IBM Drops Employee Co-Pay for Primary Care Visits

In what's seen as a highly unusual move, IBM says it will stop requiring employees to shell out a $20 co-payment when they see a primary care physician.

The company says the decision will save costs by encouraging employees to be seen and treated by primary care physicians sooner, thus reducing the likelihood of later expensive visits to emergency departments and specialists, theWall Street Journalreported.

The policy change "is designed to encourage people to get fixed early. .... We'd rather diagnose a situation and deal with it quickly as opposed to it becoming chronic," said Randy MacDonald, senior vice president for human resources.

IBM's decision is "very unusual," said Helen Darling, president of the National Business Group on Health, a trade group representing large employers. "The number of employers who cover primary-physician visits without a co-pay is miniscule," she told theWall Street Journal.

IBM is one of the largest employers in the United States, and its actions sometimes begin new trends.

California Gives $230 Million for Stem Cell Research

Embryonic stem cells are the focus of only four of 14 projects that received $230 million in grants from California's stem cell research program. The other projects use less controversial adult stem cells or conventional drugs designed to kill cancer stem cells, which are believed to give rise to tumors.

Wednesday's announcement about the funding to state universities and companies is seen as tacit acknowledgement that it will be a long time before the full potential of human embryonic stem cells in treating human diseases is achieved,The New York Timesreported.

Recipients of the grants are supposed to have a therapy ready for initial human testing within four years.

People don't care about what type of stem cells are used as long as researchers find treatments for diseases such as cancer and AIDS, according to officials of the 10-year, $3 billion program that was launched by California in 2004,The Timesreported.

FDA Panel Recommends First Non-Drug Asthma Treatment

A new technology from a small California-based company should be approved as the first non-drug treatment for asthma, a U.S. Food and Drug Administration advisory panel recommended Wednesday.

Asthmatx's Alair System employs bronchial thermoplasty, which uses radiofrequency wave-generated heat to burn away lung tissue that impairs breathing and causes wheezing and coughing spasms, theAssociated Pressreported.

The radiofrequency waves are delivered via a catheter controlled by a respiratory specialist. The procedure, performed over three sessions of a half hour each, is appropriate only for adult patients with severe asthma that doesn't respond to drug treatment.

The FDA panel voted six to one to recommend approval of the new system under certain conditions, including long-term safety monitoring of patients, theAPreported. The FDA usually follows the advice of its advisory panels.

The Alair System is already approved in Europe. If the FDA does approve the system, it may be available in the United States in the first half of 2010.

Dental Costs Lowest in Georgia and Ohio

Dental care for people in Georgia and Ohio costs almost $150 less than the U.S. average of $607 a year, says a federal government study released Thursday.

The average annual expenditure for dental care in Georgia was $466, while in Ohio it was $474, said the latestNews and Numbersfrom the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality.

Among the other findings from the analysis of average annual dental expenditures in the 10 states with the highest populations in 2006:
The highest proportion of residents with dental expenses (52.5 percent) was in Michigan and the lowest was in Texas (30 percent).
The national average for out-of-pocket payment for dental care was 49 percent. People in Florida paid more (62.5 percent) and those in Pennsylvania paid less (42 percent).
Nationally, private insurers paid 43 percent of all dental expenditures.

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Chinese Drywall Contains Higher Chemical Content

Chinese-made drywall has higher amounts of some chemicals than American-made drywall, say U.S. government agencies that have investigated reports of health problems, foul smells and corrosion by owners of homes with the Chinese product.

The Environmental Protection Agency and other departments have analyzed the drywall and say further study is needed to determine if there's a direct link between the problems and the wallboard, theAssociated Pressreported.

During the peak of the U.S. housing boom, materials became scarce, and construction companies imported millions of pounds of Chinese-made drywall, which ended up in thousands of homes.

Methadone Overdose a Danger for Medicaid Patients

Medicaid patients may be at high risk for overdose death caused by the opioid painkiller methadone, according to a study released Thursday.

The researchers looked at Washington, where the 2006 rate of opioid painkiller overdoses was significantly higher than in the rest of the country. Between 2004 and 2007, 1,668 people in Washington died of prescription opioid-related overdoses. Of those, 58.9 percent were male, 34.4 percent were 45 to 54 years old, and 45.4 percent were Medicaid clients.

The study found that Medicaid clients had a 5.7-fold increased risk of dying from a prescription opioid-related overdose. Methadone was involved in nearly two-thirds of those Medicaid client deaths.

It may be possible to minimize the risk by examining patterns of opioid prescribing to Medicaid clients and intervening with those who appear to misuse the drugs, the researchers concluded.

