Libertarian Party To File Petitions As ‘New Political Party’ For Fourth Time – KASU

For the fourth consecutive election cycle, theLibertarian Party of Arkansasplans to deliver petitions to the Arkansas Secretary of States office on Monday to become a new political party for the 2018 election.

Because the party failed to win 3% of the electoral vote in the 2016 presidential race that swept Republican nominee Donald Trump into the White House, Arkansas law requires a new political party to collect 10,000 valid voter signatures during a 90-day period.

Party chairman Michael Pakko, an economist at the University of Arkansas at Little Rocks Institute for Economic Advancement, said the party finds itself in the position again of having to register as a new party when it has participated in the last four presidential elections. Pakko said the performance of the candidate at the top of the ticket should not be the only measuring stick for ballot access. Despite being considered a new party under the law, Libertarians fielded a candidate in all four congressional races, while the Democrats only contested the 2nd District. The party was also the only competition in eight of the 34 contested state House races.

Our performance was definitely improved, Pakko said. We are giving voters a choice and voters are making that choice and voting Libertarian.

According to Pakko, party officials collected more than 15,000 signatures for the 2018 ballot after former New Mexico Governor Gary Johnson fell short in the 2016 presidential race with only with 2.63% of the Arkansas vote. Thats an improvement from 2012, when Johnson won 1.52% of the vote. His vote total rose from 16,276 that year to 29,611 this year. If the partys gubernatorial candidate wins 3% in 2018, it wont have to collect signatures in 2020.

By not winning 3% of the vote, the party will again have to qualify for the ballot in 2018, a process Pakko has said required six months of work as well as about $33,000 in costs in the 2016 cycle. Because the primary was moved up to March 1, a state law required the party to select its candidates at the end of 2015. Pakko said the party will try to change the states law defining a political party in the 2017 legislative session while working toward the 2018 election.

During the recent legislative session, the party did not get enough support to change the states law defining a political party ahead of the 2018 election.

And as the nation is riveted with former FBI Director James Comeys testimony before Congress and an obstruction of justice investigation of President Donald Trump by independent counsel Robert Mueller, Pakko said there is a high level of mistrust between American voters and Republican and Democratic parties.

There remains a low-level of trust in government and the two-party system, Pakko said. We see the constant bickering between the two major parties and I think one thing that Libertarians would like voters to know is there is another choice and another option out there.

Pakko said Arkansas voters should take a closer look at the Libertarian Party in 2018 at all levels.

We have a specific set of principles that we believe and we put emphasis on the rights of individuals, and that individuals should be free to live their lives as they see fit without as little interference from the government as possible, said the Libertarian leader and economic forecaster. Keep the government out of peoples lives and out of their pocketbooks.

After party leaders deliver petitions to the Secretary of States office next week and the signatures are validated within 30 days, Pakko said the party will immediately begin to recruit new candidates for the next major election that is now less than two years away.

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Indiana Libertarians Unite To Promote #LegalizeSundays – The Libertarian Republic

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ByDarrell England

Columbus, Ind Libertarians made cold beer a hot topic at the Rickers Gas Station Convenience Store Sunday afternoon. Indiana Laws have been restrictive withalcohol sales on Sundaysin contrast to a recent poll being published that around 71% of Hoosiers support expanded cold beer sales and 65% favor Sunday carry-out sales.

Rodney Benker, Vice-Chair of the Libertarian Party in Indiana, told FOX 59 in theirreport of the drink-in,They need to loosen their grip. It is time to allow fair and safe competition in the marketplace.

It was an overall success as Libertarian Party members from several counties attended to support the cause. One anonymous local member mentioned to have made 65 new contacts over the weekend. It was a great opportunity to support a wonderful business wanting to provide manyservices while being able to discuss the importance of the Free-Market at the same time.

The Libertarian Party of Bartholomew County provided live video of Jay Ricker,Chairman of Rickers Oil Company, addressing those in attendance before leaving the event.

#LegalizeSunday#LegalizeSundays#LPINbreaking newsfree marketheadline newsIndiana alcohol SalesIndiana NewsJay RickerJim Lucaslibertarian partyLibertarian Party of IndianaRicker Oil CompanyRicker'sRodney BenkerSunday Alcohol SalesTop Story

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Earthquake rattles Greek islands, Turkey, killing woman on Lesbos – CBS News

A man walks among collapsed buildings at the village of Vrissa on the Greek island of Lesbos, Greece, after a strong earthquake shook the eastern Aegean Sea June 12, 2017.

Reuters/Giorgos Moutafis

Last Updated Jun 12, 2017 3:40 PM EDT

ATHENS, Greece -- An earthquake with a preliminary magnitude of 6.2 badly damaged scores of homes on the eastern Greek island of Lesbos Monday, killing one woman and injuring at least 10 people. It was also felt in western Turkey, including in Istanbul, and on neighboring islands.

Lesbos mayor Spyros Galinos and the fire service said the woman was found dead in the southern village of Vrisa, which was worst-hit by the quake, which had its epicenter under the Aegean Sea.

"Most houses in Vrisa have suffered severe damage," Galinos said, adding that afflicted residents were being relocated to temporary housing set up in a football field in a nearby village.

At least 10 people were injured in the village, where many of the roads were blocked by rubble.

People gather outside an office building following an earthquake with a preliminary magnitude of 6.2 in the coastal city of Izmir, Turkey, June 12, 2017.

AP

Local authorities and the fire service said there were no reports of other people trapped or missing.

Earlier, rescuers pulled out an elderly couple alive from their damaged home in Vrisa.

According to Turkey's Disaster and Emergency Management, the epicenter was at a shallow depth of four miles. At least 25 aftershocks were recorded following the initial quake at 3:28 p.m.

The tremor was also felt in densely populated Istanbul and the western Turkish province of Izmir, but no injuries were reported there.

The governor of Greece's north Aegean region told state-run ERT television that "we're using all the resources we have to help the people in southern Lesbos."

"The army is also helping, and will provide tents for people remaining outside their homes," Christiana Kalogirou said. "They will be able to stay in sports facilities."

