Popular Articles

Using Structural MRI May Help Accurately Diagnose Dementia Patients: Mayo Clinic Study
A new Mayo Clinic study may help physicians differentially diagnose three common neurodegenerative disorders in the future. The study was presented at the Alzheimer"s Association International Conference on Alzheimer"s Disease on July 11 in Vienna.
generic viagra online
Insurance Insiders Give Views On Health Reform
In an interview with the Seattle Post-Intelligencer, Washington state Insurance Commissioner Mike Kreidler called the American health system an out-dated, World War II-era obstacle to economic progress. "We"ve been talking about health-care reform in this country for over 100 years, and its never happened," he said. However, he added, "I believe that Congress will be successful." Kreidler, a Democrat, was a member of Congress in the 1990s, when the Clinton administration attempted an overhaul. This time around, he said, "We"re still in July, and they"re making huge progress" (Pulkkinen, 8/2).
News of the day
Afinitor(R) Phase II Data Show Positive Results For Patients With Multiple Types Of Lymphoma, Leading To Phase III Trial
New data show that Afinitor(R) (everolimus) tablets significantly shrunk tumors in 33% of patients with relapsed non-Hodgkin"s lymphoma (NHL) and Hodgkin"s disease(1). Based on results from this study and other early-stage research, Novartis has initiated a Phase III trial in the most common NHL, diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL).
Oncology

Insurance Coverage May Drive Care Of Newborns With Congenital Defects

In a study that sheds light on how insurance coverage may drive health care and may reveal an unexpected result for the uninsured, a team of Yale School of Medicine and Yale-New Haven Children"s Hospital physicians has found that babies from uninsured families who are born with congenital defects are far more likely than those whose families have insurance to be transferred out of the large community hospitals where they are born and into children"s hospitals for corrective surgery. Paradoxically, these uninsured babies may receive better care at the children"s hospitals, which are fully staffed with pediatric specialists, say the researchers. The team"s data were presented at the 40th annual meeting of the American Pediatric Surgical Association in Puerto Rico on May 30. The Yale team studied around 6,000 infants with major congenital defects of the abdomen and esophagus, born in community hospitals between 1997 and 2006. During that period they saw a steady increase in the trend of uninsured pediatric patients being transferred, while insured patients were treated locally. By 2006, the uninsured babies were three times as likely as the insured to be sent to children"s hospitals. Treatment of newborns with complex congenital anomalies requiring urgent surgical care is among the most costly challenges for the health care system. The mean hospitalization cost per patient is more than $155,000, with care for some infants rising above $1 million. Because of this, "care of newborns with major anomalies can produce either a huge financial gain or loss to a hospital depending upon the patient"s insurance status," according to corresponding author R. Lawrence Moss, M.D., the Robert Pritzker Professor and Chief of Pediatric Surgery, Yale School of Medicine, and Surgeon-in-Chief of Yale-New Haven Children"s Hospital. "The current reimbursement structure in the U.S. provides the incentive," he adds. The authors acknowledge that their study did not address whether babies treated at children"s hospitals had better outcomes than babies treated at community hospitals. However, other studies have shown this to be the case. Moss and co-author Loren Berman, M.D., of the Robert Wood Johnson Clinical Scholars program state that any disparity in care that is based on insurance status is unacceptable, and likely has an overall negative effect on the care of children. Dr. Moss says, "A disturbing implication of our findings is that children"s hospitals are being asked to shoulder a disproportionate burden of caring for these uninsured babies without the appropriate reimbursement. This threatens the viability of all children"s hospitals in the United States and reduces their ability to meet the needs of our kids." In addition to Moss and Berman, authors from Yale School of Medicine include Marjorie S. Rosenthal, M.D., Department of Pediatrics. This study was funded by grants from the Robert Wood Johnson Clinical Scholars Program and the National Institutes of Health. Yale University


Add your comment:
Name:
Site address: http://
Your message:
Enter today\\\\'s date, 2 digits
(spam protection):