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Genetic Risk Factor For Testicular Cancer Discovered By Penn Researchers
Researchers at the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine have uncovered variation around two genes that are associated with an increased risk of testicular cancer. Testicular cancer is the most common cancer among young men, and its incidence among non-Hispanic Caucasian men has doubled in the last 40 years -- it now affects seven out of 100,000 white men in the United States each year. The discovery, published in the May 31, 2009 online issue of Nature Genetics, is the first step toward understanding which men are at high risk of disease.
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HIV-Positive Cambodians Evicted From Phnom Penh Homes
To make way for a Ministry of Tourism garden, 20 families with HIV-positive members have been evicted from their homes and moved outside of the city, reports the Phnom Penh Post. The newspaper writes, "Despite municipal officials claiming that residents left voluntarily and will be better off at the new site, which has been condemned by local and international rights groups as being unsuitable for human habitation, residents said they were unhappy with the move" (Shay/Chamroeun, Phnom Penh Post, 6/18).
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Web Site Helps Caregivers Navigate Medicare
The Department of Health and Human Services has created a web site called "Ask Medicare" to help caregivers navigate the often confusing Medicare system. CNN reports on the experience of Kim Mickens, a caregiver who used the site to help her mother, who has Alzheimer"s disease. "Medicare personnel helped her get some of the medical supplies she needed and also recommend a new Web site called Ask Medicare. Designed to give easy access to people taking care of elderly relatives, Ask Medicare provides information and links to services that are important to caregivers."
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Health Care Experts Examine Top Performing, Low Cost Communities

Talk about health care reform efforts has focused largely on all that is wrong with the current system. In contrast, an event Tuesday in Washington, D.C., examined best practices in ten top performing communities where they spend less and have better quality of care. NPR reports: "The health care debate in Washington has basically deteriorated into a choice between raising taxes or cutting care. But "that"s wrong," says Don Berwick of the Institute for Healthcare Improvement. "There"s a third way. It"s redesign." To try to prove his point, Berwick, along with health luminaries Elliott Fisher of the Dartmouth Medical School, Atul Gawande of Harvard and Mark McClellan of the Brookings Institution, brought doctors and hospital officials to Washington from 10 communities around the U.S. where health spending is lower than average and health care outcomes are better than average." NPR notes: "But translating the success of those communities - which ranged from Portland, Maine, to Everett, Wash., to Sacramento, Calif. - won"t be easy. ... An even larger problem is that while there is relative consensus that Medicare"s current payment system encourages doctors and hospitals to provide too much of the wrong care, no one is quite sure how to revise it to encourage just the right amount of care. "I guess the way I would put it is even if I was a benevolent dictator for a day, I wouldn"t feel comfortable at this point, given the state of knowledge, completely overhauling the Medicare payment system," said White House Budget Director Peter Orszag, who has been studying the issue for several years. That has led to a conundrum in lawmakers" efforts to try to achieve long-term savings in the health care system. They know that overhauling Medicare payments is a key means to achieving that goal. They also know that if they do it wrong, they could leave the health care system - and the patients it serves - worse off than it is now" (Rovner, 7/22). Kaiser Health News reports on the same event in which local hospitals and doctors joined forces to improve care and restrain costs: "Communities across the country aren"t waiting for Congress to take action to improve health care quality and contain costs. ... [Leaders from communities] that feature low-cost, high-quality health care met in Washington yesterday to exchange ideas at an event organized by the Institute for Healthcare Improvement, a nonprofit group based in Cambridge, Mass. ... The institute, working with The Dartmouth Institute, Harvard Medical School, the Brookings Institution and the Fannie Rippel Foundation, invited representatives from 10 high-performing communities to the conference. The communities were chosen by examining per capita Medicare costs and federal hospital performance data and patient satisfaction data. The communities that were invited weren"t necessarily the Top 10 in the country, but they were among the best in the nation. The institute wanted a geographic distribution. KHN reports: "In most of the communities, hospitals work closely with doctors. In addition, most of the health systems use electronic medical records to track patients and improve care, and encourage a culture of restraining spending, involving physicians in changing health care delivery systems and collaborating with competitors to help patients. All the communities were dominated by nonprofit health systems. "While the session didn"t focus on the congressional health proposals, most in attendance stressed the need to change the Medicare payment system from a fee-for-service system, under which providers are paid for individual tests, visits and procedures, to a system under which providers are paid for an entire episode of care or for all the needs of a population over time. Other common themes that emerged from the communities: Strong leadership, particularly from physicians, is needed to improve and standardize health care; Having a strong base of primary care doctors is important -- but coordinating care among all providers is even more important; To improve accountability, health care data are needed to measure the performance of providers and to share with purchasers of care and the public" (Galewitz, 7/22). In related news, NPR reports that President Obama has been stressing the idea that overtreatment drives health care costs: "President Obama has promised to overhaul the nation"s health-care system in a way that controls costs and expands insurance coverage. But critics say the legislation that"s appeared so far would achieve only one of those goals." Critics stress that more needs to be done to control costs at the same time the White House tries to strengthen an independent council of medical experts to oversee Medicare payments and recommend cost-saving changes. NPR reports: "The White House argues that using an expert panel to recommend changes every year would provide flexibility to adjust to changing needs. It also allows the administration to promise health-care savings in the future, without having to detail just how those savings would be achieved" (Horsley, 7/21). Meanwhile, National Journal published a glossary of potential offsets for the pay-for-performance system as lawmakers consider ways to pay for health reform (Plautz, 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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