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Low Levels Of Contamination Found In Ready-to-eat Speciality Meats Sold In UK
A new report published highlights that 99% of ready-to-eat speciality meats sold in the UK are safe to eat. However the study also reveals that a very small proportion of the meats contained Salmonella or unsafe levels of Listeria monocytogenes.
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University Of Minnesota Research Finds Teens Who Believe They'll Die Young Are More Likely To Engage In Risky Behavior
University of Minnesota Medical School researcher Iris Borowsky, M.D., Ph.D., and colleagues found that one in seven adolescents believe that it is highly likely that they will die before age 35, and this belief predicted that the adolescents" would engage in risky behaviors.
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Camera-Phone Uses Blood, Saliva Samples To Diagnose Disease
Researchers at the University of California, Berkeley, have developed a "prototype camera-phone mounted with a microscope" that can "magnify and photograph blood or saliva samples" for diagnosing diseases, the Canadian Press/Google.com reports. A report on the device was published on Wednesday in the journal PLoS One. The prototype, called CellScope, would enable "disease screening and diagnosis in the field where specialized clinical microscopy laboratories aren"t available, including in underdeveloped countries," according to the news service (Ubelacker, 7/21).
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Slumping Economy Hurts Health System, But Stimulus Provides Some Relief

The receding economy has dragged down Michigan"s health care system, "offering a preview of how a lingering recession could corrode Americans" hospitals, savings and health," the Wall Street Journal reports. "The erosion of Michigan"s gold-plated health benefits, long the envy of workers across the U.S., is accelerating the state"s downward economic spiral. Years of auto-industry layoffs and benefit cuts to white-collar retirees have left hundreds of thousands of Michigan workers... without employer-provided health coverage. To adapt, individuals are drawing down savings to fund their own insurance, going without treatments or tests, or leaning on an increasingly strained state. The share of Michigan residents under 65 using public insurance such as Medicaid rose to 22% last year, from 11% a decade earlier. These cutbacks, in turn, are devastating the health-care sector." Providers in the state are losing money and hopes have dwindled that the heath care system will be able to absorb the slack of uninsured and unemployed from the car industry"s decline (Linebaugh, 7/13). In Massachusetts, Boston Medical Center, is bracing for a major financial loss which will force it to cut services to the poor, The Boston Globe reports: "The hospital projects that it will lose $175 million in the fiscal year starting Oct. 1, an 18 percent operating loss that is unusually large even in Massachusetts" up-and-down hospital industry. The hospital estimates that it will close this year $38 million in the red, its first loss in five years. "Ironically, hospital officials blame the downturn partly on changes ushered in with the state"s groundbreaking mandatory health insurance law, which Boston Medical Center supported and that benefited many of its patients. As part of the law, the state phased out special subsidies for hospitals that treat large numbers of poor patients, a significant shock for Boston Medical Center" (Kowalczyk, 7/12). But there is good news -- community health centers are being bolstered by more than $1.1 billion in federal stimulus money made to expand services to the poor, the Wall Street Journal reports in a separate story: "The centers, which offer primary care and other coverage free or at reduced prices based on patient incomes, will be able to serve 2.8 million new patients this year, thanks to funding distributed in March from the stimulus package that Congress passed earlier this year, according to the Department of Health and Human Services. That money includes $155 million for the construction of 126 new health centers and $338 million to help 1,100 centers expand services or keep longer hours, says Mary Wakefield, head of HHS"s Health Res and Services Administration" (Zhang, 7/12). This information was reprinted from kaiserhealthnews.org with kind permission from the Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation. You can view the entire Kaiser Daily Health Policy Report, search the archives and sign up for email delivery at kaiserhealthnews.org. © Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation. All rights reserved.


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