31 December 2012

AMA: MEDICAID (for the poor) to be better paid.

GOVERNMENT

Medicaid primary care pay to more than double in 6 states

Payments will increase an average of 73% in 2013 under a health reform provision raising primary care rates to Medicare levels.

By Jennifer Lubell, amednews staff. Posted Dec. 31, 2012.
Primary care doctors who provide services to Medicaid patients may experience significant fee increases starting in January 2013, when an Affordable Care Act provision to boost Medicaid pay rates to Medicare levels goes into effect for the next two years.
Rhode Island doctors, for example, will see primary care fees go up by nearly 200% on average. For New York state, the overall increase will amount to 156%, and in California, 136%, according to a 50-state survey conducted by the Urban Institute on behalf of the Kaiser Commission on Medicaid and the Uninsured. In three other states — Florida, Michigan and New Jersey — fees also are expected to more than double for primary care physicians that qualify for the increase.
“The states that are seeing the high percentages are merely the states that have been paying such abysmal rates to start with,” said Jeffrey Cain, MD, president of the American Academy of Family Physicians. Rhode Island, the state with the highest projected pay hike, “has been paying a third of what Medicare has been paying in that state, and that’s well below the cost of taking care of a patient,” he said.
Overall, Medicaid fees for primary care doctors will rise by an average of 73% in 2013, the biggest historical pay increase Medicaid physicians have experienced, according to the Kaiser report.
The Florida Medical Assn. has been among those groups advocating for an increase in Medicaid payment for all physicians for many years, said Timothy J. Stapleton, the association’s executive vice president. “We believe that increasing Medicaid physician payment rates will improve access, lead to healthier Floridians, and save money in the long term by ensuring that fewer patients seek treatment in costly settings, like hospital emergency rooms.” Florida primary care doctors are expected to see average pay increases of 105%.
Eleven states will have fee increases of less than 25% because they already pay more compared with current Medicare rates. Doctors in Delaware, Montana, Oklahoma and Wyoming will get average pay increases of less than 10%. In Alaska and North Dakota, where Medicaid primary care fees exceed Medicare levels, the ACA provision will have no effect.

Congress targets pay hike

On average, Medicaid pays doctors at 66% of what Medicare pays, a fee gap that has widened during the past few years, the report stated. The ACA directs states to pay primary care doctors providing primary care services at 100% of Medicare rates for 2013 and 2014. The pay bump recently had been targeted for elimination in congressional negotiations as a possible offset for a deal to avoid deep automatic spending cuts, although the White House and congressional Democrats oppose the move. At this article’s deadline, it was not clear whether this proposal had been taken off the table.
In Michigan, the Kaiser report estimates that average Medicaid pay rates will rise by 125%. For Fred Van Alstine, MD, a family physician in the state who has a private practice but also runs an urgent care clinic, the change means he will be able to re-expand office hours and possibly hire new clinic personnel after experiencing recent cutbacks. But doubts about the sustainability of the pay boost beyond the two-year window make him hesitant to do so.
On average, Medicaid pays doctors 66% of Medicare rates.
Michigan has seen “a real reduction in reimbursement of about 12%, which actually put us below the marginal cost of seeing someone,” Dr. Van Alstine said. He’s president-elect of the Michigan Academy of Family Physicians but was speaking as an individual.
To survive, the clinic had to lay off staff, reduce hours and restrict the number of Medicaid fee-for-service patients it could accept. “I did that with a great deal of pain in my heart because I know those people need access, but it was either that or close our doors entirely,” he said.
The downside of the ACA pay increase is it’s guaranteed for only two years, “and there’s also some debate in the budget negotiations that this may get pulled back,” Dr. Van Alstine said. As a physician and small-business owner, he said he will not take steps to expand his clinic until he is more certain that the Medicaid parity provision is here to stay.
Letters signed by the American Medical Association and hundreds of other physician organizations made their way to Congress recently, urging lawmakers to preserve the pay increase during budget negotiations. Low Medicaid payment rates have resulted in access problems, organized medicine has said.

 ADDITIONAL INFORMATION: 

How much will Medicaid primary care rates go up?

A new report estimates that Medicaid physician fees for eligible doctors’ primary care services will rise on average by 73% in 2013 under health system reform, far exceeding annual increases Medicaid physicians have experienced historically. These fee increases will vary by state, in some cases by significant amounts. States that already pay the lowest rates will see the biggest bump, while some states already paying above Medicare rates will see no bump at all.
StateEstimated 2013 fee hike
Alabama47%
Alaska0%
Arkansas47%
Arizona33%
California136%
Colorado32%
Connecticut41%
Delaware2%
District of Columbia25%
Florida105%
Georgia48%
Hawaii79%
Idaho13%
Illinois93%
Indiana87%
Iowa34%
Kansas29%
Kentucky44%
Louisiana34%
Maine61%
Maryland45%
Massachusetts47%
Michigan125%
Minnesota36%
Mississippi11%
Missouri76%
Montana7%
Nebraska38%
Nevada52%
New Hampshire71%
New Jersey109%
New Mexico22%
New York156%
North Carolina18%
North Dakota0%
Ohio76%
Oklahoma3%
Oregon39%
Pennsylvania96%
Rhode Island198%
South Carolina35%
South Dakota49%
Texas66%
Utah34%
Vermont22%
Virginia36%
Washington52%
West Virginia34%
Wisconsin78%
Wyoming4%
Note: Tennessee has no Medicaid fee-for-service program.
Source: “How Much Will Medicaid Physician Fees for Primary Care Rise in 2013? Evidence from a 2012 Survey of Medicaid Physician Fees,” Kaiser Commission on Medicaid and the Uninsured/Urban Institute, Dec. 17 (kff.org/medicaid/8398.cfm)

30 December 2012

UK: 63% FOREIGN DOCS FAIL EXAM.

