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Among Men Living With Early, Untreated Prostate Cancer, Study Finds Acceptable Levels Of Anxiety
Men with early stages of prostate cancer who delay radical treatment in favor of an approach of "expectant management" do not have high levels of anxiety and distress. That is the conclusion of a new study published in the September 1, 2009 issue of Cancer, a peer-reviewed journal of the American Cancer Society. The study"s results suggest that living with untreated cancer is not upsetting for many patients with early prostate cancer.
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College Nursery Closures Set To Spiral, Say Unions, UK
More than 50 further education colleges are set to make redundancies leading to the closure of a huge number of nurseries, according to UNISON, UCU and NUS.
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Obama Starts Interviewing Supreme Court Candidates
President Obama on Tuesday started interviewing potential Supreme Court nominees, the Wall Street Journal reports. Senior White House adviser David Axelrod on Tuesday said that the administration is looking for a candidate who will give the powerless and disenfranchised people "a fair shake." Conservatives have said that the nominee will inevitably be a "judicial activist" because Obama has said that he wants to nominate a candidate who can use past experience and empathy for the underrepresented populations to help guide court decisions.Obama has started calling Republican senators in an effort to prevent the "bruising battles" past Supreme Court nominations have encountered during the confirmation process, the Journal reports. Obama called Sen. John Cornyn (R-Texas) on Tuesday, which Cornyn said was a "nice gesture." Sen. Tom Coburn (R-Okla.) spoke to Obama last week. Coburn said, "I don"t know that it"s going to be contentious," adding, "A prudent man would say, "I"m going to have a couple of Supreme Court nominees. Maybe I want to defuse the thing, the first one, so I can do what I want to do (with) the second one."" Axelrod said that Obama has spoken to 15 senators from both parties (Weisman/Bendavid, Wall Street Journal, 5/20).
Public Health

White House, Congress, Industry Taking On Health Costs

Health care costs soared nearly 50 percent between 2000 and 2006, adding an urgency for reform that may help Democrats pass a major overhaul before the year-end deadline set by the White House, Bloomberg reports. "You come to a point where you can"t afford health care as it is and you have to reform it," Rep. John Dingell, D-Mich., told Bloomberg. As Congress seeks to capitalize on spending growth, industry groups have arrived at the table with their own suggestions for cutting up to $1.7 trillion in spending over the upcoming decade (Litvan, 6/2). Those groups--the American Medical Association, America"s Health Insurance Plans, the Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America, the Service Employees International Union, Advanced Medical Technology Association and the American Hospital Association--offered details of their plan Monday. Among the steps they outlined is "improving chronic care management" which they estimate would save between $350 billion and $850 billion. They propose reducing "unnecessary utilization," and increasing adherence to needed medicines. Their plan also includes "pledges to try and reduce medical errors, switch to common insurance forms, improve measurements of physician performance, reduce the number of patients readmitted to hospitals, improve the efficiency of drug development and expand in-home care for patients with long-term illnesses," the Wall Street Journal reports (Adamy, 6/1). The groups say that their cost-cutting proposal, first announced at a White House meeting in May, would "depend on "good public policy" in a proposed health industry overhaul" by the administration, Reuters reports (6/1). The White House, meanwhile, has sharpened its strategy for selling health reform to lawmakers and the public by arguing that cost cuts would yield "enormous benefits for the nation"s economy," the Washington Post reports. A new report by the president"s Council of Economic Advisers suggests that slowing the rate of spending growth from 6 percent a year to 4.5 percent could create 500,000 jobs, increase the annual income for the average family of four by $2,600 and "remove "unnecessary barriers" to job mobility and increase the nation"s overall economic well-being by "roughly" $100 billion a year" (Connolly and Montgomery, 6/2). "The report comes as the White House ratchets up its public advocacy for a health care reform bill, which congressional Democratic leaders have promised to deliver by August," reports Politico. The report says, "Because such a substantial reduction will require hard choices and the cooperation of policymakers, providers, insurers, and the public, success is not guaranteed. But, the economic benefits of achieving successful reform would be very large" (Brown, 6/1). 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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