News

Emergency physician-directed treatment of patients with acute stroke using tissue plasminogen activator (t-PA) is as safe as treatment directed by an acute stroke team, according to the results of a retrospective study presented at the American Heart Association's (AHA's) International Stroke Conference 2007 in San Francisco, Calif.

In a large, multi-center, randomized, open-label, prospective trial named the Acute Catheterization and Urgent Intervention Triage Strategy (ACUITY) trial, monotherapy with the anti-thrombotic agent bivalirudin, when administered to patients experiencing an acute coronary syndrome (ACS) (eg, unstable angina or myocardial infarction without ST-segment elevation), was demonstrated to be as efficacious as the current standard-of-care therapy but with nearly a 50% lower risk of bleeding. The results of the trial were published in the New England Journal of Medicine (NEJM).

Mesalamine

Once-daily oral formulation of anti-inflammatory agent approved for the induction of remission in patients with active, mild-to-moderate ulcerative colitis

The primary cost to patients with hospital-acquired infections is a prolonged stay and additional therapeutic interventions. But because of the high financial costs, there is increasing outside pressure to decrease infection rates.

Effective maintenance of patient records, registration information, human resources documentation, and reimbursement forms are critical to the IT success of the four-hospital Saint Clare's Health System, in northwestern New Jersey. The hospital system, which houses more than 475 active beds, serves 23,000 inpatients and 250,000 outpatients annually.

Surgical site infections are a significant problem in hospitals today. They occur in 2% to 5% of patients who have clean operations outside the abdomen, and in up to 20% of patients with intra-abdominal procedures. They account for about 15% of hospital-acquired infections.

Legislation encouraging more equitable coverage of mental illness is moving forward in Congress following important modification of previous requirements. The Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions (HELP) Committee recently approved a bill that requires health plans to offer similar benefits for mental and physical illness in terms of deductibles, copayments and treatment limitations. But the new measure no longer mandates that group health plans cover mental illness.

Over the next few years, more health plans and employers will investigate covering the physician-administered injectable drugs under the pharmacy benefit as a way to control the costs and manage appropriate utilization, says Kathryn Lindhorst Canaday, PharmD, director of pharmacy analysis, Pharmaceutical Strategies Group (PSG), based in Dallas.

Millions of people's lives have been influenced by the work of Mollie Orshansky, even though very few people know who she is. Dozens of health-related programs throughout history have benefitted from Mollie's contributions, including programs through HHS, charitable agencies, private companies and managed care. In 1963, it was Mollie-an accomplished mathematical genius and daughter of a poor immigrant family-who developed the U.S. government's official measure of poverty and the guidelines for what we call the Federal Poverty Level (FPL) today.

When you're the most populous state in the union, any extraordinary policies you sketch out could likely become a national catalyst for change. California has begun working on its state initiative for comprehensive healthcare reform, not simply for lack of a national proposal, but also because the health of its 36.1 million residents is at stake.

The Illinois Supreme Court recently confirmed that the corporate practice of medicine doctrine is still alive and well in the state of Illinois. In Vine Street Clinic, et al. v. HealthLink Inc., the court concluded that percentage-based fees charged by the owner of a healthcare provider network were illegal under the state's medical practices act.

Rising pressure to reduce federal spending for Medicare has put the spotlight on payments and policies governing the Medicare Advantage program. MA plans are "vastly overpaid," according to Rep. Pete Stark (D-Calif.), chairman of the House Ways & Means Health subcommittee, largely because they sign up more healthy beneficiaries. Senate Finance Committee chairman Max Baucus (D-Mont.) is looking closely at whether "funneling dollars into private plans gets us the most bang for our healthcare buck."