Thursday, December 31st, 2009 at
8:40 pm
About 3,000 Medicare patients who’ve been getting care at a Mayo Clinic facility in Arizona will have to pay out of their own pocket or find another doctor. Starting in 2010 (i.e., next week), the five primary care docs at a Mayo outpost in Glendale, Ariz. will stop accepting Medicare
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A Mayo Clinic Outpost Won’t Take Medicare
Thursday, December 31st, 2009 at
5:33 pm
Back in September, the Congressional Budget Office raised its estimate of how much money the feds would save if tort law were changed to reduce liability for doctors and hospitals. Even the new, higher estimates don’t suggest that tort changes (such as capping noneconomic damages) would be a silver bullet for health costs; CBO says the changes would lower the nation’s health-care bill by about 0.5%, and reduce the feds’ burden by $54 billion over 10 years. Still, a few lawmakers have asked CBO to elaborate on its new estimates
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Read more here:
Medical Malpractice: Why CBO Upped Estimated Savings
Thursday, December 31st, 2009 at
4:21 pm
Public-health-related bans are set to take effect with the New Year in a bunch of states. Here’s a sampling: California restaurants will be banned from using trans fats
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Coming Very Soon: Bans on Trans Fats, Smoking, Texting
Thursday, December 31st, 2009 at
1:55 pm
Most pregnant women wind up taking at least one prescription drug . But, because no one wants to subject pregnant women and their unborn children to a clinical trial, there’s very little clear evidence about the unique risks some prescription drugs may pose during pregnancy.
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Originally posted here:
Which Drugs Are Safe to Take During Pregnancy?
Thursday, December 31st, 2009 at
1:43 am
The stimulus bill that Congress passed back in February said docs and hospitals that make “meaningful use” of electronic medical records would get big bonus payments from Medicare and Medicaid. The bill laid out a few basics about meaningful use — reporting quality measures, sharing information electronically — but didn’t get into much detail.
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Original post:
How to Get $20 Billion for Using Electronic Medical Records
Wednesday, December 30th, 2009 at
4:38 pm
You must have come across many anti-wrinkle products that claim they are the best in the market. They claim that their product is superior in quality and their cost is cheaper than the other products. It is quite unfortunate that the people who are worried about their wrinkles immediately believe their statements and buy the products. Please understand that any anti-wrinkle product will work well only if the wrinkles are less. They promise that their creams can remove wrinkles completely but it is not true. Once a wrinkle appears on a skin means it can never be removed completely. However a good cream can prevent the wrinkles from getting worse. You may find it difficult to choose the best anti-wrinkle product as there are too many in the market.
When trying to decide on the best anti-wrinkle treatment, look at the three main ingredients. Many products contain the same ingredients.
Avocado Oil is one of the best, if not the best, source of collagen, a protein that helps maintain the skin’s firmness, preventing wrinkles from forming. The skin has difficulty absorbing some collagen forms, but Avocado Oil contains collagen that is easily absorbed, helping you maintain a sufficient amount of collagen in your skin to avoid the wrinkles that threaten to appear in the creases and folds of your skin.
Keratin encourages your body’s proteins to stay active, replacing dead skin cells and regenerating new ones. Wrinkles appear less visible when the skin is regenerated with new cells.
Shea Butter, perhaps the most famous of the three top ingredients, is extracted from a nut usually found in Africa. It softens, heals, and even reduces the visibility of wrinkles, making it a powerful all-in-one anti-wrinkle ingredient. The ingredients in any anti-wrinkle product can make or break it, so customers should exercise their power to make sure they are getting the best possible ingredients to fight wrinkles, since companies will naturally fight to gain the highest percentage of customer use in the market.
If you are ready to get your looks back, visit this website now. You will get helpful information on anti-wrinkle products and other useful beauty advice. This and other unique content ” articles are available with free reprint rights.
Wednesday, December 30th, 2009 at
4:21 pm
Lots of big drug makers have been pushing into China lately.

More:
One Drug Maker That’s Moving Manufacturing Out of China
Wednesday, December 30th, 2009 at
3:54 pm
You’re the CEO of a little company with a promising experimental antibiotic. You cut a deal with J&J to co-develop your new drug. Sweet deal! Unless … Unless, when the drug is submitted for FDA approval, the agency balks
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When Partnerships Sour: J&J/Basilea Antibiotic Rejected
Wednesday, December 30th, 2009 at
2:05 pm
Sounds like the FDA is about to get tougher on new medical devices: The acting director of the agency’s device division tells the WSJ and New York Times that stricter criteria for approval are on the way. His comments come as a couple new journal articles suggest many devices are approved based on studies that lack rigor. One article, published in JAMA , looked at cardiovascular devices that were approved by the FDA between 2000 and 2007 and were subject to the agency’s most stringent level of scrutiny for devices
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See more here:
Is the FDA Too Easy On Medical Devices?
Tuesday, December 29th, 2009 at
9:03 pm
Medical research is finally starting to catch up with millions of Americans who have been taking vitamins and supplements for years.
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See the original post:
The Evidence On Ginkgo Biloba and Memory