The study appears in the latestMorbidity and Mortality Report, published by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Deaths involving prescription opioid painkillers are a major reason why the number of poisoning deaths in the United States nearly doubled from 1999 to 2006.

Vision loss: Introduction

This section discusses 645 medical conditions causing Vision loss. A simple discussion of these causes with additional information is below.
Central vision loss (see Vision changes) - with possible causes of central vision loss such as:
Blind spot
Cataracts
Macular degeneration
Macular hole
Optic neuritis - may cause unilateral sudden central vision loss.
Multiple sclerosis - because it may cause optic neuritis
Brain tumors
Brain aneurysm

Diabetes increases risk of dementia in elderly

A Swedish study indicates that diabetes in the elderly increases the risk of dementia by one and a half times and vascular dementia by 2.6 times. A combination of diabetes mellitus and systolic hypertension or heart disease greatly increases the risk of vascular dementia by 11.3 times. Thus effective treatment and management of cardiovascular disease and diabetes helps reduce the risk of dementia.

Source: summary of medical news story as reported by Reuters Health

Diabetes increases eye problems

Diabetes is a multisystem disease that has effects on the end organs of the body, which includes the eyes. Diabetic retinopathy, glaucoma and macular edema are some diabetic eye complications which are the greatest cause of blindness in America. Warning signs of eye problems are changes in vision, involving blurring, flashers, floaters and reduction in sight. Treatment with laser or surgery is only effective in early stages of the eye disorders. These eye diseases are suspected in diabetics necessitating yearly eye checks by an ophthalmologist.

Protect Yourself From Breast Cancer

Protect Yourself From Breast Cancer

DID YOU KNOW:
The American Cancer Society has awarded approximately $388.4 million to breast cancer research since 1971.

ACS funded research that led to the development of lifesaving breast cancer drugs such as tamoxifen and Herceptin, as well as discovery of the breast cancer gene.

In October 2004, the Society began a collaboration with the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS) on the Sister Study, a nationwide study to learn about the environmental and genetic causes of breast cancer.

If you see pink everywhere you turn this month, here's why: October is National Breast Cancer Awareness Month, a time when survivors, advocates, and health organizations strive to raise awareness of the progress we're making together in fighting this disease – and the things women can do to protect themselves.

Since 1990, more and more women have been surviving breast cancer, largely because of early detection through mammography and improvements in treatment. However, breast cancer is still the second leading cause of cancer death in women, exceeded only by lung cancer.

Mammograms can find breast cancers earlier, when they are easier to treat and the chances of survival are higher. That's why the American Cancer Society recommends yearly mammograms and breast exams for women 40 and older. If you're putting off getting your mammogram because you're scared or nervous, watch some real women talk about their experience. You'll see this life-saving test is nothing to be afraid of.

And don’t forget that in addition to getting a yearly mammogram, there are steps women can take to reduce their risk of breast cancer:

Eat a healthy diet to help control weight, since being overweight or obese may raise breast cancer risk.
Get regular physical activity. The American Cancer Society recommends 30 minutes a day, 5 or more days a week. Forty-five to 60 minutes a day is even better for reducing breast cancer risk.
Limit the amount of alcohol you drink to no more than 1 drink per day. Alcohol is clearly linked to an increased risk of developing breast cancer.
And perhaps most important, be sure to talk to your doctor if you notice any changes in your breasts or have any other concerns. That conversation could save your life.

NIH NEWS

For many people, laser eye surgery can correct their vision so they no longer need glasses or contact lenses. Laser eye surgery reshapes the cornea, the clear front part of the eye. This changes its focusing power.
There are different types of laser eye surgery. LASIK - laser-assisted in situ keratomileusis – is one of the most common. Many patients who have LASIK end up with 20/20 vision. But, like all medical procedures, it has both risks and benefits. Only your eye doctor can tell if you are a goodFrozen Assets: NIAID Researchers Turn to Unique Resource for Clues to Norovirus Evolution
A search through decades-old frozen infant stool samples has yielded rich dividends for scientists from the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), part of the National Institutes of Health. The team customized a laboratory technique to screen thousands of samples for norovirus, a major cause of acute gastroenteritis outbreaks in people of all ages. What they discovered about the rate of evolution of a specific group of noroviruses could help researchers develop specific antiviral drugs and, potentially, a vaccine against a disease that is very unpleasant and sometimes deadly.

The research, led by Kim Y. Green, Ph.D., and Karin Bok, Ph.D., of NIAID's Laboratory of Infectious Diseases, will appear in a future issue of the Journal of Virology, and is now available online. NIAID scientist Albert Z. Kapikian, M.D., is a co-author on the paper. In 1972, Dr. Kapikian and colleagues identified and characterized the virus, now known as norovirus, responsible for an outbreak of acute gastroenteritis in Norwalk, Ohio, in 1968.

