Health Care


Strike Force Ops Lead to Indictment of 30 Alleged Medicare Fraudsters

Collectively, the physicians, company owners, executives, and others charged in the indictments are accused of conspiring to submit approximately $61 million in false claims to the Medicare program.

A head shot of a snowman

Shoveling Snow Safely

The first major snowstorm of the season is a time of excitement and wonder for a child: snowball fights, sledding, and closed schools. For adults, it's the dreaded shoveling season complete with aching backs, frozen fingers, or worse.

Physicians Develop Fast Method to Estimate Blood Loss at Scene of Trauma

Determining blood loss at the scene of trauma can be critical to successful patient treatment. Health care workers such as emergency medical technicians have used visual estimation, which can be highly inaccurate, as their only means of determining volumes of blood loss. A new, simple method developed by UMDNJ-Robert Wood Johnson Medical School may drastically improve their accuracy.

Sanofi Pasteur Commercializing MRSA Vaccine

The French vaccine maker announced a worldwide licensing agreement with the biotech company Syntiron to develop and commercialize its vaccine against staph, including Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus.

The American Lung Association offers tips to help anyone trying to quit smoking.

Resolved to Quit Smoking? ALA Can Help

The American Lung Association says its smoking cessation program, Freedom From Smoking (www.ffsonline.org), and similar programs can succeed. Six other tips from ALA can help with this New Year's resolution.

Podcast Explores Link Between Cardiac Deaths, Holidays

Research has found that heart attacks peak during the winter months, and the prevailing hypothesis has been that cold temperatures stress the heart. But in 2004, researchers analyzed 12 years of Los Angeles County death certificates and found that heart attack deaths also rise in the balmy Los Angeles winters. What's more, cardiac deaths peak on Christmas and New Year's Day in L.A. County.

One-Fourth U.S. Adult Health Care Expenditures Associated with Disability

Slightly more than one quarter of U.S. adult health care spending was associated with disability in 2006, according to a new study by researchers at RTI International and the Centers for Disease Control & Prevention.

Tips to Get Through a Personal Health Care Crisis

As 2009 winds down, the nation continues to struggle with a brutal economy, leading to a rise in the number of patients who are unemployed and overwhelmed by medical bills. Experts at the University of Michigan Comprehensive Cancer Center offer these tips for coping.



Researchers Identify Barriers to HPV Vaccination in Low-Income Populations

Results of two separate studies show lower rates of HPV vaccination in low-income populations, and identify vaccination barriers and tailored interventions that may help to increase HPV vaccine uptake rates.

DOL Proposes Exemption for Ford Motor’s New Health Plan Retirees

The Department of Labor's Employee Benefits Security Administration (EBSA) has announced a proposed exemption that, if granted, would allow the Ford Motor Co. to transfer company securities to a voluntary employee beneficiary association (VEBA) trust, which would fund a new health plan established to provide health benefits for the company's retirees. The new health plan would cover in excess of 285,000 retirees and their dependents, and a small number of active employees.

a pile of cash

Big Appropriations Bill Passed

A key Senate vote on Saturday prevents a filibuster, so the combined funding bills are set for a Sunday final vote. OSHA would get a $45 million boost from its FY2009 funding and MSHA a 3.1 percent increase.

Chemical Exposures in U.S. Population Measured in CDC Report

The Fourth National Report on Human Exposure to Environmental Chemicals shows most Americans have measurable levels of many chemicals in their blood or urine, including PFOA, perchlorate, and MTBE.

'Harvard Heart Letter' Reports on Vitamin D Deficiency Dangers

New research suggests that having too little vitamin D, the so-called sunshine vitamin, can contribute to heart disease, falls and broken bones, breast cancer, prostate cancer, depression, and memory loss, reports the December 2009 issue of the Harvard Heart Letter.

An effective drug supply and management system is one of the elements of the DOTS treatment approach that has saved millions of lives since 1994, WHO says.

8 Million TB Deaths Averted, 36 Million Cured Since 1994

The World Health Organization says millions of people have been aided by the treatment approach developed 15 years ago.

American Institute of Architects 2010 president George H. Miller was inaugurated Dec. 4, 2009.

New AIA President Promotes Safety, Sustainability

In an inaugural speech, George H. Miller called on members to design better schools, affordable housing, mass transportation, and sustainable communities that encourage better public health.

FDA Launches Pet Health, Safety Widget

The Food and Drug Administration has launched its pet health and safety widget for consumers as part of an ongoing effort to provide timely, user-friendly, public health information.

DOL Recovers More than $1.7 Million for SSM Health Care Workers

SSM Health Care, a medical corporation comprised of seven health care centers and hospitals in the St. Louis area, has paid more than $1.7 million in back wages following a Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA) investigation by the Department of Labor's Wage and Hour Division.

Sleep apnea may afflict as many as 28 percent of commercial drivers, according to studies.

Trucking Sleep Apnea Conference Announced

The May 12 meeting at a hotel near Baltimore and Washington will bring experts together to seek solutions to a problem that may afflict as many as 28 percent of commercial drivers. An indication of the federal interest in this issue is the fact NTSB Chairman Deborah A.P. Hersman will deliver a May 11 keynote speech.

FDA Interim Recommendations Address Excess CT Radiation Concerns

As part of an ongoing investigation into cases of excess radiation during CT perfusion imaging of the brain, the Food and Drug Administration has provided imaging facilities and practitioners with interim recommendations to help prevent additional problems.

Study Finds Stopping MRSA Before It Becomes Dangerous Is Possible

Most scientists believe that staph infections are caused by many bacterial cells that signal each other to emit toxins. The signaling process is called quorum sensing because many bacteria must be present to start the process.

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