Popular Articles

Lawmakers, Officials Distort The Facts To Support Or Oppose Health Overhaul
"Confusing claims and outright distortions have animated the national debate over changes in the health care system," the Associated Press reports. The AP lists examples:

Delirium Presentation Predicts Mortality
The way certain patients present in the post-acute hospital setting with delirium, a common, preventable but life-threatening acute confusional state, predicts mortality, according to a study conducted by the Institute for Aging Research of Hebrew SeniorLife.
News of the day
Sleeping Through Dialysis: No Nightmare For Kidney Patients
Dialysis takes hours of kidney disease patients" time several days a week, so why not do it at night while sleeping? Overnight dialysis is more convenient for some patients and offers significant benefits over shorter daytime treatments, according to a study appearing in an upcoming issue of the Clinical Journal of the American Society Nephrology (CJASN). The findings indicate that overnight dialysis is a viable alternative for patients with irreversible kidney disease, particularly in dialysis clinics where there are constraints on time and res.
Mental Health

Colorado Rural Co-Ops Provide Example For Health Care System Proposal

Rural utility co-ops in Colorado could provide an example of how a co-op would work nationally for health care, The Denver Post reports. "Strange as it sounds, the humble cooperatives that electrified rural America and serve as a foundation of the farm economy have suddenly landed at the center of the debate over Congress" effort to reform a health care system dominated by multibillion-dollar drug companies and hospital conglomerates." The Denver Post notes: "Although there are a few health insurance cooperatives, the idea has never been tested on a massive scale. Co-ops are most often small, community-based businesses that help farmers store grain or buy machinery. In rural areas, co-ops were often the only way to connect isolated farms to the electrical grid, because so few customers weren"t worth the investment to major utilities. (Ray) Clifton, of the (Colorado Rural Electric Association), said he believes co-ops did a better job at the task than a purely government-run program could have - and for similar reasons, so would health insurance co-ops." Among the attributes he listed: ""They are service-oriented. The whole concept of a co-op is to provide a service of the most reasonable cost," he said. "The directors live in the community, they meet their fellow ratepayers in the grocery store or at church. This is local control."" Some criticisms of the co-ops are that they are less efficient and unwieldy in practice (Riley, 6/24). 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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