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Covidien Announces Milestone Placement In Remote Respiratory Monitoring
Covidien (NYSE: COV), a leading global provider of healthcare products, has announced a key milestone in the continued growth and use of the OxiNet™ III remote respiratory monitoring system in U.S. hospitals. With the recent system installation at the Mayo Clinic campus in Jacksonville, FL, the Nellcor™ OxiNet III system currently monitors 10,000 beds and is integrated into more than 450 U.S. hospitals, including the Mayo Clinic campus in Rochester, MN, M.D. Anderson Cancer Center (Houston, TX), St. Anthony Central Hospital (Denver, CO) and Sumner Regional Medical Center (Gallatin, TN). The OxiNet III remote monitoring system enhances the safety of patients throughout the hospital, enabling continuous monitoring of patients" oxygen saturation levels via the trusted Nellcor OxiMax™ product platform, even when the clinician is not at the bedside.

Deworming Drug Could Help Reduce Spread Of HIV In Africa, Study Finds
Providing girls in rural Africa with a deworming drug could help reduce the spread of HIV, according to a study recently published in PLoS Neglected Tropical Diseases, the New York Times reports. The drug, called praziquantel, costs about 32 cents per pediatric dose and prevents schistosomiasis, a worm disease that starts as a urinary tract infection. If untreated, schistosomiasis can lead to female genital sores that can facilitate HIV infection. Because the drug can kill the worms but cannot cure genital sores, girls should be protected before they reach sexual maturity, according to the Times. "For this relatively small investment, the reproductive health of young women would be improved," the authors from the Sabin Vaccine Institute, Imperial College London and Oslo University wrote, adding that "there is a reasonable chance that HIV/AIDS transmission can be reduced." There are about 207 million schistosomiasis cases worldwide, 90% of which occur in Africa, where humans are exposed usually through snail-infested water. According to a pilot program conducted in Burkina Faso, all 70 million cases among young children in Africa could be treated for $22 million, and repeating universal treatment every two years for 10 years would cost $112 million (McNeil, New York Times, 5/26).
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House Members Continue Bickering Over Reform

Hope is fading in the House on voting on reform before the August recess as Democrats bicker over details, Roll Call reports: "Majority Leader Steny Hoyer (D-Md.) told reporters Friday that Democratic leaders may push off the health care bill until September if they can"t get it finished within the next two weeks." "Hoyer asserted that Democrats had made major progress on a draft agreement to address regional disparities in Medicare rates and expressed confidence that the fiscally conservative Blue Dogs and House Energy and Commerce Chairman Henry Waxman (D-Calif.) would be able to work together and mark up the bill this week, despite a series of false starts." Waxman and major Blue Dog Democrat health player Rep. Mike Ross, D-Ark., came to an impasse over reform Friday, but said work would be done over the weekend on the legislation, Roll Call reports (Dennis and Drucker, 7/27). The Wall Street Journal: "A leader of the fiscally conservative group of representatives said he expects any vote on the House"s health proposal would have to wait, likely until after Labor Day. "I think the American people want to take a closer look at this legislation. They want to feel more comfortable with it," Rep. Jim Cooper, a Blue Dog from Tennessee, said on CBS"s Face the Nation" ... Blue Dogs have emerged as pivotal players in the national health-care debate, a swing group that the White House is wooing more intensely to keep its initiative on track. The group, which accounts for about one-fifth of House Democrats, wants to make sure the health-care plan isn"t too expensive for small businesses and hopes to keep the government"s costs down" (Bendavid, 7/27). House Speaker Rep. Nancy Pelosi is again "vowing passage" of reform, The Washington Post reports. ""When I take this bill to the floor, it will win," Pelosi (Calif.) said on CNN"s State of the Union. "This will happen."" "The speaker, who has struggled to overcome a series of recent setbacks, raised the stakes by planning to restart talks Monday among bickering Democrats on the Energy and Commerce Committee, one of three House panels with jurisdiction over health care and where the bill stalled last week," the Post added (Murray and Kane, 7/27). The Hill: "Democratic Rep. Hank Johnson says that President Obama needs to ramp up the pressure on House Democrats holding up the healthcare reform bill so that the lower chamber passes it before heading home for August recess. According to the Georgia lawmaker, he told a White House official on the Hill for negotiations to "ask the president to turn up the heat, targeting the folks who are holding it up - as he has been doing - but don"t stop. We need as much help from the president as we can get"" (Hooper, 7/25). In the meantime, House Republicans are giving snippets of their own bill - many as amendments - without divulging what exactly is in them, Roll Call reports in a separate story: "Barton said the Republican alternative, which he hopes to offer in committee, would probably cost about $500 billion over 10 years when it is scored by the Congressional Budget Office, far less than the Democratic plan (which has been scored to cost $1.6 trillion)." The Republican reform plan includes tax cuts and vouchers for insurance as well as a new insurance pool. It would also prevent a cut in doctors" pay via Medicare and may include a co-operative insurance plan (Dennis, 7/24). 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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