Popular Articles

A Cancer Gene Switch For Repairing Damaged DNA
Scientists at the Medical Research Council Laboratory of Molecular Biology uncover how an important cancer gene, BRCA1, works by increasing the accuracy with which broken DNA is repaired. Women who inherit a faulty version of the BRCA1 gene are at a higher risk of developing breast or ovarian cancer.

Does Intercessory Prayer For Sick People Actually Help Heal Them?
Health and religion have always been intertwined, most obviously through prayer on behalf of the sick. Does intercessory prayer for sick people actually help heal them? For thousands of years some people have believed so. But new Brandeis University research in the Journal of Religion this month shows that over the last four decades, medical studies of intercessory prayer - the prayer of strangers at a distance - actually say more about the scientists conducting the studies than about the power of prayer to heal.
News of the day
NHS Confederation Responds To Public Accounts Committee Report On NHS Funding
Nigel Edwards, the director of policy at the NHS Confederation, said, "The surpluses generated by the NHS over the 2007-2008 financial year are a testament to sound financial planning and an awareness on the part of everyone in the service of the need to spend public money carefully.
Health Insurance

Many Washington State Hospitals Skimp On Required Charity Care

"As the recession has cost more people their jobs and their health insurance, local hospitals have seen more patients show up with no way to pay," reports KUOW, a Washington State public radio station. "Hospitals in Washington are required to provide free care to anyone living below the poverty line, if they ask for it. But some hospitals give more freely than others." Leonard Bass, who was homeless five years ago, regularly visits a clinic operated by Haborview Medical Center for diabetes treatment and is one such patient. "Harborview (a county-owned hospital) provides far more health care to the poor and uninsured than any other hospital in the state," and patients like Bass believe the center is their only choice for care. However, all nonprofit hospitals in the state face the same requirement for providing treatment to people in Bass" financial situations. He is unemployed, uninsured, and living in poverty. But, in the Pudget Sound region, there are only three hospitals that provide more than 2 percent of their care to the poor. Ken Berger, of Charity Navigator, a group that rates nonprofit performance, said "The average nonprofit hospital in many parts of the country, the amount of charity care they (provide) is abysmal, it"s like 2.5 percent, and you"re considered the best in your class" (Ryan, 7/10). 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.


Add your comment:
Name:
Site address: http://
Your message:
Enter today\\\\'s date, 2 digits
(spam protection):