"Thanks to the foresight of Dr. Kapikian and others at NIAID and the Children's National Medical Center who established and have maintained these clinical samples since 1974, our researchers have a unique resource that represents one of the oldest sets of norovirus samples in the world," says NIAID Director Anthony S. Fauci, M.D. "This is the first study to look at samples that date back almost to the first recorded cases of norovirus outbreaks, more than 40 years ago."

Highly contagious, noroviruses are responsible for an abrupt onset intestinal ailment also called winter vomiting disease or cruise-ship disease. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) estimates that 23 million cases of acute gastroenteritis each year are due to norovirus infection and that noroviruses are the cause of more than half of all food borne gastroenteritis outbreaks. In elderly people, infants and people with compromised immune system function, dehydration resulting from vomiting and diarrhea following norovirus infection can be life-threatening. In developing countries, according to a 2008 estimate by CDC researchers, up to 200,000 children under 5 die of norovirus infection each year. There is no vaccine against norovirus and no specific antiviral drugs to treat infections.

A key question for norovirus researchers is determining when a dominant variant, called genotype II.4 (or GII.4), first emerged, notes Dr. Green. " This genotype has been associated with the majority of global outbreaks of acute norovirus gastroenteritis since the mid-1990s," says Dr. Green. " The GII.4 genotype was first described around 1987, but no one knew for sure whether that genotype emerged then or if it existed earlier."

To answer the question, Dr. Bok customized a new technique — real-time reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR)—and applied it to stool samples originally collected from infants and young children hospitalized at the Children's National Medical Center in Washington, D.C., between 1974 and 1991. Samples were taken from infants and children with gastroenteritis and from others (controls) who did not have gastroenteritis. Essentially, Dr. Bok crafted genetic hooks capable of fishing out matching genetic sequences of any norovirus present in the samples. Fifty out of 5,424 samples tested contained norovirus. The most commonly seen genotype was GII.3 (48 percent), but the second most common genotype was GII.4 (16 percent). Some GII.4-containing specimens dated back to 1974, allowing the researchers to conclude that this now-dominant genotype had been circulating for years before its more recent identification as the cause of severe global outbreaks of norovirus disease.

Next, using a strategy developed by NIAID scientist Stanislav Sosnovtsev, Ph.D., the researchers determined the complete genetic sequences of five older GII.4 viruses and compared those sequences to gene sequences of contemporary GII.4 noroviruses. The comparison allowed the investigators to determine how much the archival viruses differed from the most recent representatives of the same genotype and, thus, to calculate how quickly the GII.4 genotype is evolving.

Currently, there are no antiviral drugs specifically targeted to noroviruses, but the new knowledge about which segments of the norovirus genome change the least could aid in the development of novel drugs that could be targeted at those more genetically static portions of the virus, say the researchers. Noroviruses, like influenza viruses, mutate readily and evolve rapidly, explains Dr. Green. If vaccines against noroviruses become possible in the future, researchers would need to take into account shifts in the virus's genetic make-up and reformulate the vaccines to match the virus, she adds. However, unlike influenza viruses, noroviruses cannot be grown in the lab, raising an additional hurdle to vaccine development.

" By examining the history of norovirus evolution contained within these archival samples, we can see how the virus has changed during this time, and we also can better predict how the virus is likely to change in the future," says Dr. Bok. If scientists one day crack the problem of growing norovirus in the lab, information about the rate of evolution will be invaluable to developing vaccines, adds Dr. Green.

"This research is the first to reveal the speed at which the molecular clock of norovirus runs," says Dr. Green. Dr. Green and her colleagues are now looking at stool samples from the 1960s in Dr. Kapikian’s collection. If norovirus can be detected in those samples, knowledge about the ancestry and rate of evolution of this virus will be further expanded.

Additional information about noroviruses is available from NIAID at http://www3.niaid.nih.gov/topics/norovirus/ and from the CDC at http://www.cdc.gov/ncidod/dvrd/revb/gastro/norovirus-factsheet.htm

NIAID conducts and supports research — at NIH, throughout the United States, and worldwide—to study the causes of infectious and immune-mediated diseases, and to develop better means of preventing, diagnosing and — treating these illnesses. News releases, fact sheets and other NIAID-related materials are available on the NIAID Web site at http://www.niaid.nih.gov.

The National Institutes of Health (NIH) — The Nation's Medical Research Agency — includes 27 Institutes and Centers and is a component of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. It is the primary federal agency for conducting and supporting basic, clinical and translational medical research, and it investigates the causes, treatments, and cures for both common and rare diseases. For more information about NIH and its candidate for laser eye surgery.