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As They Debate Health Overhaul, Politicians Keep Eye On 2010
"Fifteen months before the midterm congressional election, health care is appearing in candidate stump speeches and interviews - particularly by Republican challengerṣ€¦ running in districts recently claimed by Democrats," USA Today reports. "That dynamic helps explain why a $1 trillion-plus health care bill stalled last week in Congress. ̣€¦ Obama has said he wants lawmakers to finish health care by the end of the year, in part because it could become mired in election-year politics. All 435 members of the House and 36 members of the Senate are up for election in 2010."
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Endocrine Society Issues Position Statement On Endocrine-Disrupting Chemicals
Interest and concern about possible health threats posed by endocrine-disrupting chemicals (EDCs) is on the rise, yet there is currently no comprehensive coordinated approach to regulating EDCs in the United States. To address this emerging public health issue, The Endocrine Society today released a new position statement outlining the public health concerns of exposure to EDCs and proposing a series of recommendations for revising current policy and generating new policy on EDCs.
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New Data From Endeavor-II Challenges Conventional Wisdom On Drug-Eluting Stents
New clinical data presented at a major international meeting of interventional cardiologists challenged the conventionalwisdom on the long-term efficacy of drug-eluting stents, medical devices used in the treatment of coronary artery disease.
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Revealed: Priority Groups For Swine Flu Vaccination, UK

NHS staff will be vaccinated first in the Government"s swine flu vaccination campaign, followed by pregnant women, young children and adults with chronic illnesses, Pulse can exclusively reveal. Pulse has learned from a senior Government adviser that a "pecking order" has been drawn up for vaccination. Everyone in the UK will be vaccinated eventually, but priority is set to be given in the following order: - Healthcare professionals - Pregnant women - All children under five - Adults aged under 65 with a chronic illness - All young people aged under 18 - All other patients not in the categories above The told Pulse: "The priorities for vaccination are a big priority for the Department of Health. It"s almost certain that GPs and healthcare professionals will be vaccinated first, because you"ve got to keep your workforce going. "After that, at-risk groups will be vaccinated. This will mean pregnant women, because there seems to be a suggestion that they are at specific risk. "The remaining groups will be all children under five, those aged under 65 with a chronic illness, and then under 18s. "That"s the tentative pecking order. Older people are not a priority group for the swine flu vaccination as it seems that everybody born before 1958 might have been already exposed to this H1N1 swine flu virus." BMA negotiators are still locked in discussions with the DH over exactly how the vaccination campaign will be run, and how it will be financed. Dr Richard Vautrey, deputy chair of the BMA"s GP committee, told Pulse: "The ÷£7.51 GPs are currently paid [for flu vaccination] is part of a package of financial arrangements to run the practice. Swine flu is completely different, likely to cover different groups than the seasonal flu campaign and will have a completely different order of magnitude, so will require extra res. That"s what we are trying to negotiate." Richard Hoey, editor of Pulse, said: "The priority groups plans planned are almost a mirror image of those for the seasonal flu campaign, and that"s going to cause GPs a real headache. "The big flu vaccine clinics that GPs run are largely aimed at the over-65s, but they are specifically identified as a low-priority group for swine flu vaccination, so it is going to be much more difficult for practices to run the two campaigns side by side." PULSE


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