A woman clears her shop after an earthquake in the village of Plomari on the northeastern Greek island of Lesbos, June 12, 2017.

AP

Lesbos authorities said homes were also damaged in the village of Plomari and some roads were closed. No severe damage was reported on nearby islands.

"We are advising residents in affected areas of Lesbos to remain outdoors until buildings can be inspected," senior seismologist Efthimios Lekkas said.

Earthquakes are frequent in Greece and Turkey, which are on active fault lines. Two devastating earthquakes hit northwestern Turkey in 1999, killing around 18,000 people. Experts in both countries said more aftershocks are to be expected.

In Turkey, 61-year old Ayse Selvi felt the tremors in her summer home in Karaburun near the quake's epicenter.

"My God, all the picture frames fell on the ground and I have no idea how I ran out," she said. "I'm scared to go inside now."

There was no reported damage or injuries at refugee camps on Lesbos or the nearby island of Chios. Both islands saw a major influx of migrants leaving from Turkey in 2015, and about 8,000 remain in limbo in Lesbos and Chios as they await news on their asylum applications.

2017 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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Windstar Cruises adds unusual itinerary to Shetland, Faroe Islands – USA TODAY

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Christened at a ceremony in Nice, France on May 6, 2015, the 212-passenger Star Breeze is Windstar Cruises' second new ship in a year.(Photo: Gene Sloan, USA TODAY)

Windstar Cruises is out with an unusual new itinerary that focuses on some of the most remote North Atlantic islands.

Dubbed Secrets of the Faroe, Shetland & Orkney Islands, the seven-night trip begins and ends in Edinburgh, Scotland and features visits to the Denmark-controlled Faroe Islands as well as Scotland's Shetland Islands and Orkney Islands.

Windstar is planning just a single departure of the itinerary for now, on Aug. 17, 2018. It'll take place on the line's 212-passenger Star Breeze.

The voyage includes two stops in the Faroe Islands, in the port towns of Torshavn and Tvoroyri. The ship also will spend part of a day cruising through some of the Faroe Islands' rugged fjords and past Cape Enniberg.

Windstar Cruises to add Asia sailings for 2017

The ship will make day visits to Lerwick in the Shetland Islands and Kirkwall in the Orkney Islands as well as the mainland Scottish town of Aberdeen. The ShetlandIslands are known for a windswept landscape that includes rugged cliffs and beaches, Iron Age ruins and Shetland ponies. The Orkney Islands harbor some of the oldest and best-preserved Neolithic sites in Europe as well as historic sites related to a significantnaval role in World War I and II.

Fares for the sailing start at $3,499 per person, based on double occupancy.

Cruise ship tours: Inside Windstar Cruises' Wind Spirit

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Lawyer Calls Egyptian President a ‘Traitor’ Over Islands – Voice of America

CAIRO

A leading Egyptian rights lawyer widely expected to run in next year's presidential election has called President Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi a "traitor" over his government's decision to hand over two Red Sea islands to Saudi Arabia.

Khaled Ali made his comment during a meeting of opposition parties called Sunday to denounce an ongoing review by lawmakers of the April 2016 agreement that surrendered the islands to the Saudis. A video of his address before the meeting was posted on social media on Monday. He could now face legal consequences for publicly insulting the president.

Egypt's government maintains that the islands of Tiran and Sanafir at the mouth of the Gulf of Aqaba belong to Saudi Arabia but were placed under Egypt's protection in the 1950s in anticipation of Israeli attacks. El-Sissi has repeatedly emphasized that his government would never cede Egyptian territory or keep what belongs to others.

"The president is a traitor and the prime minister is a traitor," said Ali, who unsuccessfully ran in the 2012 presidential elections won by the Islamist Mohammed Morsi. "Whoever will be content to lower the Egyptian flag on Tiran and Sanafir and raise the Saudi flag in its place is a traitor," said Ali.

Already, there is a court case accusing Ali of making an obscene finger gesture on the street outside the courthouse where the transfer of the islands was annulled in January. If convicted in a final ruling, he could face up to six months in prison or a fine.

A conviction would take away Ali's eligibility to run for office, according to his lawyers. He is already seen as a long shot against el-Sissi, who has presided over a widespread crackdown on dissent.

Ali and other critics of the agreement argue that the January court ruling was final and should be respected by the 596-seat chamber, which is packed with el-Sissi supporters. He led a team of lawyers who challenged the agreement in court.

Parliament speaker Ali Abdel-Al, a staunch government supporter, has said the legislature has the constitutional right to ratify international agreements. Court rulings running contrary to this principle, he told lawmakers on Sunday, are only of concern to the judiciary.

Parliament's legislative and constitutional committee on Monday continued to review the agreement. At one point, lawmakers opposed to the pact chanted "Egyptian, Egyptian!," alluding to the islands, and screamed "illegitimate" when one lawmaker suggested that Gamal Abdel-Nasser, Egypt's nationalist leader of the 1950s and 1960s, acknowledged that the islands were Saudi.

The ratification of the agreement by the full house is a virtual foregone conclusion since government supporters enjoy an overwhelming majority, but such a move risks a repeat of the street protests that greeted the agreement last year. The protests, the largest since el-Sissi took office in 2014, were met by the arrest of hundreds of activists and demonstrators, most of them were later released. It could also leave the legislative branch of government in a potentially destabilizing legal battle with the judiciary.

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Wooden boats at Channel Islands Harbor for Father’s Day – Ventura County Star

Alicia Doyle, Special to The Star Published 4:28 p.m. PT June 12, 2017 | Updated 9 hours ago

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Scott Harrison steps aboard the Cheerio ll, a 1931 Fellows & Stewart yawl owned by Dick McNish that will be on display at the Channel Islands Maritime Museum for this year's wooden boat show.(Photo: CHUCK KIRMAN/THE STAR)Buy Photo

Like classic cars, wooden boats have a style, craftsmanship and romance unique to their time period. Their aficionados say that's what makes them far-distant cousins to today's mass-produced boats made of metal or plastic.

They have a certain feel thats quite different from aluminum or fiberglass boats, said Scott Harrison, who is organizing Sunday's vintage wooden boat show at the Channel Islands Maritime Museum in Oxnard's Channel Islands Harbor.

