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Eye Disorder Research Benefits From Grant
Researchers at the Peninsula Medical School in Plymouth and Exeter have received a grant of ÷£9,600 from the Northcott Devon Medical Foundation to continue its research into the genetic causes of eye movement disorders.

Sen. Baucus Says Health Care Overhaul Will Cover About 95% Of Citizens, Will Not Cover Undocumented Immigrants
Senate Finance Committee Chair Max Baucus (D-Mont.) on Thursday said that Congress" health care overhaul plan would cover 94% to 96% of the population but not undocumented immigrants, the AP/Las Vegas Sun reports (Alonso-Zaldivar, AP/Las Vegas Sun, 5/21). In remarks at a briefing sponsored by the Kaiser Family Foundation, Families USA and the National Federation of Independent Business, Baucus said, "There are always going to be some people ... you just can"t find" to enroll, adding that "we"re going to try to get as close as we can (to 100% coverage) and we"re working hard to accomplish that." He added, "[W]e"re not going to cover undocumented workers. That"s too politically explosive" (Reichard, CQ HealthBeat, 5/21). According to an analysis by the Center for Immigration Studies and the U.S. Census Bureau, undocumented immigrants make up between 15% and 22% of the estimated 47 million U.S. residents without health coverage. Baucus said, "I don"t have a good answer yet to undocumented workers, illegal aliens," adding, "There will still be charity care " (Landers, Dallas Morning News, 5/22). Baucus said that the bill his committee is working on and that he expects to mark up in mid-June will include "incentives" and possibly requirements for employers to pay for employee health insurance. Baucus mentioned the possibility of including an individual mandate and establishing a health insurance exchange (AP/Las Vegas Sun, 5/21). Baucus also noted that the plan most likely will include a public health insurance option in some form (Tumulty, "Swampland," Time Magazine, 5/21). "Everything"s on the table," Baucus said, warning that "because this is so big, so complex, there are going to be a lot of trade-offs. ... This is just so large" (CQ HealthBeat, 5/21). He said that he is very optimistic about the prospects of bipartisan support for the legislation, placing the odds at between 75% and 80% ("Swampland," Time Magazine, 5/21).
News of the day
Lantheus Medical Imaging, Inc. Completes Enrollment Of CaRES Registry To Further Evaluate Definity(R) In Patients With Suboptimal Echocardiograms
Lantheus Medical Imaging, Inc., a worldwide leader in diagnostic imaging, announces that it has completed patient enrollment of CaRES (Contrast Echocardiography REgistry for Safety Surveillance), the first, multicenter Phase IV observational registry that evaluates the use of ultrasound imaging agents in routine clinical practice. The 1,060 patients who were enrolled at 15 sites in the U.S. were 18 years old or older and required DEFINITY® Vial for (Perflutren Lipid Microsphere) injectable suspension-enhanced echocardiography because of a previous suboptimal, unenhanced echocardiogram.
Diagnostics

Health Care Overhaul Could Include Changes To Doctor Payments

The Wall Street Journal reports that "Democratic centrists said they won a tentative commitment from the White House to back a proposal to curb the growth of Medicare costs. ... One proposal pushed both by President Barack Obama and some centrists is to give the executive branch the authority to implement cuts to Medicare spending that would be recommended by independent experts. Congress could stop the cuts, but only if it acted swiftly. Fiscal conservatives say that under the current system, which gives Congress more power, lawmakers shy away from politically tough votes to restrain Medicare costs." "After a more-than-two-hour meeting at the White House Tuesday, centrists said they secured a verbal commitment to add such a mechanism on Medicare cost-cutting to the House bill. White House budget chief Peter Orszag ... said "I think it"s probably the most important piece that could be added to the House legislation"" (Hitt and Bendavid, 7/22). The Associated Press: "With Congress and the Obama administration groping for a way to restrain the skyrocketing rise in medical costs and restore solvency to the health care program for seniors, the Medicare Payment Advisory Commission could be moved into the executive branch, its clout expanded exponentially." "The consequences for thousands of doctors, hospitals, nursing homes and other health care providers under Medicare, the government-run program for seniors, would be sweeping. A bill backed by Sen. Jay Rockefeller, D-W.Va., would give MedPAC"s annual recommendations, which are advisory, the force of law unless overridden by Congress. That would be a remarkable grant of authority by lawmakers - an acknowledgment that Congress was politically incapable of reining in Medicare on its own - much as legislation a decade ago put the closure of unneeded military bases on autopilot." But "MedPAC has its critics, and some lawmakers worry that constituents will hold them responsible for future payment cuts made largely without their involvement." In a letter last month, Sen. Max Baucus, D-Mont., explained that even now, lawmakers are "sure to listen very carefully to MedPAC"s recommendations, particularly on provider payments." Created by congressional Republicans over a decade ago, MedPAC has 17 part-time commissioners, a staff of 35, and a budget of $10.4 million: "almost infinitesimally small in a government that is on track to spend about $3.8 trillion in the current fiscal year." The administration hopes that increasing the authority of MedPAC would help reign in spending by limiting increases to doctor payments (Espo, 7/21). Meanwhile, "House Democrats want to give doctors a $245 billion sweetener that helps ensure their critical support for a health care overhaul bill," The Associated Press reports in a separate story. "Next up: Trying to explain how they could do it without breaking President Barack Obama"s promise that health legislation won"t increase the federal deficit. ... Democrats and the Obama administration argue that the $245 billion included for doctors - the approximate 10-year cost of adjusting Medicare reimbursement rates so physicians don"t face big annual pay cuts - does not have to be counted in the overall cost of the health care bill. Their only-in-Washington reasoning is that they already decided to exempt it from congressional "pay-as-you-go" rules that require new programs to be paid for. In other words, it doesn"t have to be paid for because they decided it doesn"t have to be paid for." "Old policy or new, no one disputes that the "doc fix" does in fact add to the deficit. And the administration"s position carried no weight with the CBO when it released its analysis of the House Democrats" bill. The CBO, Congress" nonpartisan budget scorekeeper, said Friday that enacting the legislation "would result in a net increase to the federal budget deficit of $239 billion over the 2010-2019 period." The increase is mostly because of Democrats" failure to pay for the "doc fix," but CBO didn"t even bother to entertain the notion that its cost should be excluded." The change has "been a top priority for the American Medical Association, which cited its inclusion as a key reason in its endorsement of the House Democrats" sweeping health care bill" (Werner, 7/21). NPR interviewed AMA President Dr. James Rohack. The interview did not address MedPAC or the "doc fix." Dr. Rohack said the AMA endorsed the House Democrat"s bill because "status quo"s unacceptable," and the "political process needs to continue on." Asked why the House bill does not address malpractice concerns, Rohack said that "when President Obama spoke to the AMA house of delegates in June, he recognized that defensive medicine was one of the contributors to unnecessary costs. And so we"re willing to work with the White House, the Congress to try and come up with some solutions if we"re going to provide what we believe is long overdue fundamental health system reform." He also stressed that the House bill was not the final bill. "We believe, like a baseball game, we"re in the second inning" (Siegel, 7/21). 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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