Daily Archives: January 29, 2008

Americans Pay For Iraq’s Universal Healthcare Coverage-


I did a google search for “which countries in the world have universal healthcare” and came upon a Wikipedia result.  The entry states that  the USA is the only wealthy, industrialized nation who does not have healthcare.  As a matter of fact, we have over 47 million out of 300 million citizens with no healthcare coverage according to the National Coalition on Healthcare.   It appears however that the USA is funding  healthcare coverage  for Iraqis and Afghanistan.  According to the site:

 ” The number of uninsured children in 2005 was 8.3 million – or 11.2 percent of all children in the U.S. (1). The number of children who are uninsured increased by nearly 400,000 in 2005, breaking a trend of steady declines over the last five years. “

However, the good news is that Americans are helping every Iraqis get healthcare.  Now, I do believe that this is a noble act and with all the sanctions placed on Iraq since the early 90s, there has been a lot of  needless suffering by Iraqi children. However, should we not fix our own healthcare system before helping foreign countries get Universal Coverage?   

In fact,  USAID.gov states  that over 97% of   IRAQI children have been immunized against MMR and Polio. Again, let me stress that only 91% of Amercian kids have healthcare so it can be assumed that our vaccination rates are not as high as Iraq since the USA government won’t generally pay to have our children immunized.  The report also states the the USA help renovate over 110 healthcare centers while our inner city hospitals are being closed for lack of funding.

We need to get our priorities in order. The more we invest in our own country’s  health the more our country will be able to help the rest  of the world.    However , should not our aid and assistance of our fellow humans around the globe result from  abundance  of  our riches and not in place of our basic healthcare needs?  

Universal Healthcare for Californians


Schwarzenegger’s Universal Health Plan Scuttled by Budget Woes

Michael B. Marois

Jan. 29 (Bloomberg) — California lawmakers said they must contend with the state’s growing budget crisis before they reconsider Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger’s plan to provide health insurance for everyone in the most populous U.S. state.

The Senate Health Committee yesterday voted to block a universal health insurance bill supported by Schwarzenegger. Lawmakers said they were concerned taxpayers would end up subsidizing the program at a time when the state faces a $14 billion deficit. Senate and Assembly leaders said they had no immediate plans to reintroduce the bill.

Schwarzenegger’s proposal is the latest casualty of a weakening California economy that has sapped revenue and forced the governor to call for across-the-board cuts that would include closing state parks and releasing inmates early. He declared a fiscal emergency this month after seeing an expected surplus dissolve into a deficit amid the worst housing market slump in 16 years.

“Our attention will soon be turned exclusively to how we can make sure the state doesn’t go insolvent,” Senate President Pro Tem Don Perata, an Oakland Democrat, told reporters after the vote yesterday. “None of us came to Sacramento to shred services to the people who need them most, and yet that’s what we’re faced with.”

The bill passed out of the Democratic-controlled Assembly along party lines in a 45-31 vote in December.

The program would have required businesses to spend as much as 6.5 percent of payroll costs on health care for workers or pay the same amount into a state program. It also would have asked voters to raise the tax on a pack of cigarettes by at least $1.50 from the current 87 cents and force all residents to buy insurance if they can afford it.

`One Setback’

Schwarzenegger, a 60-year-old Republican, insisted the plan would fund itself through the higher taxes on cigarettes and new fees on businesses, doctors and hospitals. He vowed to continue to press for legislation to expand insurance to the more than 6 million residents who can’t afford it.

“I am someone who does not give up, especially when there is a problem as big and as serious as health care that needs to be fixed,” Schwarzenegger said in a statement. “One setback is just that — a setback.”

Democrats on the Senate Health Committee said yesterday they were concerned that the provision requiring everyone to buy insurance would force some people to purchase coverage they couldn’t afford. They also were concerned the plan didn’t include enough fail-safes to ensure that costs could be kept down.

Only Massachusetts, Maine and Vermont have passed laws to expand health care to the uninsured. Maryland in 2006 became the first state to require large companies of more than 10,000 workers to pay a set amount for employee health-care benefits. Employers successfully fought the law in federal court.

“When you’re negotiating something as complex as health care, you’ve got to be ready for defeat,” said Speaker of the Assembly Fabian Nunez, a Los Angeles Democrat who wrote the bill in a comprise with Schwarzenegger.

To contact the reporter on this story: Michael B. Marois in Sacramento at mmarois@bloomberg.net

Hand Gels May Not Kill Bacteria?


It should be noted that handgels should not be used to kill MRSA skin infections. These are highly resistant superbugs.

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Hand gels alone may not curb infections

By TIMBERLY ROSS

Doctors and nurses on the go often skip soap and water in favor of an alcohol-based hand gel, thinking the quick-acting goo will kill bacteria on their hands and curb the spread of infection. It turns out that’s not enough.

In a Nebraska hospital, medical workers nearly doubled their use of the alcohol-based gel, but their generally cleaner hands had no bearing on the rate of infections among patients.

The doctor who studied the problem pointed to many villains: Rings and fingernails that are too long and hard to clean, poor handling of catheters and treatment areas that aren’t sanitized.