Now in its second year on Father's Day, Sunday's display, called "From the Tree to the Sea," will featureearly- to mid-20th-century wooden boats that belong to members of the Pacific Corinthian Yacht Club.

Among them will be Cheerio II, a California Historical Vessel owned by Dick McNish. Built by Fellows & Stewart of San Pedro in 1931, Cheerio II is a yawl, 56 feet long and 12 feet wide, with a draft of six feet.

It gives me a lot of pride to own Cheerio, McNish said.

Wooden boats are popular in places like Port Townsend, Washington, which is considered the wooden boat capital of the West Coast, he said.

But in our area of Ventura and Santa Barbara, there are primarily fiberglass or plastic boats, McNish said.

He describes boats made of wood as living, breathing vessels.

Their history should be kept alive because they are a living thing, McNish said.

Wooden boats are more distinctive than modern-day boats, agreed Sugar Flanagan, McNishs son-in-law. The Port Townsend residenthas sailed Cheerio several times to Australia and New Zealand.

Fiberglass boats look like theyre made of frozen snot because when you look at them, its this really hard plastic substance that was man-made, Flanagan said. If this was chopped up on the beach, youd consider it pollution.

Flanagan praised his father-in-law for giving Cheerio constant TLC.

He does the restoration of keeping her alive for future generations, Flanagan said. If people like Dick werent around to restore them, their history would be gone because there are fewer of them. Wooden boats are like an animal going extinct. There are people out there to protect them.

Other wooden vessels that will be on display include Muggs, a powerboat built in 1930 thats 37 feet long and nine feet wide with a two-foot draft; and Elusive II, a 40-foot Kettenberg sailboat built in 1961.

Those who visit the museum Sundaywill also have the opportunity to view Allura II, a powerboat built in 1929 thats also a California Historic Vesseland a restored 19-foot Chris-Craft Holiday boat built in 1952.

Well also have a floating tiki hut and bar, Harrison said. Its this fun round thing that this couple owns with a bar and seats.

In addition to the wooden boat display at the Channel Islands Maritime Museum, a classic car show will take place the same day right next door, and nautical treasures will be for sale on the patio in front of the museum. There also will be activities for children, including making paper whale hats and competing in miniature boat races.

They are little Styrofoam sailing boats, and thewind is provided by the contestant through an environmentally-friendly straw, said Peter Crabbe, executive director of the Channel Islands Maritime Museum. In addition, we will possibly have a ship in a bottle demonstration by one of our resident model makers.

Continuing the wooden boat theme, the documentary The Boatmaker will be screened 7 p.m. on June 22at the Santa Barbara Maritime Museum. The film is about Santa Barbara architect Ken Minor, who spent 25 years hand-building a 30-foot Bristol Channel Cutter wooden sailboat in a barn with the dream of sailing around the world.

Not to be forgotten or overlooked is our museum, where we have an amazing collection of world-class original maritime paintings and models of ships from the Golden Age of Sail, Crabbe said. The museum will be open, and visitors may browse at their leisure or enjoy a guided tour led by one of the museum's knowledgeable volunteer docents.

What:"From the Tree to the Sea," the second annual Father's Day Wooden Boat Show When:10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Sunday Where: Channel Islands Maritime Museum, 3900 Bluefin Circle, Oxnard Admission: $7 for adults, $5 seniors and active military with ID, $3 children ages 6-17, free for members and children younger than 6 Information:cimmvc.org; 984-6260

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Historic islands bill introduced – Holyrood.com

Humza Yousaf: Picture credit - Scottish Government

An historic bill designed to meet the unique needs of Scotlands islands has been introduced to the Scottish Parliament.

The Scottish Government said the Islands (Scotland) Bill will help create the right environment for sustainable growth and empowered communities.

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Islands Minister Humza Yousaf said: This government is committed to promoting islands voices, to harnessing islands resources and enhancing their well-being. The measures in this bill underpin this ambition.

In particular, the provision to island-proof decision-making across the public sector will ensure the interests of islanders are reflected in future legislation and policy from the very outset.

The National Islands Plan will set out the strategic direction for supporting island communities, continuing the momentum generated by the Our Islands, Our Futurecampaign and the work of the islands strategic group.

This is the first ever bill for Scotlands islands, marking an historic milestone for our island communities. I am proud and privileged as Islands Minister to be guiding the bill through Scotlands Parliament.

Measures in the bill will include:

Leader of Orkney Islands Council, James Stockan, welcomed the publication of the bill.

He said: The Our Islands, Our Future campaign specifically asked for an act for the islands in 2013 and it is gratifying to see this objective being realised.

Island proofing is particularly important as evidenced by Orkney Islands Councils substantive response to the Scottish Governments consultation.

We were able to amply demonstrate numerous cases where legislation had been detrimental to Orkney and which could have been avoided if island proofing had taken place.

Councillor Stockan added: But our work is not complete. We will be working tirelessly with Scottish Government to ensure that there is an objective standard by which decisions over whether to conduct an Islands Communities Assessment are made and also how the legislation will be interpreted.

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Maine island school holds first graduation ceremony in 17 years – Bangor Daily News

CRANBERRY ISLES, Maine On Saturday, three students celebrated completing 8th grade in the first graduation ceremony on Great Cranberry Island in 17 years. One of them was a homeschooled student who didnt attend classes at the school.

The Cranberry Islands are a cluster of five offshore islands south of Mount Desert Island. Only two of them, Great Cranberry Island and Little Cranberry Island have year round populations totalling about 100 residents between the two.

Seventeen years ago Great Cranberry celebrated its most recent graduation at Longfellow School, the islands tiny two-room schoolhouse.

Keith and Heath Wedge were the only students to attend Longfellow in 1999 and 2000, keeping the schoolhouse open in the face of a steadily declining enrollment. But with Keiths graduation, Heath moved on to Pemetic School in Southwest Harbor, leaving Great Cranberrys school empty for the first time since it was established in the mid-1800s.

