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The Medical Consequences Of Police Use Of Force During Restraint: Two Studies
Dr. Jared Strote at the University of Washington Medical Center led a group that examined the medical records of nearly 900 patients subdued by the Seattle Police Department with a Taser over a six-year period. Less than one percent required hospital admission for an injury related to the restraint incident. No deaths occurred, even when patients exhibited signs of excited delirium.
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Shedding Light On Preserving Fertility Among Cancer Patients
Cancer treatment has come a long way, leading to a multitude of therapy options and improved survival rates. These successes, however, have created a challenge for young cancer patients since chemotherapy and radiation treatments that often save lives threaten fertility. Techniques available to safeguard fertility, such as freezing eggs for later embryo development, have poor odds of success, leaving patients with very limited options for the future. But that is beginning to change as researchers improve current techniques, mature human eggs in the laboratory, and discover cellular mechanisms that could help preserve and even restore fertility. Researchers will report on these and other findings at the 42nd annual meeting of the Society for the Study of Reproduction (SSR), July 18 to 22, at the David L. Lawrence Convention Center in Pittsburgh.
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In First Wave Of Stimulus Funding, MSU Researchers Receive $400,000
A pair of Michigan State University professors have received a total of nearly $400,000 for their cardiovascular research projects as part of the first wave of stimulus funding from federal agencies.
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Plans To Control Doctors' Pay Big Issue In Massachusetts

Massachusetts officials are proud of their low rate of uninsured people, but the state also hosts the highest health care costs in the country, a problem that jeopardizes their achievement in expanding coverage, NPR"s Morning Edition reports. A commission charged with overseeing the insurance plan for 310,000 government workers recently voted - unanimously - that doing away with the current, fee-for-service model for paying doctors was the first step to controlling those costs. "Massachusetts policymakers want to replace fee-for-service with "global payment" - paying groups of health providers a flat yearly fee for each patient they cover," NPR reports (Knox, 8/5). Responding to a viewer"s question about whether similar plans to set physician rates are being considered in Washington, CNN health correspondent Sanjay Gupta said, "Nothing"s been set in stone butò€¦ we are hearing for example, there may be caps on out of pocket expenses and full coverage for things like preventive care. There is no plan in any of bills so far to set prices across the board across the country" (8/4). Doctors, meanwhile, are growing antsy about their fees under the current system. "Insured patients typically expect to make a small co-payment when they see a doctor, and later get billed for anything else they owe. But physicians no longer want to wait for their money," the Wall Street Journal reports. Some doctors are asking patients for co-pays as well as other out-of-pocket portions, such as their deductible or co-insurance, before leaving after an office visit or receiving a procedure. Practices report collecting only 50 percent of their charges if they bill patients after they leave the office, and only 10 to 20 percent from uninsured people. However the new policies sometimes put patients in difficult positions: "Mary Lou Hatch, 43, of Surprise, Arizona, delayed the start of chemotherapy for her breast cancer earlier this summer because the oncologist demanded $450 from her in advance" (Matthews, 8/4). 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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