“Hand hygiene is still important, but it’s not a panacea,” said Dr. Mark Rupp, an infectious disease specialist at the University of Nebraska Medical Center. He led the study at the adjoining Nebraska Medical Center.

The results of his study appear to contradict hospital guidelines from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention that say better hand hygiene — through frequent washing or use of hand gels — has been shown to cut the spread of hospital infections.

The spread of infection-causing germs in U.S. hospitals is a huge health problem, accounting for an estimated 1.7 million infections and 99,000 deaths each year, according to the CDC. These include drug-resistant staph, urinary tract infections and ventilator-associated pneumonia, among others.

“There are many factors that influence the development of hospital-acquired infections. It would be naive to think that a single, simple intervention would fix this problem,” Rupp said.

His study appears in the January issue of Infection Control and Hospital Epidemiology.

Research has shown alcohol-based hand gels are more effective, faster and easier to use than soap and water. The findings of the new study were based on 300 hours of hand hygiene observations of nurses and doctors in two comparable intensive care units over a two-year period.

More gel dispensers were put in the units, and usage rose from 37 percent to 68 percent in one unit and from 38 percent to 69 percent in the other. Compliance for hand washing of any kind in most hospitals is estimated to be about 40 percent, according to experts, although some hospitals do better.

Every two months, bacteria samples were taken from health workers’ hands, which were found to be cleaner when using the alcohol gel.

The infection rates in both ICUs were “relatively low,” the study said. And researchers found “no significant relationship” between rates of hand gel use and infections among patients. In fact, in one unit the infection rate rose when the hand gel was widely available and its use promoted.

Rupp found the results surprising. However, he said hospital-borne infections cannot be stopped by better hand hygiene alone because infections aren’t limited to person-to-person contact.

He suggested hand gels be combined with other measures, such as better cleaning of hospital units, proper insertion and maintenance of catheters, and doctors prescribing antibiotics only when necessary so more drug-resistant bacteria don’t pop up.

He also said hospital workers shouldn’t wear rings and should trim their fingernails even more than the CDC recommendation of no longer than a quarter of an inch. Rupp said bacteria showed up when nails extended just beyond the fingertip.

Mike Bell, who deals with infection control at the CDC, said that while he didn’t agree that hand gels do little to reduce infection, Rupp was right to say they were just one part of the solution.

“If they don’t do everything else right, having clean hands is not enough,” he said.

Both Bell and Dr. David Hooper of Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston suggested that Rupp’s study would have shown a reduction in infections if it was conducted over a longer period.

Hooper said the compliance rate for hand hygiene at Massachusetts General has been about 90 percent for the past several years. The number of drug-resistant staph cases was cut in half and continues to decline, he said.

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On the Net:

University of Nebraska Medical Center: http://www.unmc.edu/

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention: http://www.cdc.gov/

Massachusetts General Hospital: http://www.massgeneral.org/

Fox News Report Says “Avoid Aspartame”?


Are artificial sweeteners good for you?

What are the dangers of  diet sodas?

Fox News Report Says “Avoid Aspartame”?, reportedly causes blindness, headaches, numbeness, tingling, etc.

Fox News States Aspartame Should Be Pulled From Market?


Bill Calls for Sugar-Substitute Ban

By Gina Mangieri

Many popular foods and drinks would be pulled from store shelves under a bill in the state Legislature to ban the sweetener aspartame.While the Food and Drug Administration and many doctors say it’s safe, a growing contingent of consumers thinks the additive is dangerous if not deadly.
One lawmaker is bringing the debate to the Capitol.Diet soda — for many, a daily staple. But is what’s inside hurting us? Some consumers are organizing against the no-calorie sweetener aspartame that’s found in numerous drinks and snacks.
Critics say it’s been linked to 92 symptoms and several deaths. Hawaii lawmaker Rep. Mele Carroll heard concerns from dozens of her own constituents with conditions they blame on aspartame.

“Some of them felt helpless, helpless in the sense of they don’t know how to prove,” Carroll said.

She drafted a bill that would ban the additive in any foods sold in Hawaii by the end of this year.

“I think it’s great when we do extreme legislation because it raises the issue and it gets all of our attention,” Carroll said.

Many doctors dispute the critics.

“Aspartame has been studied hundreds of times,” said Dr. Kalani Brady, a physician and educator at the John A. Burns School of Medicine. “Nothing has ever been shown to be a detriment with aspartame. It’s perfectly safe.”

The FDA backs that position and some doctors warn people to be wary about some websites.

“The internet does not guarantee that its sources are all scientific,” Brady said.

If the ban were to pass, stores and consumers would have some big changes ahead.

“Oh, we would shut down things, you know,” Brady said. “It’s very difficult to look into all the products that aspartame is contained in. More than just an inconvenience, it would shut down economy.”

In just a few days since the bill was introduced, it’s already generating a lot of talk — and if nothing else, Carroll is glad it’s got people thinking about their health.

“We as a people have to make our own choices, but we should know exactly what we’re putting into our bodies,” Carroll said.

The measure has passed first reading and has been referred to committees in the House and Senate.