggered violent anti-Japanese protests across China and caused Japanese companies to suspend operations in China.

Both Taiwan - to which the pre-1949 Chinese government moved - and China reject Japans claims to the islands, which were controlled by the United States after World War II and granted to Japan in 1972.

Japan claims that China and Taiwan only began to take an interest in the islands in the 1970s, when evidence was discovered of major subsurface resource deposits in their territorial waters.

The issue flared up after Japan nationalized three of the five islands two weeks ago, which previously belonged to a private owner.

Beijing and Tokyo cannot agree on a maritime border in the economic zones around the islands. Japan claims it has occupied the islands since 1895, while Beijing says Japanese charts dating back to 1783 show the islands as Chinese territory.

Original post:

Taiwan Fishing Vessels Head for Disputed Islands

China surveillance ships enter waters near disputed islands

TOKYO (Reuters) - Two Chinese marine surveillance ships entered what Japan considers its territorial waters near disputed islands in the East China Sea on Monday, the Japanese Coast Guard said, a move bound to raise tension between Asia's two largest economies. China's Xinhua news agency confirmed that two civilian surveillance ships were undertaking a "rights defense" patrol near the islands ...

Read this article:

China surveillance ships enter waters near disputed islands

Carrington Colleges Group Campuses Celebrate Health Care Recognition Month with Interactive Health Care Focused Events

PHOENIX--(BUSINESS WIRE)--

Carrington College and Carrington College California, part of the DeVry family of schools, will host a variety of events offering complimentary health care services in celebration of Health Care Recognition month. Students at 20 campuses will provide dental kits and demonstrations, host blood drives, perform basic health care checkups, teach the public about basic respiratory care and offer CPR certifications. Because events, times and dates will vary throughout the month of October, call (855) 237-1134 for campus-specific details.

Carrington Colleges Group is proud to celebrate Health Care Recognition month. Our students and staff embody the spirit of what this recognition represents, said Robert Paul, president of Carrington Colleges Group. By participating in the month-long events, students will demonstrate their expertise in a real-world environment while also promoting to the community a better awareness of health care.

Carrington students enrolled in related programs, such as dental hygiene, nursing, medical assisting and respiratory care, will help host the events. The students will use the experience as a learning opportunity to refine their skills and promote career growth within expanding health care fields they can pursue following graduation.

Many career experts point to favorable growth projections by the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics for careers in health care fields. For example, employment prospects for qualified dental hygienists are expected to accelerate by approximately 38 percent through 2020, much faster than average. The job outlook for qualified registered nurses (26 percent projected increase through 2020), medical assistants (31 percent projected increase through 2020) and respiratory therapists (28 percent projected increase through 2020) is also extremely promising.

For more information about degree and certificate programs offered at Carrington College and Carrington College California campuses, or to register for classes, go to carrington.edu or call (855) 237-1134.

About Carrington Colleges Group

Carrington Colleges Group offer programs through two separate institutions, Carrington College and Carrington College California, to prepare students for careers in health care, criminal justice, business and graphic design. The colleges offer a diverse range of over 20 programs that lead to a certificate or associate degree. The colleges provide employment-focused, outcome-based, postsecondary education and training.

Carrington Colleges Group is a part of DeVry Inc. (DV), a global provider of educational services. For more information about Carrington Colleges Group, visit http://www.carringtoncollegesgroup.com.

See original here:

Carrington Colleges Group Campuses Celebrate Health Care Recognition Month with Interactive Health Care Focused Events

IOM: Physicians play key role in stopping health system waste

Washington To cut down on what it says is a massive amount of waste and inefficiency in health care, an Institute of Medicine report is recommending that physicians and other health professionals become part of a learning system that uses new clinical support tools and payment models linking performance to patient outcomes, as well as a team approach to care management.

A panel convened by the institute to look at the challenges facing the U.S. health system found that unnecessary services, fraud and excessive administrative costs accounted for about 30%, or $750 billion, of total health spending in 2009. Wasted resources have human consequences, according to the report, Best Care at Lower Cost: The Path to Continuously Learning Health Care in America. According to one outside estimate, 75,000 deaths may have been prevented in 2005 if the quality of care in all of the states had risen to the level of care of the highest-performing state in the nation.

Our health care system lags in its ability to adapt, affordably meet patients needs and consistently achieve better outcomes, said Mark Smith, MD, chair of the IOM committee that wrote the report. Dr. Smith cited examples of these inefficiencies during a press event to discuss the reports 10 main recommendations on transforming the health care system.