Its been something thats been missing from the community since then, said Lindsay Eysnogle, principal of the Cranberry Island schools. Theres a feeling of loss in such a small community when the school isnt open.

Since the Wedges left, students from both Cranberries have attended the Ashley Bryan School on Little Cranberry Island. But Great Cranberry residents hoped that one day their old schoolhouse would be revived, and the town continued to maintain the building in the event that more students arrived.

It finally happened this past school year, when the town renovated the Great Cranberry school building and its school board decided that the two islands would take turns hosting students, Eysnogle said. After next school year at Longfellow, classes will be held on Little Cranberry for two years, before returning to Great Cranberry to repeat the cycle.

This year two Longfellow students graduated and were joined by one homeschooled student who finished 8th grade. Another homeschooled student on the islands graduated as well, but didnt attend the ceremony.

Eleven island students attended classes at Longfellow school this year. Next year, thats expected to swell to as many as 14 students, according to Eysnogle. Students who have to travel between islands for school take a 10-minute ferry ride and then hop into a van that takes them to the schoolhouse.

The schools are expected to have a pretty stable population in coming years, with several families with 3- and 4-year-olds living on the island. Eysnogle said she expects the population to hover between 11 and 20 students for at least the next five years.

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Republican senators are privately crafting a health care bill, raising alarm from Democrats – PBS NewsHour

JUDY WOODRUFF: This is an important week for the fate of a bill designed to replace and potentially overhaul the health care law often referred to as Obamacare.

Republican senators are trying to finish drafting key portions of their own bill affecting coverage and costs. But Democrats say the entire battle over repealing the law is quite different from standard operating procedure, and not nearly transparent enough.

Lisa Desjardins looks at how its playing out in the Senate.

LISA DESJARDINS: Right now the debate over health care is red hot in Congress, but only behind closed doors, as Republicans privately try to craft a Senate bill.

And that is something Democrats, like Senator Claire McCaskill last week, have been raising publicly.

SEN. CLAIRE MCCASKILL, D-Mo.: We have no idea whats being proposed. Theres a group of guys in a backroom somewhere that are making these decisions. There were no hearings in the House. I mean, listen, this is hard to take, because I know we made mistakes on the Affordable Health Care Act, Mr. Secretary.

And one of the criticisms we got over and over again, that the vote was partisan. Well, you couldnt have a more partisan exercise than what youre engaged in right now. Were not even going to have a hearing on a bill that impacts one-sixth of our economy.

LISA DESJARDINS: McCaskill wants something called regular order. What is that? Well, it used to be the normal process. A bill goes through committee hearings, where experts and those affected by an issue ring in.

Then senators on the committee can vote to change the bill with amendments. And then, when a bill gets to the Senate floor, regular order means another chance to change it with amendment votes there too.

In 2009, with the Affordable Care Act, two Senate committees held three months of hearings and went through weeks of voting on amendments.

More recently, Senate Leader Mitch McConnell said he wanted regular order when Republicans took over in 2015.

SEN. MITCH MCCONNELL, Majority Leader: We need to open up, open up the legislative process in a way that allows more amendments from both sides.

LISA DESJARDINS: But thats not how Republicans so far have planned this health care debate. Again, in regular order, bills go through committees and amendment votes. Instead, this time around, Senate Republicans have indicated they may send their health care bill straight to the Senate floor with little, maybe no chance to amend it. And they have held no hearings on the bill so far.

Leading this process is Republican Senate Finance Chairman Orrin Hatch.

SEN. ORRIN HATCH, R-Utah: Well, I dont know that theres going to be another hearing, but we have invited you to participate.

LISA DESJARDINS: Who stressed to McCaskill that he wants Democratic ideas, if not more hearings and votes. But that differs from Hatch in 2009, when Republicans were the minority, and he thought Democrats were moving too fast on health care.

SEN. ORRIN HATCH: We at least ought to take the time to do this right.

LISA DESJARDINS: In the end, it took Democrats 14 months to pass their health care bill in 2009 and 2010. Thats why this moment is critical. The Senate will make or break health care reform. And Senate leaders, including Hatch, have said they want to pass a full health care bill by the end of this month. Thats just nine or 10 legislative days away.

For the PBS NewsHour, Im Lisa Desjardins.

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Republican senators are privately crafting a health care bill, raising alarm from Democrats - PBS NewsHour

GOP senators may be willing to back health bill that funds Planned Parenthood – Fox News

Several Republican senators have indicated that they would be willing to support a health care bill that funds Planned Parenthood or some abortion services, Fox News has learned.

The GOP is worried that any bill to repeal and replace ObamaCare would have to be carefully structured to hold the support of moderate and conservative Republicans. However, the apparent concession by conservatives might give leadership more room to maneuver.

The pressure is on Senate Republicans to try to move a bill to repeal and replace ObamaCare before the Fourth of July recess. The House of Representatives passed its own bill, the American Health Care Act, last month.

Fox News has also learned that Senate GOP leaders have been sending policy proposals to the Congressional Budget Office for evaluation and scoring. However, a full bill was not expected to be presented at the weekly Republican luncheon Tuesday.

Senate Republicans are winnowing down policy options in an effort to get the necessary 51 votes to pass any health care legislation. Some believe any bill will only get 50 votes, necessitating a tie-breaking intervention by Vice President Mike Pence.

Meanwhile, the government said Monday thatabout 16 percent of consumers who signed up for coverage this year through Healthcare.gov and its state counterparts had canceled their plans by early spring.

Figures released from the Health and Human Services department show that 10.3 million people were signed up and paying their premiums as of March 15. That's 1.9 million fewer than the 12.2 million who initially signed up during open enrollment season, which ended Jan. 31.

In the first part of last year, the dropout rate was similar, about 13 percent. It increased as the year went on. Monthly enrollment averaged about 10 million people in 2016.

Some of the main reasons for dropping out include finding job-based insurance, problems paying premiums, and becoming eligible for Medicare.

A new analysis from HHS also found higher dropout rates in areas where insurers have left the program. About one-third of U.S. counties only had one participating insurer this year, and next year there may be areas with no available carrier.

