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Washington's Basic Health Plan Raises Rates To Compensate For Budget Cuts
Washington state"s cash-strapped health insurance program, Basic Health Plan, "is resorting to steep premium increases to achieve what [its officials] were loath to do on their own - expel thousands of working-class people," the Seattle Times reports. Price hikes for the poorest plan members - who earn less than 125 percent of the poverty line - could double their premiums, while spikes are expected to be much higher for members with bigger incomes.
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Doctor Knows Best - Royal College Of Obstetricians And Gynaecologists
In a commentary published in BJOG: An International Journal of Obstetrics and Gynaecology, doctors discuss the types of information pregnant women would welcome and why the advice provided to women by doctors is considered trustworthy.
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Reducing P38MAPK Levels Delays Aging Of Multiple Tissues In Lab Mice
In the new issue of the Developmental Cell journal, a team of scientists at Singapore"s Agency for Science, Technology and Research (A*STAR) and the University of North Carolina School of Medicine at Chapel Hill, report research findings about the molecular mechanisms behind the aging process, which has up till now been poorly understood, that offer the possibility that a novel, pharmacological approach could be developed to combat age-related disorders.
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Maryland Hospital Fined For Not Reporting Errors

Regulators have fined a hospital in Lanham, Maryland, for not reporting errors. The Washington Post reports that "Doctors Community Hospital in Prince George"s County has been fined by Maryland health regulators after failing to notify them that a patient had died and that at least seven others suffered serious harm last year as a result of mistakes by the medical staff. The 185-bed medical surgical hospital in Lanham paid the $30,000 fine last month for violating a Maryland law that requires hospitals to report serious medical errors. State officials agreed to reduce a proposed penalty of $95,000 as long as the hospital uses the remaining $65,000 to develop a patient safety program." The top state regulator said the reporting errors were due to "understaffing, a lack of attention to what caused patients to be injured or to die, and the absence of a system to prevent recurrences." The Washington Post reports that "the fine is the first in the five years that Maryland has required its 69 hospitals to make public any serious errors that affect patients during treatment. Hospitals are supposed to report such occurrences as surgery on the wrong limb, a patient"s taking the wrong medication, a fall, an infection from an IV line and a delay in treatment." The hospital"s president, Philip B. Down, wrote a letter describing the surge in indigent patients that had caused "deteriorating conditions" at the financially troubled hospital, noting that they expect 60,000 emergency room admissions this year. The Post also writes that "last year 15 hospitals with 100 to 200 beds, including Doctors, reported a total of 44 mistakes that led to death or serious injury, most from falls. More than 20 states have passed laws requiring hospitals to report mistakes or preventable infections" (Rein, 6/15). 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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