Cost and complexity of health care are the two issues at stake, Dr. Smith said. Physicians in private practices can interact with as many as 229 other physicians in 117 different practices for their Medicare patients alone. Some of this interaction relies solely on outdated technology from the last century, such as telephones and faxes. Who uses faxes anymore? he asked.

The cost problems are known as well, Dr. Smith continued. For 31 of the past 40 years, health care has been increasing at a greater rate than the economy as a whole and now comprises roughly 18% of the nations gross domestic product.

Getting rid of health care inefficiencies and waste requires a broad transformation to a system that adopts new clinical and information technology tools to manage patient care better. Unlike the situation in 1999, when the IOMs landmark patient safety report To Err Is Human: Building a Safer Health System was released, the industry today has newfound access to computing and connectivity tools to make substantial gains on cost and quality, Dr. Smith said. Our sense is the system must learn continuously, that patients, clinicians and the communities they reside in have to be part of constant circle of the generation of evidence and capturing of information from patient care that can then be returned to scientific knowledge.

Current payment methods also foster inefficient care, the report stated, advising that pay instead should be based on care outcomes and the principle of providing optimal care at lower cost, instead of on individual products and services. Payers should adopt outcome- and value-oriented payment models, contracting policies, and benefit design to reward and support high-quality, team-based care that focuses on patients needs, the IOM report stated.

Physicians, particularly older ones, have been resistant to such changes, said Paul Keckley, PhD, executive director of the Deloitte Center for Health Solutions in Washington. They invest a lot of time to get prepared to practice, and then the rules change and theyre frustrated, he said.

Health care comprises roughly 18% of the U.S. gross domestic product.

Investment costs are tied to information technology, to transferring from a physician-centric to a team-based delivery model, and to shifting incentives from volume to outcomes. And its coming at a pretty difficult time, when the health systems costs are a major issue.

Excerpt from:

IOM: Physicians play key role in stopping health system waste

Health Care: Three North Bay hospitals make U.S. ‘top performer’ list

Sutter Medical Center of Santa Rosa and Kaiser Foundationhospitals in Santa Rosa and Vacaville were the three North Bay facilities on latest list of the nations top performers in key quality measures by The Joint Commission, the leading accreditor ofU.S.health care organizations.

Sutter Santa Rosa said it was recognized for exemplary performance in using evidence-based clinical processes shown to improve care for certain conditions, including heart attack, heart failure, pneumonia, surgical care, childrens asthma, stroke and venous thrombo embolism, as well as inpatient psychiatric services.

Kaiser Permanente said in the past several years it has had an intensive focus on improving the care and service experience for members.

The hospitals were among 620 in the U.S.that earned the distinction this year from The Joint Commission.

Eachtop performerhospital met two 95 percentperformance thresholds on accountability measure data reported to The Joint Commission in 2011. The ratings were based on aggregated data.

A 95 percent score means a hospital provided an evidence-based practice 95 times out of 100 opportunities to provide the practice. Examples include giving aspirin on arrival for heart attack patients, giving antibiotics one hour before surgery and providing a home-management plan for children with asthma, according to Sutter Santa Rosa, a Sutter Health affiliate.

***

Northern California Center for Well-Being on Sept. 14 held its annual Celebration of Dreams, honoring localhealth care professionals and individualsfor improving overall health in the region.

The event, a veritable whos who in local health care, recognized Petaluma-basedAmys Kitchen as healthy business leader for its establishment of primary care Family Health Centers at its Santa Rosa and Oregon plants. The centers are aimed at maintaining health of workers and their families and reducing ever-increasing premiums for the employer. The centers are a five-minute walk from the manufacturing plants and have a co-pay of only $5.

The following individuals were also honored:

Read the rest here:

Health Care: Three North Bay hospitals make U.S. ‘top performer’ list

Lexington attorney writes booklet for state employers on health reform law

If you're looking for a readable summary of the new federal health care reform law, Margaret Levi has written it.

Levi, a lawyer with the Lexington firm of Wyatt, Tarrant & Combs, is the author of a new publication titled The Impact of Health Care Reform on Kentucky Employers. The 68-page booklet, published by the Kentucky Chamber of Commerce, was released Sept. 6.

The Affordable Care Act was signed into law in March 2010, and it has been a political lightning rod before and after its passage. Levi's booklet includes short, succinct chapters on the law's history and its highlights.

"There's a lot of criticism of it from people who haven't read it, and I think you have to know it before you can criticize it," said Levi, a Danville native and resident, said of the law.

"I'm not taking a political position one way or another. I am neutral and I tried very hard to remain neutral."

