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Blogs Comment On Health Reform Legislation, Maternal Mortality, Other Topics
The following summarizes selected women"s health-related blog entries. ~ ""Operation Rescue" Founder Warns of "Violent Convulsions" if Health Bill Doesn"t Ban Abortions," Ian Millhiser, Think Progress: Operation Rescue founder Randall Terry is "probably the first public figure to raise terrorism as a potential response to a health bill which allows Americans to keep the same access to reproductive care that they currently enjoy," Millhiser writes in a blog post responding to Terry"s warning "that his supporters may engage in violent acts of terrorism unless Congress prohibits abortion services from being covered in the new health reform legislation." According to Millhiser, Terry recently said that there are some people ""who will be tempted to acts of violence"" and that ""history will hold those in power responsible for the violent convulsions that follow"" the legislation. Millhiser writes that many conservative policymakers are "pushing a poison pill amendment" to Congress" reform bill that would prohibit the coverage of abortion services in plans offered within a national health insurance exchange. He notes that 71% of U.S. residents oppose an amendment that would "cut off women"s access to reproductive care" (Millhiser, Think Progress, 7/20).~ "Gestation Is a Life-Changing Experience for Women," Jessica Grose, XX Factor: Grose"s post responds to Francis Kissling"s recent Salon opinion piece discussing the ""new pro-lifers."" According to Grose, this movement "seeks to make bearing and raising children easier, and reducing abortion that way." She continues, "It almost sounds reasonable to pro-choice Kissling, except for one thing: making bearing children "easier" doesn"t acknowledge how gestation can change a woman"s life." According to Kissling, the ""new pro-lifers barely acknowledge the difficulties of childbirth,"" and the movement ""denies the reality that even in modern Western culture, in the high-tech U.S., every woman who agrees to be pregnant still risks dying if the pregnancy goes awry."" Kissling also wrote that the ""new antiabortionists want to use their rosy view of pregnancy as the frame for public policy, and that is where they become indistinguishable from the old antiabortion movement. For both groups, women are passive participants in gestation."" Grose writes that "many of the new pro-lifers don"t support efforts to bring contraception to women who don"t have access to it," an issue that is "likely to come back in a big way in the next few months as the administration"s new health plan is debated" (Grose, XX Factor, 7/20).~ "Thanks, Abstinence-Only Education!" Feministing: "Thanks to a decade of misinformation and masquerading as sex education, teens are having the same amount of sex, using contraception less and getting pregnant more," a Feministing blog entry states. A report from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention found that trends in reproductive and sexual health of U.S. teens and young adults ""have flattened, or in some instances may be worsening."" According to the blog entry, "We"re reaping what we"ve sowed." Although President Obama"s 2010 budget proposal includes cuts in abstinence-only education funding, "de-funding these programs is not enough," the blog says. It adds, "We have to undo the damage that"s been done to young people and support real solutions." The blog concludes, "The purity-pushers are not going anywhere, but this is about more than politics, ... it"s about our health and futures" (Feministing, 7/20).~ "Human Rights Resolution Spotlights Disparities in Maternal Health Care in the U.S.," Ximena Andion Ibanez et al., RH Reality Check: A "vast majority" of pregnancy- and childbirth-related deaths are "preventable and can therefore be understood to reflect widespread indifference to the rights of the world"s poorest women," Ibanez writes in a blog post co-authored by Center for Reproductive Rights Deputy Director Laura Katzive and Michelle Movahead, an attorney at the ce
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New Study Finds 1 In 4 Multiple Sclerosis Patients With High Out-of-Pocket Costs Not Filling Prescriptions
One in four multiple sclerosis (MS) patients are declining to fill their prescriptions likely due to high out-of-pocket costs, according to new research conducted by pharmacy benefits manager Prime Therapeutics (Prime). The study found that patients with an out-of-pocket expense greater than $250 were seven times more likely to decline to fill their prescription than patients with an out-of-pocket cost of $100 or less. The study concluded that this increase in the number of patients who decline to fill their MS specialty prescriptions and do not continue taking the necessary MS medications may adversely affect long term patient care.
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"Body-count" Processing Must End At VA, Says The American Legion
An immediate overhaul of the Department of Veterans Affairs disability claims processing system is the only way out of a fast-growing nationwide backlog of unresolved cases, American Legion National Commander David K. Rehbein said after a congressional hearing last Thursday evening.
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HCL Anticipates Increasing Demand For Locums As NHS Funding Is Squeezed, UK

HCL, the UK"s largest health and social care recruiter, said today that it anticipates increasing demand for its temporary and locum staff as the NHS seeks to increase efficiencies in healthcare provision. The Company was responding to a report issued yesterday by the NHS Confederation, which pointed to an expected ÷£15 billion contraction in NHS finances in the five years from 2011. The Report warned that cuts in spending could lead to a reduction of permanent staff, as the "very advantageous" levels of pay and pension provision in the public sector become increasingly difficult to sustain. The Report recommends that quality and efficiency within the health service are best achieved by re-designing clinical services, by utilising the healthcare workforce more efficiently and also by taking a more commercial approach towards commissioning services. Kate Bleasdale, Executive Vice Chairman of HCL, said: "These findings confirm what we have been saying for some time: using a greater flexible workforce of highly skilled and appropriately qualified locums is the only way that the NHS can increase efficiencies and save money without compromising frontline services to patients. This is because current levels of public sector spending are unsustainable - the NHS pension bill alone rose by ÷£52 billion last year. "Locum staff cost the taxpayer less than permanent staff as they do not receive public sector pensions and benefits. Furthermore, flexible workforces are adaptable - healthcare professionals can be moved around quickly depending on where they are most needed to meet the fluctuating demands of the population. "HCL expects to see steadily increasing demands for our services as NHS Trusts seek to improve efficiency and save money. We also anticipate further increases in demand in our rapidly growing International division, as Trusts look to make up the shortfall of staff in the UK by sourcing qualified healthcare professionals from our worldwide networks. "These are challenging times for the NHS, as the funding squeeze coincides with the increasing demands of an ageing population, and as the recession itself takes its toll on the nation"s health. "HCL is committed to supporting the NHS in driving innovation through healthcare staffing provision, to ensure that patients continue to receive the highest level of care." HCL


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