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America's Health Insurance Plans Statement On Health Care Reform Rhetoric
America"s Health Insurance Plans (AHIP) released the following statement from spokesman Robert Zirkelbach.
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GOP Senators Say They Do Not Plan To Delay Hearing For Supreme Court Nominee Sotomayor
Sen. Jeff Sessions (R-Ala.), the ranking Republican on the Senate Judiciary Committee, said on Tuesday that GOP senators would not use procedural maneuvers to delay Supreme Court nominee Sonia Sotomayor"s confirmation hearing, CQ Today reports. According to CQ Today, "It could be in the Republicans" own political interest to go ahead with the Sotomayor hearings as currently scheduled," because it would allow them to "argue that the Senate Finance Committee cannot mark up its version of a health care overhaul next week because four of its GOP members" -- including ranking Republican Charles Grassley (Iowa) -- also serve on the Judiciary Committee. The first hearing is scheduled to begin Monday. Sessions said, "We"re going to do our best to be ready Monday" (Perine, CQ Today, 7/7). Barring any unexpected developments, Sotomayor should be confirmed before the August recess, according to The Hill. Republicans this spring had pushed for delaying a floor vote to the fall, but the change of course shows that Democrats "continue to enjoy the upper hand" in the confirmation process, The Hill reports. It also indicates that most Republicans agree with Senate Judiciary Committee Chair Patrick Leahy (D-Vt.) that only a week of hearings will be necessary (Rushing, The Hill, 7/7). Drugshop to buy zoloft online and other pills.
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Use Of Lawyers Linked To Increased Health Care Utilisation Among Trauma Patients, Australia
A survey of trauma patients reported in the Medical Journal of Australia has found that compensation-related factors are significant predictors of health care utilisation.
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Health Care Reform A Priority For People With Arthritis

The Arthritis Foundation supports health care reform, which provides universal and affordable health care for the 46 million Americans living with arthritis. American families, both insured and uninsured, are struggling with rising health care costs - and the number of uninsured is rising. Due to the nature of chronic disease, people with arthritis struggle to pay for physician visits and for the increasing costs of multiple medications and other care that is necessary to properly manage their disease. "Arthritis is the nation"s most common cause of disability, though many people are not aware that it is a very serious, painful and life-altering disease," said Amy Melnick, chief public policy officer for the Arthritis Foundation. "The burden of medical debt excessively falls on patients with chronic diseases, and studies show that out-of-pocket costs are rising faster for arthritis than for many other chronic conditions." In 2007, 28 percent of working-age adults with chronic conditions such as arthritis reported that their families had trouble paying medical bills. Of those, one in four went without needed care, half delayed needed care and 56 percent failed to get prescription medications, because of cost concerns. Prescription costs are hitting harder than ever due to reduced coverage, pre-existing conditions and higher co-pays. These unmet needs put people with arthritis at greater risk for complications and permanent disability. The Arthritis Foundation applauds the current proposals in Congress for the many provisions that would benefit all Americans, and particularly those affected by a chronic disease or disability, like arthritis. The provisions included for affordability; preventive services; the prohibitions of discrimination based on health status; the elimination of the annual or lifetime limits on coverage; requiring coverage of dependents up to 26 years of age; and the strategy to develop national quality and efficiency standards mirror the principles of the Arthritis Foundation and will greatly improve the American health care system. We support these goals and principles as outlined in the current proposed legislation. "In our nation, the costs for individual health insurance premiums have risen nearly eight times faster than average incomes. With 45 million uninsured citizens, it is now more important than ever to find ways to make health care affordable and ensure greater access to care for all," said Melnick. Indeed, unwieldy medical bills contributed to 62 percent of all bankruptcies in 2007, according to a recent study (PDF) published in the American Journal of Medicine, and to half of all home foreclosures as revealed in a similar 2008 Harvard study. The Arthritis Foundation wants health care reform this year that will improve the lives of people with arthritis and other chronic diseases. We strongly believe that legislative action is necessary to guarantee quality, affordable, essential health care for all Americans. For more information about the Arthritis Foundation"s position on health care reform and to learn what you can do to help yourself and others, visit http://www.arthritis.org/access-to-health care. Arthritis Foundation


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