The booklet was the idea of the Kentucky Chamber, the statewide business association that offers booklets about issues facing employers. The Chamber approached Wyatt, Tarrant & Combs about writing the booklet because the law firm has the largest health care practice in the state. Levi is a member of the firm's "health care service team," and her clients include hospitals, physicians and other health care providers.

Before joining the law firm, Levi, a Centre College graduate, was the in-house counsel for Ephraim McDowell Health Inc. in Danville.

Levi's first task in preparing the booklet was to read all 2,555 pages of the Affordable Care Act.

"I started in February," she said. "It took a while. I couldn't tell you how long it took me.

"The hard part in reading it is, it will have a section that says, 'This amends 43 USC (United States Code) by inserting this.' So you not only have to read the Affordable Care Act, but you have to go out and pull up what it's changing so you can see what the true effect of it is."

Read more here:

Lexington attorney writes booklet for state employers on health reform law

Health Care Quality Improvement Costs on the Rise

KENNEBUNK, Maine--(BUSINESS WIRE)--

Health insurers spent more than $5.042 billion on health care quality improvement expenses in 2011, compared to $4.936 billion in 2010, according to a new report by Mark Farrah Associates (MFA). Health insurers are similar to property insurers in that by protecting the covered entity from harm, claims stay low and the business is more profitable. MFA found, after analyzing data in the Supplemental Health Care Exhibit (SHCE) portion of the National Association of Insurance Commissioners (NAIC) statutory filings, that health insurers are spending a great deal of money to keep policy holders free from harm. With an aging population, a renewed focus on controlling health care costs and an ability to deduct expenditures related to quality improvement costs from PPACA MLR rebate mandates, MFA expects these expenditures to rise in the future.

Health insurance quality improvement costs are expenses for activities that are designed to improve health care quality and increase the likelihood of desired health outcomes that can be objectively measured and produce verifiable results. These activities include: improving health outcomes, preventing hospital readmissions, improving patient safety and reducing medical errors, wellness and health promotion activities and activities that enhance the use of health care data (Health Information Technology or HIT) to improve quality, transparency and outcomes.

While the primary purpose of the SHCE is for calculating mandated medical loss ratio (MLR) rebates, the data can also be used to benchmark expenditures on various activities by segments. By using the data in the Supplemental Exhibit health plans can benchmark their own efforts against other health plans. Third party vendors can use the data to identify which plans may benefit from the services they offer and consultants, government agencies and other concerned organizations can analyze these data elements.

MFAs latest business strategy report analyzes the total dollars spent on quality improvement programs in 2011 and the activities and segments where the money was spent. To read the full text of Health Plans Quality Improvements Expenditures Rising, visit the Analysis Briefs section on Mark Farrah Associates website http://www.markfarrah.com.

Committed to simplifying analysis of health insurance business, our products include Medicare Business Online, Medicare Benefits Analyzer, Health Coverage Portal, County Health Coverage, Health Insurer Insights and Health Plans USA.

See the article here:

Health Care Quality Improvement Costs on the Rise

Freedom House: Ukrainian authorities manipulating Internet discussions

Ukraine has been included on the list of countries in which pro-government commentators are used to manipulate Internet discussions, reads a report entitled "Freedom on the Net 2012. A Global Assessment of Internet and Digital Media" of the international non-governmental organization Freedom House.

The report shows how actively the authorities in various countries use a range of tactics to control speech online. Such tactics include the restriction and filtration of the information, the adoption of laws prohibiting certain types of content, active manipulations, physical attacks on bloggers and other Internet users, and politically motivated supervision.

According to the results and the level of use of such tactics, the countries were divided into three groups in the report: free, partly free and not free.

Ukraine along with Georgia, Argentina, Italy, Hungary, Germany, and the United States are on the list of free countries. According to the report, Estonia has the highest level of freedom from censorship and intrusions of the government in the functioning of the online media.

According to Freedom House, Kazakhstan, Russia, India, Azerbaijan are partly free, and Belarus, Uzbekistan, Iran, Cuba, China and Vietnam are not free from censorship online.

The organization pointed out progress in the level of freedom comparing to that of last years in Tunisia, Georgia, and Burma. Meanwhile, the level of freedom on the Internet has significantly dropped in Bahrain, Pakistan, Ethiopia, and Egypt.

Despite the fact that Ukraine's level of freedom of speech online was assessed higher than in other post-Soviet countries, it was still included in the group of countries (along with Belarus, Bahrain, China, Cuba, Egypt, Russia, Syria, Saudi Arabia, and Venezuela) where pro-government commentators are used to manipulate Internet discussions, reads the report.

See the rest here:

Freedom House: Ukrainian authorities manipulating Internet discussions