Popular Articles

Study Shows Even Moderately Elevated Cholesterol Level Boosts Dementia Risk
Elevated cholesterol levels in midlife - even levels considered only borderline elevated - significantly increase the risk of Alzheimer"s disease and vascular dementia later in life, according to a new study by researchers at Kaiser Permanente"s Division of Research and the University of Kuopio in Finland. The study appears in the journal Dementia & Geriatric Cognitive Disorders.

American Career College's Ontario Campus Approved To Offer Respiratory Therapy Program
American Career College has gained approval to offer a Respiratory Therapy (RT) program at its Ontario campus, where the program"s initial class will commence on July 20, 2009. Currently, American Career College offers an RT program at its Orange County campus in Anaheim.
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Measuring Brain's Memory Centers May Help Predict Alzheimer's
Scientists at the University of California, San Diego School of Medicine have shown that a fully automated procedure called Volumetric MRI which measures the "memory centers" of the brain and compares them to expected size is effective in predicting the progression from mild cognitive impairment (MCI) to Alzheimer"s disease. The procedure can be readily used in clinics to measure brain atrophy, and may help physicians to predict decline in MCI patients. Their study has been published in the June issue of the journal Alzheimer Disease and Associated Disorders.
Diagnostics

Obama's Health Reform Pitch Leaves Questions Unanswered For Many Viewers

The New York Times spoke to several families as they watched President Obama"s Wednesday night news conference. Thirty-six year old Craig Brown found that the event, meant to explain and gain support for health reform proposals, left him with many questions. He and his wife "remain frustrated by the lack of available detail about his plan"s contours and cost. They say they feel they are being asked to buy on spec from a government they do not trust. ... A similar unease was apparent in three other living rooms where families gathered to watch the news conference." "You see, he"s saying he wants to continue private insurance, but then he says they"re part of the problem. Well, which is it? It"s just ridiculous," one viewer told the Times while watching the press conference. Another said he was worried about what the overhaul would do to small businesses, like his own, that already provide coverage to employees (Sack, 7/23). "Very smart people are zoning out of the health care reform debate because they think it"s just too complicated," CBS News reports. Defining the goals of the overhaul - expanding coverage, reforming the insurance market, improving the delivery system and increasing the focus of disease prevention - are "relatively easy to understand, CBS reports. But, explaining how the government plans to implement them makes people "feel stupid - partly by special interest groups who intentionally or unintentionally confuse the debate" (LaPook, 7/23). Forbes presents a primer on "the hot-button topics of cost, coverage, funding, taxes and improving valuẹ€¦ [t]o help you better navigate the sprawling and complex debate, here"s our primer on the issues driving reform" (Ruiz, 7/23). 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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