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Interest Groups Crowd Airwaves, Pursue Lawmakers
"The increasingly heated fight over health-care legislation is saturating the summer airwaves, with groups on all sides of the debate pouring tens of millions of dollars into advertising campaigns designed to push the cause of reform forward, slow it down or stop it in its tracks," the Washington Post reports. So far, drug makers, labor groups, Democrats and Republicans - among others - have spent $52 million to finance the ad campaigns, a heady start that could lead to a "record-breaking legislative battle."
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Easier Access To Media By Children Increases Risk For Influence On Numerous Health Issues
With children having easier access to media and a wider variety of content, the possible negative influence on health issues such as sex, drugs, obesity and eating disorders is increased, and warrants monitoring usage and limiting access if necessary, according to a commentary in the June 3 issue of JAMA, a theme issue on child and adolescent health.
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Health Care Reform: What Small Business Wants
"As Congress prepares to do battle over health reform, a parallel dispute is shaping up among small-business groups that are staking out opposing positions on a key element of reform proposals: whether Uncle Sam will take on a bigger role in offering insurance coverage or leave the field to the private market," CNN Money reports. A fierce critic of the Clinton administration"s health care reform efforts a decade ago, the [National Federation of Independent Business] now considers universal health care to be one of its top legislative priorities. But it wants to see that care and coverage come from the private sector." The NFIB supports "a reform plan that would provide universal coverage and cut costs by increasing competition among private insurers, likely through the creation of government-mediated insurance pools." But "the Main Street Alliance, founded last year to lobby on behalf of small-business owners around health reform, says its survey of 1,200 small business operators and self-employed entrepreneurs in the 12 states where it operates found that 59% prefer a public option, with only 26% wanting more private plan choices alone" (deMaus, 7/2).
Mental Health

Aunty Beve Takes Out Prestigious Essay Prize

The winner of the Medical Journal of Australia"s Dr Ross Ingram Memorial Essay Competition for 2009 is Beverley Spiers, a Justice Health Aboriginal Health Worker and Education Officer, based at Cessnock Corrections Centre, New South Wales. Known by many as "Aunty Beve", Beverley is a respected Elder of the Darkinoong community, and has been an Aboriginal Health Worker in the criminal justice system for 27 years. Her essay, entitled Antecedents of chronic kidney disease in Aboriginal offenders in New South Wales prisons, describes a single day at Cessnock Corrections Centre, during which she and a Justice Health nurse screened 88 offenders for markers of kidney disease. In an essay filled with good humour and suspense, she outlines the process. "I headed into the prison-yards - "Calling all Kooris!" I"d kick that Koori grapevine into gear fast to get the word out. The bait was a Koori-coloured red, yellow and black water bottle. One each. It wasn"t much, but then most of these guys have almost nothing." "D-Day arrived. By 7.30am I was already in the yards as the wings were emptying for breakfast. We rallied the Kooris to win the bet as soon as methadone parade was over. We had 66 for sure, and others signing on, as the transports arrived with more offenders." But the project had a serious side: many of those screened in this and several other prisons showed signs of kidney disease, hypertension and diabetes. A tireless advocate for the health needs of Aboriginal people in prison, she concludes her essay with a plea for both education and access. "For the many Aboriginal people locked in prison - especially those also locked in their self-destructive rituals of negativity, resentment and blame - experience shows that the process of health education in prison is only likely to start when they are targeted, brought together and encouraged into the caring hands of Justice Health"s wonderful Health Centres, with their specially trained and enthusiastic Aboriginal Health Workers." The Dr Ross Ingram Memorial Essay Competition runs yearly and is open to all Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people who are working or studying in a health-related field. For more information about the competition, see here winning essay is published in the 18 May issue of the Medical Journal of Australia. Medical Journal of Australia


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