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Cedars-Sinai Women's Heart Center Launches Advanced Preventive Women's Clinic For Women With Menopause Symptoms Who Are At Risk For Heart Disease
Women who are at risk for heart disease and who are also experiencing menopause symptoms now have an added re - a highly specialized clinic in the Division of Cardiology at the Cedars-Sinai Heart Institute. The Advanced Preventive Women"s Clinic at the Women"s Heart Center recently opened and is offering comprehensive cardiac risk assessments designed specifically for women who are in menopause. The clinic also offers menopausal patients state-of-the-art screenings, as well as personalized medicine therapies and counseling, including high-risk hormone counseling.
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Human Genome Sciences Announces Completion Of Enrollment In Phase 2b Monthly-Dosing Trial Of Albuferon(R)
Human Genome Sciences, Inc. (Nasdaq: HGSI) announced that Novartis has completed enrollment and initial dosing in a Phase 2b clinical trial to evaluate the safety and efficacy of Albuferon(R) (albinterferon alfa-2b) administered monthly in combination with ribavirin in treatment-naive patients with genotypes 2 and 3 chronic hepatitis C. Albuferon is being developed by HGS and Novartis under an exclusive worldwide co-development and commercialization agreement entered into in June 2006.
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House Panel Passes Protection For Drug Makers
The House Energy and Commerce Committee passed an amendment to their broad health reform bill giving drug makers 12 years of exclusive rights to market new biologic drugs, "a setback" to the administration and consumer advocates who hoped to make generic drugs more widely available, the Wall Street Journal reports. The panel voted 47-11 on the measure, which "would also allow "evergreening," the practice by pharmaceutical companies of making minimal adjustments to their drugs, such as creating extended-release versions, as a way to lengthen their monopoly."
Public Health

Rising Health Spending Spurs Reform Debate

A new study shows that - in the words of Jon Gabel, its lead author - "American families with employer-based [health] coverage were worse off in 2007 than they were in 2004," the Wall Street Journal reports. The study, published in Health Affairs, found that out-of-pocket costs, such as co-pays and deductibles, increased 34 percent between those years. "The main reason for rising out-of-pocket costs was the growth in overall health spending," the Journal reports (Gerencher, 6/3). The report came Tuesday as White House economists pitched health reform as a way to bolster the sagging economy. A top administration economist, Christina Romer said ""billion-dollar bills [are] lying on the sidewalk" if the nation can find a way to make the system more efficient," the San Francisco Chronicle reports. The White House report suggested that by reducing waste, and making other changes, the rising costs could be slowed by 1.5 percentage points a year, putting as much as $2,600 into the pockets of the typical American family of four. While Republicans were skeptical, Douglas Holtz-Eakin, an economist and GOP adviser, said "we should not squander" the "economic growth opportunity" (Lochhead, 6/3). "The American people feel like they"ve been hit by a wrecking ball, and it"s in the form of health care costs. Fixing the economy and holding down health care costs are two sides of the same coin," Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore., told CQ Politics. Wyden introduced a plan two years ago to save money and cover more people that has become a favorite among Republicans, according to the report. Despite the reform debate"s recent shift to focus on cost, lawmakers appear to favor proposals that could increase spending, CQ Politics reports (Wayne, 6/3). Officials in Minnesota, meanwhile, were grappling with a local report that predicted the state"s health spending to double over the next nine years, to 20 percent of their economy. The state health department plans to use that estimate as a benchmark, and beginning next June, issue analyses that compare actual spending to the projections in an effort to gauge the effectiveness of health reforms, the Minneapolis Star Tribune reports (Wolfe, 6/2). 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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