The Trump administration said the numbers are a sign of continuing problems with Obamacare, such as sharp premium increases and the departure of some major insurers that suffered financial losses.Democrats have accused Trump of trying to "sabotage" Obama's signature domestic achievement

Fox News' Chad Pergram and Mike Emanuel contributed to this report. The Associated Press also contributed to this report.

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Majority in Georgia 6th have unfavorable view of GOP healthcare bill: poll – The Hill

A majority of likely voters in Georgias sixth congressional district hold an unfavorable impression of the Republican plan to repeal and replace ObamaCare, according to a new poll by The Atlanta Journal-Constitution.

While 62 percent hold an unfavorable impression of the legislation, 25 percent have a favorable impression of the plan, the poll said. Thirteen percent did not know or did not provide an answer.

The results of the poll come with the district about a week away from going to the polls for the special election that has drawn both funds and attention throughout the country.

Republicans in the Senate have said a vote on the legislation could come in July.

Abt Associates conducted the poll from June 5 through June 8, surveying 1,000 registered voters. It has a margin of error of 4 percentage points.

Democrat Jon Ossoff and Republican Karen Handel will face off on June 20 in the special election for the seat vacated by Health and Human Services Secretary Tom Price.

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Majority in Georgia 6th have unfavorable view of GOP healthcare bill: poll - The Hill

Promotion of health care execs could lift GE’s efforts in life sciences and health data – The Boston Globe

As Jeff Immelt (above), GEs outgoing chief executive, prepares to leave, he hands over a company with a health care division that is partnering with area hospitals.

General Electric Co. has been ramping up its activity in the states health care and life sciences sectors for several years. The rise of two health care-focused executives on GEs new leadership team could turbocharge its business in the booming fields.

Mondays announcement that the companys health care chief John Flannery was promoted to chief executive of GE, and the promotion of life sciences boss Kieran Murphy to head its health care operation, was cheered by those involved in Massachusetts medical, life sciences, and technology businesses.

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Industry leaders said it would likely hasten GEs move to integrate health data with its medical devices and more important to local entrepreneurs boost the companys support of medical technology and health data startups.

This is a signal that theyre very serious about enhancing their medical technology business, said Tom Sommer, president of the Massachusetts Medical Device Industry Council, known as MassMEDIC, a business group representing more than 300 companies. GE will now have a front-row seat in scouting the next generation of medical technology companies.

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Even before Mondays announcement, MassMEDIC had scheduled a networking reception next week to showcase efforts by GE Ventures, the companys venture-capital arm, to finance startups. The event is expected to draw hardware and software entrepreneurs involved in the digitization of medical gear, where GE and other companies add features to traditional medical imaging and diagnostic equipment to store, analyze, and transport patient data.

The market is changing so much, said Maria Shepherd, president of Medi-Vantage LLC, a medical technology consulting and strategy firm in Lincoln. Its all about improving clinical outcomes and reducing costs. Having [GE] here in Boston makes them local, so theyll get to know the local entrepreneurs.

But industry veteran Jonathan Fleming, chief executive of Cambridge drug developer Q-State Biosciences Inc., sounded a note of caution. GEs health care business faces many obstacles, he said, including moves by health insurers to reduce payments for overused imaging tests.

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GE is going to be continually challenged in growing its health care business, Fleming warned.

Flannery, who is set to assume the top job at GE in August, has led GE Healthcare since 2014. Its a sprawling business with about 55,000 employees and $18 billion in annual revenue. The division sells critical equipment and technology used by hospitals around the world including MRI and ultrasound machines, ventilators, patient monitors, blood pressure cuffs, and incubators for newborns. It also makes equipment for research labs.

Christopher Anderson, president of the Mass High Technology Council, said Flannery has all of the global experience and is totally focused on innovative tech.

Hell be able to fit right into a number of other successful tech [companies] who have their headquarters in Massachusetts and fit into the global market, he said.

GE has prioritized recruiting in the region, targeting software developers and other digital talent as it seeks to modernize its traditional heavy-machinery businesses with new software and technology, a transformation to what it calls the Industrial Internet.

The corporation has also become an investor in the Boston areas startup scene. GE Ventures owns parts of companies including Catalant, Desktop Metal, Tamr, and Rethink Robotics.

Jeff Bussgang, a general partner at Boston-based venture capital firm Flybridge Capital Partners, said Flannerys background could be a particular asset given Boston is a center of medical and biotech research.

I assume he is equally committed to Boston and the fact that hes a health care executive, which is in our regions wheelhouse, strikes me as a very good thing, Bussgang said.

The company has been pushing to expand in health care technology, in part by teaming up with Boston-based hospitals to develop new software programs. Last month, GE and Partners HealthCare the parent company of Massachusetts General and Brigham and Womens hospitals launched a 10-year initiative on artificial intelligence.

GE and Partners plan to build software targeting several aspects of medical care, starting with programs that can help doctors read medical images more accurately. They want to develop an open platform that can house hundreds of different applications. Flannery told reporters in May that he considers data and analytics and machine learning the future of health care.

The company is also developing software with experts at Boston Childrens Hospital.

Though GEs health care business is headquartered in Chicago, Flannery is a familiar name in Bostons medical and tech industries.

John has been highly engaged in getting to know the Boston health care community and the opportunities and challenges that exist within the industry, Brigham and Womens president Dr. Betsy Nabel said in a statement.

Childrens Hospital chief executive Sandra Fenwick said Flannerys background in digital health and life sciences will serve him well.

Our collaboration with GE Healthcare, established under John Flannerys leadership, continues to make progress, Fenwick said in a statement. His elevation to CEO should keep our work moving forward.

GEs decision last year to move its headquarters to Boston, plus the promotion of its top health care executive, means the company likely wants to stay focused on health care, said Jonathan P. Gertler, a life sciences industry consultant.

I cant imagine theyve appointed the person who ran GE Healthcare to the top position in order to take their eye off health care, said Gertler, chief executive of Back Bay Life Science Advisors.

Massachusetts has welcomed the growth of GEs presence in health care here. A year ago, Governor Charlie Baker and other state officials joined Murphy, then president of the GE Healthcare Life Sciences business unit, for the opening of a new $27 million, 210,000-square-foot site in Marlborough as North American headquarters for the life sciences business.

