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Federal Program Cracks Down On Medicare Fraud In Houston
A federal program targets Medicare fraud in the Houston area as news of three cases representing at least $35 million in false claims emerged within the past week. The Houston Chronicle reports on the three cases, noting: "These Houston-area scams alleged in two FBI complaints and one Montgomery County indictment were among six reported nationally in a single week - representing at least $285 million in false billings, records showed. "This is an astounding amount," said Houston"s FBI spokeswoman Pat Villafranca. The $285 million is more than four times the amount stolen during robberies of U.S. banks during all of 2008, she said. This month, Houston became the fourth metropolitan area - joining Miami, Los Angeles and Detroit - to create a ramped-up fraud strike force. It goes by the acronym "HEAT," Health Care Fraud Prevention and Enforcement Action Team."
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Supreme Court Nominees Should Disclose Views On Constitutional Issues, USA Today Opinion Piece States
One thing that "has been conspicuously absent" from the confirmation hearings for Supreme Court nominee Sonia Sotomayor is "substance," Jonathan Turley, the Shapiro Professor of Public Interest Law at George Washington University, writes in a USA Today opinion piece. According to Turley, "The vast majority of questions and answers remained on a shallow and predictable level where Sotomayor did little more than describe current doctrines and case law -- avoiding disclosures of her own views." He continues, "What is most striking is how Sotomayor"s statements were virtually identical to both her conservative and liberal predecessors," including her comments that Roe v. Wade and Planned Parenthood v. Casey are "the precedent of the court."Turley writes, "The content-light character in these hearings is largely the product of the "Ginsburg rule" -- named after Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, who refused to answer questions in her 1993 confirmation hearing about any case or matter upon which she might later vote." According to Turley, "Later nominees for both parties have relied on the Ginsburg rule to turn the hearings into prolonged photo-ops for senators, who largely ask wafer-thin questions to solicit largely scripted answers." The rule "allows nominees to get by with meaningless sound bites that promise to respect precedent, the Framers [of the Constitution] and collegiality in general," he adds. Furthermore, it "tells the public nothing about a nominee"s philosophy or purpose before giving her life tenure on the world"s most powerful court," Turley writes.According to Turley, there is a "simple solution to returning substance to the confirmation process: End the Ginsburg rule by insisting that nominees answer questions about their specific views on constitutional rights." Although "the current system works well for presidents, nominees and senators," it "does little for the public or the system of justice," he writes (Turley, USA Today, 7/16).
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Biogen Idec Receives Fast Track Designation From FDA For PEGylated Interferon Beta-1a For Relapsing Multiple Sclerosis
Biogen Idec (NASDAQ: BIIB) announced the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has granted PEGylated interferon beta-1a (BIIB017) Fast Track designation for relapsing multiple sclerosis (RMS). Biogen Idec is currently enrolling patients in a global Phase III study evaluating the efficacy and safety of either bi-weekly or once-monthly injections of PEGylated interferon beta-1a in this patient population.
Diagnostics

Syphilis Making Comeback, Gonorrhea More Treatment Resistant, LSUHSC's Martin Says

