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Rural Hospital Places Critical Bet On Health IT; Technology Raises Fears Of Hackers
Kaiser A small, rural hospital in Missouri is "rolling the dice" on electronic medical records, its CEO tells the Associated Press. The 47-bed hospitals borrowed nearly $1 million to implement an electronic records system, and that"s on top of a $370,000 operating deficit and staff layoffs. The executives are banking on a government bailout in the form of a "$3 million windfall" of stimulus-funded incentives for hospitals to switch to electronic record-keeping.
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Alphatec Spine Reaches Milestone Of OsseoFix Adoption
Alphatec Holdings, Inc. (Nasdaq: ATEC), the parent company of Alphatec Spine, Inc., a medical device company that designs, develops, manufactures and markets products for the surgical treatment of spine disorders, with a focus on treating conditions related to the aging spine, today announced that, as of June 1, 2009, over 115 patients in eight European countries have been treated with the OsseoFix™ Spinal Fracture Reduction System, the Company"s innovative product for the treatment of vertebral compression fractures. The first European training session was held at the University of Vienna in mid-December 2008. The first shipments of OsseoFix products into Europe occurred at the end of December 2008.
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Argos Therapeutics Presents Positive Transplantation And Immunosuppression Data For Soluble CD83 At The American Transplant Congress
Argos Therapeutics announced the presentation of new information on its soluble CD83 (sCD83) protein program in a poster session at the 2009 American Transplant Congress, held May 30-June 3 in Boston. The poster presentation, to be made on June 2 at 5:30pm by Argos" collaborating scientists from the University of Western Ontario, demonstrates that combination therapy with sCD83 can prolong kidney allograft survival in an animal model of transplantation, and that sCD83 attenuates pathological changes in kidney allografts, induces generation of T regulatory cells and inhibits dendritic cell maturation, all of which may contribute to immunosuppression and allograft tolerance.
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California Medical Association Supports Senate Move To Expand Health Care Coverage

The California Medical Association applauded the U.S. Senate Finance Committee for producing a thoughtful analysis of ways to expand the nation"s health care coverage. The committee"s paper, titled "Expanding Health Care Coverage: Proposals to Provide Affordable Coverage to All Americans," includes certain market reforms that all participating health plans would be required to participate in. "In California, doctors have long argued for a system that provides universal access to health care," said Dr. Dev GnanaDev, a trauma surgeon who is president of CMA. "Expanding coverage is a start, but does not necessarily translate into patients having access to doctors when they need it, a critical component of people staying healthy and checking rising health care costs." A critical piece of expanding access to care will be insurance reform. CMA supports the paper"s proposal for a Health Insurance Exchange, a government-coordinated pool of health insurance plans for consumers to purchase from, as long as it ensures patient choice by providing enough plans to facilitate competition and keep cost down. Although the Exchange would be part of national reform, the plans must be held accountable to the laws in states where they sell their insurance products. For example, in California, the Knox Keene Act offers robust protections, such as requiring health plans to assist patients in their primary language and provide breast cancer screening, whereas federal law does not. CMA has been a constant advocate for insurance plans to have a minimum medical loss ratio, spending at least 85% of health care premiums on patient care. Such a standard would help lower health care costs by ensuring more health care dollars go to health care, not administrative costs or profits. The paper also outlines the role of public programs, such as Medicaid, and discusses their expansion to cover low-income families. Any expansion of current public programs must address the shortcomings of current programs which hinder access to health care for their enrollees. As we"ve seen in California, the failure to fully fund Medi-Cal has led to well-documented shortages of providers, many of whom simply cannot afford to participate more vigorously in the program. (Click here to see Los Angeles Times, March 24, 2008) This has left patients struggling to get access to care. Any expansion to a these programs must have appropriate funding to ensure real access to a doctor. The committee is scheduled to release a separate paper detailing financing options in coming weeks. The California Medical Association


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