That part of the company markets products such as bioreactors used for drug manufacturing and contrast agents for medical imaging, and is the fastest-growing part of the GE Healthcare division, which Murphy will now head. It is leading the companys push into precision medicine, enabling the small-scale production of personalized treatments for genetic diseases.

Like Flannery, Murphy is already well known to many locally. Some say the pair, with Flannerys background in finance and Murphys in science, has complementary skill sets.

These are people with vision, said Lexington health care consultant Harry Glorikian, a former entrepreneur in residence at GE Ventures who knows both executives. Both of them have a positive disposition toward looking at new ideas and supporting them. This bodes well for the health care and life sciences side of the business. And I think theyre going to take a major role in Massachusetts.

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Promotion of health care execs could lift GE's efforts in life sciences and health data - The Boston Globe

Healthcare questions dominate Sen. Dan Sullivan town hall – Alaska Public Radio Network

Senator Dan Sullivan speaks to public in Afognak building on Near Island, Kodiak. Kayla Desroches/KMXT

Republican Senator Dan Sullivan held a town hall in the city of Kodiak Saturday and attracted a sizable crowd. He dedicated the bulk of the meeting to the publics questions, and most focused on healthcare.

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One commenter, Mike Milligan, said the United States has a health care system based on money.

He connected his statement to Sullivans support of putting outside funds into political campaigns.

Other people have a healthcare system based on health and you have been a consistent supporter of [the] Citizens United [Supreme Court] decision, which keeps money in politics, Milligan said. How can you address this money associated with healthcare delivery when youre such an ardent supporter of Citizens United?

In response, Sullivan told a story about a woman who approached him and his family at dinner. The person said she and her husband were paying $3,000 dollars a month under the affordable care act with a $10,000 dollar deductible.

Come on, thats $33,000 dollars before you get any coverage, Sullivan said. Thats completely unaffordable. So, its complex, its very personal, as you mention Mike. I get it. And thats why weve been trying to meet with everybody.

Sullivan said theyre working towards reform for the state.

Scattered among the many comments on health care were several about protecting fisheries resources.

Gina Friccero referred to an incident in 2014 where a massive flow of mining waste in Canada escaped into lakes that served as spawning grounds for sockeye salmon.

The residents of the great state of Alaska have made it clear across party lines that we do not want to put the salmon habitat at risk, Friccero said. After the failure of Mount Polley mine, it is obvious that there is no viable way to protect our watershed from the pollution caused by mining. We ask that you make us a priority and stand against mining in any area that threatens the ecology of salmon habitat.

Sullivan said he believes in responsible resource development and transparency. He discussed the ongoing issue of Pebble Mine in the Bristol Bay watershed. The Environmental Protection Agency recently settled a lawsuit with the Pebble Limited Partnership that allows the company to apply for a federal permit for a mine in the area.

If that mine ever goes to permitting, which its not at permitting at all yet state, federal permitting it has to meet the highest standards, Sullivan said. And we shouldnt trade one resource for another. We already know we have great resources, as you mentioned, in Bristol Bay.

He said the permitting process should be fair.

At the town hall, Sullivan also spoke about some of the bills hes started or contributed to, including one to bolster missile defense and another to encourage new entrants into the fishing industry and provide training for young fishermen.

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Healthcare questions dominate Sen. Dan Sullivan town hall - Alaska Public Radio Network

HealthCare.gov dropout trend continues under Trump – ABC News

Continuing a dropout trend seen in the Obama years, about 16 percent of consumers who signed up for coverage this year through public health insurance markets had canceled their plans by early spring, the government said Monday.

Figures released from the Health and Human Services department show that 10.3 million people were signed up and paying their premiums as of March 15. That's 1.9 million fewer than the 12.2 million who initially signed up during open enrollment season, which ended Jan. 31.

Created by Obama's Affordable Care Act, HealthCare.gov and its state counterparts offer subsidized private health insurance to people who don't have coverage through their jobs. The latest numbers seem to reflect the usual ups and downs of the program, more than the heated political debate over its future.

The Trump administration said the numbers are a sign of continuing problems with "Obamacare," such as sharp premium increases and the departure of some major insurers that suffered financial losses. President Donald Trump has declared the program "dead," and he's trying to replace it with a Republican plan that's currently even less popular in public opinion polls.

Meanwhile, Democrats are accusing Trump of trying to "sabotage" Obama's main domestic achievement, which has been credited with reducing the U.S. uninsured rate to a historic low of about 9 percent. With Republicans in full control of government, this year could bring the unwinding of Obama's law.

But independent analysts say the new numbers are no big surprise.

"The dropout rate is very similar to last year, with some people failing to pay their premiums or finding alternative coverage after signing up during open enrollment," said Larry Levitt of the nonpartisan Kaiser Family Foundation. "What's new here is a new administration spinning numbers in a very different way from the last one."

In previous years many people who initially signed up also wound up dropping out, for a variety of reasons.

In the first part of last year, the dropout rate was similar, about 13 percent. It increased as the year went on. Monthly enrollment averaged about 10 million people in 2016.

Some of the main reasons for dropping out include finding job-based insurance, problems paying premiums, and becoming eligible for Medicare.

A new analysis from HHS also found higher dropout rates in areas where insurers have left the program. About one-third of U.S. counties only had one participating insurer this year, and next year there may be areas with no available carrier.

The dropout rate was a sore spot for the Obama administration, which updated the numbers only a few times a year. The Trump administration says it will provide more frequent updates.

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HealthCare.gov dropout trend continues under Trump - ABC News

Healthcare: Are you prepared to trade privacy for treatment? – CSO Online

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What does the U.S. and the U.K. have in common when it comes to healthcare? Their healthcare sector continues to be under siege, and renewed efforts need to be made to lift the level of focus on protecting patient information. It is as if a Sword of Damocles hangs over this sector.

As asinine as it sounds, we may have finally reached the tipping point where patients are now accepting, by default, their information will be at risk when they accept medical care?