Dr. David H. Martin, Professor and Chief of the Section of Infectious Diseases at LSU Health Sciences Center New Orleans School of Medicine, updated reporters and the National Foundation for Infectious Diseases on sexually transmitted diseases in the United States on July 22, 2009 at the National Press Club in Washington , DC. Dr. Martin, whose presentation was called, Sexually Transmitted Diseases: Neither Gone nor Forgotten, revealed significant information about STDs including Chlamydia trachomatis, gonorrhea, syphilis, and a relatively new STD, Mycoplasma genitalium. Highlights include the number of cases of the asymptomatic Chlamydia trachomatis, the most common reportable infectious disease in the US, is growing; gonorrhea, the second most common reportable infectious disease in the US, is growing more resistant to treatment; syphilis is making a comeback which could wipe out the gains made in syphilis control following the epidemic of the late 1980s; and M. Genitalium has the potential to become a public health target as recent work has now linked it to pelvic inflammatory disease in women along with being a known cause of nongonococcal urethritis in men. Dr. Martin"s complete presentation follows. The most common bacterial STD: Chlamydia trachomatis is the most common reportable infectious disease in the United States and the number of cases is growing every year thanks in part to increasing screening efforts. It is particularly of concern in adolescents and young adults, and also in African-American populations, among who reported case rates are 8-fold higher than in whites. The major adverse events associated with chlamydial infections are borne by women and include pelvic inflammatory disease, chronic pelvic pain, ectopic pregnancy and infertility. The organism also can infect infants at birth and causing conjunctivitis and, more importantly, pneumonia. In men C. trachomatis causes urethritis and occasionally a testicular inflammatory condition known as epididymitis. However, most chlamydial infections are asymptomatic. These silent infections form a large reservoir of infection in the population resulting in potential for continuous transmission of the organism among those who are sexually active outside of long term monogamous relationships.. Excellent C. trachomatis diagnostic tests are now available and can be performed on urine specimens. Treatment is inexpensive and safe. Therefore, theoretically, this common STD could be dramatically curtailed in the U.S. population if broad based screening efforts were undertaken. In 1989 the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force recommended C. trachomatis screening of all sexually active young women. However there are significant barriers to achieving this goal. These include lack of access to health care, health care provider reticence to address sexual health issues with their patients, limited budgets to support screening programs, insufficient treatment of exposed sex partners, and lack of knowledge on the part of young sexually active individuals about the true risk of unprotected sexual intercourse with multiple partners. An example of the limited effect of the screening recommendation can be found in the data reported by the Healthcare Effectiveness Data and Information Set (HEDIS) during 2000 2007 and collected by the CDC. Nationally, the annual screening rate increased from 25.3% in 2000 to 43.6% in 2006, and then decreased slightly to 41.6% in 2007. We should be doing better. Approaches that are being employed by some public health agencies around the country include screening high risk populations in high schools, juvenile retention facilities, adolescent clinics, and drug treatment centers. Self collection of specimens (vaginal swabs in women and urine specimens in both sexes) which can be mailed to testing facilities is now possible and some public health agencies across the country are experimenting with novel ways of encouraging the at risk population to do so. Increased Chlamydia testing and treatment should be a goal of evolving plans for health care reform in the U.S. Decreasing treatment options for gonorrhea: Gonorrhea is a potentially dangerous disease, causing complications similar to those from Chlamydia as well as potential for disseminated infection. While effective treatment options and aggressive screening for the causative agent, Neiserria gonorrhoeae, has made it much less common over the last four decades, it remains the second most common reportable infectious disease in the U.S. Racial disparities are more pronounced for gonorrhea than any other infectious disease, with 19 times higher case rates in African Americans than whites. An emerging challenge for gonorrhea control is increasing resistance to currently available antibiotics. In the 1970"s penicillin resistant N. gonorrhoeae was introduced into the U.S. by soldiers returning from the Viet Nam war. More recently travelers to and from the Far East brought quinolone antibiotic resistant strains into the U.S. These initially were identified in Hawaii and the West Coast but subsequently spread throughout the country. CDC recommended against using these well tolerated and inexpensive drugs for the treatment of gonorrhea in 2008. The cephalosporin class of drugs is now the mainstay of gonorrhea treatment in the U.S. Unfortunately, there is early evidence that resistance to this class of drugs may be appearing in N. gonorrhoeae strains isolated from patients in the Far East. Should this problem become wide spread there would few options available for treating this highly infectious disease. The N. gonorrhoeae story is a paradigm of how injudicious use of antibiotics combined with decreased new antibiotic discovery research may result in a future where untreatable bacterial infections are common. The "great imitator" makes a comeback: By the year 2000 syphilis incidence rates in the U.S. had dropped to the lowest levels ever recorded. There was hope that syphilis could be eliminated in this country and in 1999 CDC launched a national syphilis elimination program. The plan focused on the South, specifically counties with persistent relatively high rates of disease. Unfortunately, beginning in 2001 rates began to rise among men in the West and the Northeast and have continued to do so since. The majority of these cases have been in men who have sex with men (MSM) many of whom are HIV infected as well, creating the potential for enhanced HIV transmission as well as complications from syphilis, such as neurologic disease. Rates among women continued to decrease until 2004 when they too began to increase. Soon thereafter in 2006 the feared consequence of increasing numbers of syphilis cases among women, congenital syphilis, also began to rise. These issues are of great concern as the gains made in syphilis control following the epidemic of the late 1980s could be wiped out. As heterosexual syphilis transmission is concentrated in communities with limited health care res syphilis control will be another measure of the success of health care reform in the U.S. Advances in molecular microbiology lead to the discovery of a new STD: Mycoplasma genitalium was first identified in the early 1980s through the serendipitous isolation and propagation of a single strain isolated from a man with urethritis. Inability to identify subsequent isolates using the methods of classical microbiology foiled research efforts for a decade. In the early 1990"s application of newly developed polymerase chain reaction technology to diagnosis of infections caused by this organism greatly advanced the work. We now know that M. genitalium is an important cause of nongonococcal urethritis in men. Very recent work has shown that there is an association with pelvic inflammatory disease in women. If it is established that this organism is associated with serious adverse health outcomes in women such as infertility and/or that it has consequences for infants born to infected mothers M. genitalium will join C. trachomatis and N. gonorrhoeae as public heath targets. Leslie Capo Louisiana State University Health Sciences Center


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