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Elbit Imaging Ltd. Announces Swiss Team Uses InSightec's ExAblate(R) 4000 Brain System To Treat Patients With Functional Brain Disorders
Elbit Imaging Ltd. (TASE: EMIT, Nasdaq: EMITF), announced that, its subsidiary (in which EI holds indirectly approximately 58.34%, InSightec Ltd., announced that a team at the University Children"s Hospital Zurich has completed a feasibility study testing the use of non-invasive transcranial MR-guided focused ultrasound surgery (TcMRgFUS) for the treatment of neuropathic pain. Ten adult patients diagnosed with chronic neuropathic pain successfully underwent non-invasive deep brain ablation surgery (central lateral thalamotomy) with transcranial TcMRgFUS and showed improvement in pain scores and reduction of pain medication with no adverse effects at three months follow-up. This is the first study in the world to test non-invasive transcranial focused ultrasound as a treatment modality for functional brain disorders.
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Proposed Budget Cuts Worry Hospitals

The Wall Street Journal/Dow Jones Newswires reports on reaction to the Obama administration"s proposed cuts that may acutely affect hospitals. It notes: "President Obama last weekend called for $313 billion in savings over 10 years through adjustments in Medicare and Medicaid payments - a plan that a "deeply disappointed" American Hospital Association said would mean $220 billion in payment cuts to hospitals, on top of billions in other proposed Medicare cuts." The Journal reported that Tenet Healthcare Corp. CEO Trevor Fetter thinks "the Obama administration may be asking hospitals to bear too great a burden for helping pay for an expansion of medical coverage to uninsured Americans, although full details of the president"s latest financing proposal have yet to emerge." The Journal reports, "Obama proposed, among other savings, reducing government subsidies to hospitals for treating the uninsured as more people are covered. That makes sense, yet could pose problems if funds are cut while hospitals continue to care for large amounts of uninsured patients, Fetter said." "While hospitals stand to benefit significantly if policy makers extend medical coverage to the more than 45 million uninsured Americans, the timing of that expansion and any spending cuts needed to help pay for it is crucial since a mistake could "have catastrophic results," Fetter said," according to the Journal. He also expressed concern about the effects of rising unemployment and said that now hospitals are "getting paid literally nothing from a large portion of our patient population," and are paid less than the cost of treatment for their Medicaid patients (Brin, 6/17). 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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