Government entities, one in the U.S. and another in the U.K. recently issued reports on the state of affairs within the healthcare sector. The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) Health Care Industry Cybersecurity Task Force issued itsfirst report to Congress, and the HHS Office of Inspector General (IG) submitted its semi-annual report to Congress. In the U.K., the Information Commissioners office (ICO) released its data protections and concerns report. The content demonstrates how the issues being faced on the IT side of the healthcare equation know no borders.

The HHS Task Force recognized how vulnerable the sector is with its observation: "Over the next few years, most machinery and technology involved in patient care will connect to the internet; however, a majority of this equipment was not originally intended to be internet accessible nor designed to resist cyber attacks."

The HHS Task Force recognizes that a cultural change is required if cybersecurity and patient privacy are to be kept from "digitally sourced harm"a fancy way of saying being affected by a breach.

Interestingly, the HHS IG report highlights as areas of concern enhancing safety and quality care, efficiency of operations, reducing fraud and improper payments, and improving "data integrity and information security." The HHS IG recognizes the bang that can be acquired via implementing big data analytics to the fraud equation as a means to detect and prevent improper payments. Similarly, the HHS IG identifies "penetration testing" as its area of focus.

While across the pond in the U.K., the ICO notes the 31.5 percent increase in the number of self-reported incidents of data mishandling in the healthcare sector. The report also identifies with specificity that care homes (known in the U.S. as assisted living or nursing homes) continually avoid responding to IOC's requests. The Register notes how data breaches within the health sector accounted for 43 percent of all data breaches in the UK.

What is not surprising is the amount of breaches across both the U.S. and U.K. that are caused by human error. Sharing patient information in press releases or presentations is a self-inflicted wound. Copying data in a clear-text state to a storage medium, again a self-inflicted wound. Throwingpatient files awayvia normal garbage disposal methods instead of destroying patient data, again a self-inflicted wound. The recent WannaCry crisis brought the U.K.'s health service to its knees was also a self-inflicted wound because they continued to use Window XP machines (an operating system that was end-of-life in April 2014). And of course, the "clicking" of links within emails that serve as the hook-setting event for some of the larger breaches, a lack of awareness by the insider.

Patients need to be asking, "How is my data being protected?" The U.K., interestingly enough, has provided via the ICO a means for an individual to check if their information is being handled correctly.

It's up to you. Are you prepared to trade your privacy for treatment? Hold your healthcare providers accountable for how they handle your information.

Christopher Burgess is an advocate for effective security strategies, be they at the office or home for you and your family. Christopher, served 30+ years within the Central Intelligence Agency. He co-authored the book Secrets Stolen, Fortunes Lost, Preventing Intellectual Property Theft and Economic Espionage in the 21st Century.

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Healthcare: Are you prepared to trade privacy for treatment? - CSO Online

AARP targets more Republicans in new healthcare ad buy – Washington Examiner

AARP is targeting 11 GOP senators, including key centrists, to oppose the House-passed healthcare bill that would raise premiums for seniors.

The ad campaign expands a May effort that ran ads targeting five senators, calling for the House-passed American Health Care Act to be scrapped. The expansion comes at a pivotal time as Senate leadership hopes to vote on a healthcare bill by the end of July.

AARP is targeting Sens. Lisa Murkowski and Dan Sullivan of Alaska, Jeff Flake of Arizona, Cory Gardner of Colorado, Joni Ernest and Chuck Grassley of Iowa, Dean Heller of Nevada, Rob Portman of Ohio, Lamar Alexander and Bob Corker of Tennessee, and Shelley Moore Capito of West Virginia.

The list includes some key centrists who will be critical to the GOP leadership's hopes of passing its own version of the American Health Care Act before Congress' August recess.

Heller and Flake are up for re-election in 2018. Heller, Portman and Capito are pushing leadership for a seven-year phaseout of Obamacare's Medicaid expansion.

AARP, the nation's biggest seniors lobby, has been opposed to the American Health Care Act for some time, angry over a proposed change to premiums for senior citizens in insurance plans on the individual market.

Obamacare allowed insurers to charge seniors three times the amount they charge a younger person. The American Health Care Act would increase that to five times.

"Our members and other Americans over age 50 are very worried about legislation that would raise their premiums through what is, in effect, an age tax," said AARP Executive Vice President Nancy LeaMond.

It is not clear what pieces of the legislation the Senate will keep, including the age-rating ratio.

AARP also derided problems with Medicaid and hurting "protections for people with pre-existing conditions."

A controversial last-minute amendment to the legislation, which passed the House last month by a 217-213 vote, let states opt out of community rating mandate. States could get a waiver that would let insurers charge sicker people more money.

House Republicans say that $23 billion included in the legislation for high-risk pools could help offset any increases. A recent estimate from the Congressional Budget Office said that money wasn't enough to offset major increases for people with pre-existing conditions such as cancer or diabetes.

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AARP targets more Republicans in new healthcare ad buy - Washington Examiner

NIAID scientists discover rare genetic susceptibility to common cold … – National Institutes of Health (press release)


National Institutes of Health (press release)
NIAID scientists discover rare genetic susceptibility to common cold ...
National Institutes of Health (press release)
Scientists have identified a rare genetic mutation that results in a markedly increased susceptibility to infection by human rhinoviruses (HRVs) the main ...

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NIAID scientists discover rare genetic susceptibility to common cold ... - National Institutes of Health (press release)

Controversial CRISPR paper blasted by gene-editing companies … – Genetic Literacy Project

Two gene-editing companies are hitting back at a scientific publication that caused their stocks to plummet, calling it wrong, filled with errors, and saying it shouldnt have been published.

In separate letters sent to Nature Methods, scientists from Intellia Therapeutics and Editas Medicine criticized a report in the journal that claimed the gene-editing tool CRISPR had caused unexpected mutations in the genomes of mice and which cast a shadow over efforts to initiate human studies using the technique.

A spokesperson at Springer Nature, which publishes Nature Methods, said the organization had received a number of communications already about the paper. We are carefully considering all concerns that have been raised with us and are discussing them with the authors, the journal said.

On Twitter and elsewhere, other scientists quickly pointed out basic mistakes in the paper, including misidentifying genes, the small number of animals involved and, most seriously, that it had mislabeled normal genetic differences between animals as the result of CRISPR editing.

In our opinion the conclusions drawn from this study are unsubstantiated by the disclosed experiments, wrote Vic Myer, chief technology officer of Editas, in a letter signed by 11 other company scientists.

The GLP aggregated and excerpted this blog/article to reflect the diversity of news, opinion, and analysis. Read full, original post:Gene Editing Companies Hit Back at Paper That Criticized CRISPR

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Controversial CRISPR paper blasted by gene-editing companies ... - Genetic Literacy Project

Rare Genetic Mutation Makes People Prone to Colds – Live Science

The case of a young girl who frequently got sick from colds has helped scientists pinpoint a rare genetic mutation that makes people more susceptible to cold viruses.

The 5-year-old girl has suffered numerous life-threatening infections from human rhinoviruses, which cause the common cold, according to a new report. When she was just over 1 month old, she developed an infection with both a rhinovirus and a flu virus, and had to be placed on a ventilator so she could breathe. Since then, she has been hospitalized more than 15 times with various respiratory infections, including colds, the flu and bacterial pneumonia, according to the report, from researchers at the U.S. National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID).

Because of these frequent infections, her doctors suspected her immune system was not functioning properly, and they sequenced her genome to see if they could find a genetic explanation for her symptoms. [27 Oddest Medical Cases]

They found she had a mutation in a gene called IFIH1, which is involved in the production of immune- system proteins called MDA5. Normally, MDA5 proteins help detect the presence of viruses inside cells and signal the activation of other immune-system proteins to fight the infection, the researchers said.

But in earlier studies in mice, scientists had found that animals that lack working MDA5 proteins could not detect certain viruses and were thus not able to activate an immune response against these viruses.

In the new study, the researchers found that the girl's MDA5 proteins did not recognize rhinoviruses. This meant that rhinoviruses could continue replicating at high levels and lead to severe illness. The researchers concluded the working MDA5 proteins are critical to protecting people from rhinoviruses.

"The human immune response to common cold viruses is poorly understood," Dr. Anthony Fauci, director of the NIAID, said in a statement. "By investigating this unique case, our researchers not only helped this child but also helped answer some important scientific questions about these ubiquitous infections that affect nearly everyone."

The researchers also turned to a database containing information from the genomes of more than 60,000 people to see whether there were other cases of health problems related the IFIH1 gene. They found several different mutations in the IFIH1 gene that could lead to less effective MDA5 proteins, although these mutations were rare.

In addition, most people with these IFIH1 mutations lived normal life spans (the earliest death was at age 81), and they had healthy children. The researchers suspect that these people may have had other genetic factors that compensated for their improperly working MDA5 proteins and kept them from catching life-threatening colds; or they survived despite experiencing frequent colds, but did not report those colds.

Although most people who get sick with a cold recover without a doctor's visit, some people can experience serious complications from colds, particularly if they have asthma, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease or other health problems, the researchers said. The findings may one day lead to new ways to treat patients with severe illness from rhinoviruses who also have MDA5 proteins that aren't working properly, they said.

"When people have other disease factors, [rhinovirus] infection can become a tipping point and lead to severe illness, disability or even death," said study co-author Dr. Helen Su, chief of the Human Immunological Diseases Unit at NIAID. "Now that we better understand the pathway, we can investigate more targeted ways to intervene" in these cases.

The girl in the current study survived numerous respiratory infections, but still needs treatment with supplemental oxygen, the report said. Although her genetic mutation appears to increase the risk of rhinovirus infections only, other factors, such as lung injury, also might have increased her susceptibility to other respiratory viruses, including flu viruses, the researchers said.

The girl's health improved as her immune system matured and she was able to form antibodies against various viruses, which protect against infection. These antibodies partly helped to compensate for the defective MDA5 response, the researchers said.

The study was published today (June 12) in the Journal of Experimental Medicine.

Original article on Live Science.

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Rare Genetic Mutation Makes People Prone to Colds - Live Science

How precision medicine can fix a broken healthcare system – Healthcare IT News

BOSTON Hospitals, networks and the federal government can use precision medicine to drive expenses out of the system, better understand disease and prevent people from getting sick in the first place.

We have a broken healthcare systems and were hoping precision health can help reduce costs, said Megan Mahoney, MD, chief of general primary care in the Division of Primary Care and Population Health at Stanford University, said Monday at the Precision Medicine Summit.

[Also:Widespread precision medicine is still years away, experts say]

Penn Medicine Associate Vice President Brian Wells agreed. We think we can reduce costs, Wells said. At Penn we can shorten the time to a good outcome for the patients.

Mahoney pointed, for example, to the ability to identify predictors of disease and move that upstream to advance disease prevention as just one example.

That is an enormous opportunity right now, according to Nephi Walton, a biomedical informaticist and genetics fellow at the Washington University School of Medicine.

[Also:Eric Dishman wants precision medicine to move from personal to universal]

Every single day without exception we are discovering a new genetic disease, Walton said. Beyond knowing the diseases, how to manage them is a huge task, a huge amount of information gathering.

And todays crop of electronic health records are not ready for that, Walton said.

In order to do precision medicine you need all the patients data in a common repository, said Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center CIO John Halamka, MD.

Beth Israel, for instance, has 26 different EHRs across 450 sites of care, so Halamka said that it uses a common data repository for precision medicine work instead of the electronic health record.

Stanford, for its part, undertook a primary care transformation initiative as part of its precision medicine work to move away from a traditional, transactional, catastrophe-based model toward a team-based approach where responsibility is distributed across a physician, an advanced practice provider and four care coordinators, Mahoney said.

The biggest issue we see in primary care is burnout 50 percent of employees experience it, Mahoney said. Precision health can help shift away from the in-person visit to what is more patient-centered and, Id argue, more provider-centered. This has really freed up the providers and given the joy of practice back to doctors.

Twitter:SullyHIT Email the writer: tom.sullivan@himssmedia.com

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How precision medicine can fix a broken healthcare system - Healthcare IT News