From UK DAILY MAIL

Last week the Mail on Sunday revealed how hundreds of foreign doctors working in the NHS are routinely failing key medical exams.
Medical associations want doctors to be allowed six attempts at passing the tests, rather than the current four, because the success rates are so poor.
The revelation raised fears trainee medics, mainly from India, Pakistan and Nigeria, are not suitably qualified to treat patients, despite having worked for the NHS for three years before taking the exam.
Until they pass the exams, which qualify them to practise independently as hospital physicians or GPs, trainees continue to see patients – under supervision – in placements at hospitals and GP surgeries.
The Mail on Sunday reported how the figures showed foreign doctors are substantially more likely to fail than UK graduates, with communication cited as one of the problems.
While just nine per cent of British doctors fail to pass the knowledge and practical exams, more than  63 per cent of foreign doctors do not reach the standard to pass.

Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2254824/Three-quarters-doctors-struck-Britain-trained-abroad.html#ixzz2GXUi3yot
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29 December 2012

UK: FOREIGN SURROGATES for SALE

  • From UK DAILY MAIL
  •  
  • Number of British couples registering children to foreign surrogates has almost trebled in the past five years
  • Wombs are typically hired for between £10,000 and £20,000
  • Experts warned of the exploitation of poor women abroad
By Harriet Cooke
|



British couples who cannot have their own babies are looking more at foreign surrogacy as a way of starting a family
Cherished: British couples who cannot have their own babies are looking more at foreign surrogacy as a way of starting a family (file picture)
New figures have highlighted an increasing demand for 'wombs for hire' from foreign surrogate mothers.
The research, published in The Journal of Social Welfare and Family Law, reveals how the number of couples registering children to foreign surrogates has almost trebled in the past five years.
The demand by Western couples for women to give birth to their babies is shown by the number of 'parental orders' granted to parents - which enable the child to be taken from the surrogate.
The process, driven particularly by Indian agencies, was completed 47 times in 2007 and 133 in 2011.
But the real figures are believed to be much higher, and experts have warned of the increasing exploitation of women living in poverty who undergo the pregnancies to raise money.
Their wombs are typically rented for between £10,000 to £20,000.
The practice of paying surrogate mothers is not allowed in Britain, meaning British couples who are unable to have children look abroad for an alternative solution.
 
The options can be researched at events such as the Alternative Families Show, where prospective parents can meet representatives from surrogacy agencies.
'I don't think the Human Fertilisation and Embryology Authority has been strong enough on this,' Marilyn Crawshaw, author of the research and senior lecturer at the University of York, told The Independent.
'There is concern about child trafficking. The World Health Organisation held a meeting on this.
Parents desperate to have children will pay thousands of pounds to foreign agencies to arrange the birth of their child
Bond: Parents desperate to have children will pay thousands of pounds to foreign agencies to arrange the birth of their child (file picture)
'One report described a surrogacy ring in Thailand in 2011 in which 13 Vietnamese women, seven of them pregnant, had been trafficked for the purpose of acting as surrogates.'
She added the official figures did not reflect the real number of children born in India to foreign parents.
Natalie Gamble, a lawyer specialising in surrogacy cases, said important regulations were in place to protect children at risk from international trafficking, but there were no safeguards in place for overseas surrogacy.
The practice follows a decline in international adoptions, which has plummeted to its lowest point in 15 years.
The number dropped from a high of 45,000 in 2004 to an estimated 25,000 last year, according to research by Peter Selman, an expert on international adoptions at Britain's Newcastle University.

The reduction has been attributed to crackdowns against baby-selling, the world economy and efforts by countries to place more children with domestic families.

28 December 2012

UNIVERSITY FREIBURG: TELECONSULTATION FORM (English/Russian)

Teleconsultation Request Form
Заявка на получение
телеконсультации
в Университетской клинике г. Фрайбург
IMS - Fax-No.: + 49 761 270 1931 0
______________________________________________________________________________________
Please fill out this form in English or German
Пожалуйста, заполните этот бланк на английском или немецком языке!
Hospital name / company name:
Клиника / фирма:
Contact person:
Контактное лицо:
Telephone of the contact person:
Телефон Адрес контактного лица:
Email of the contact person:
электр. Адрес контактного лица:
What specialist would you like to have a teleconsultation with?
С каким специалистом Вы хотели бы заказать телеконсультацию?
Patient’s Name/Surname:
Ф.И.О. пациента:


Date of Birth:
Дата рождения:
Purpose of teleconsultation:
Цель телеконсультации:
Current diagnosis:
Диагноз пациента:
Brief Patient’s History:
клинические данные:
IMS
and International Business Development
International Medical Services
2
Current medical condition /complaints:
актуальные жалобы:
Current medication:
Принимаемые в данный момент медикаменты:
Please attach to this request form your current laboratory results, medical reports (in English or German) and your radiological examinations if possible.
Пожалуйста, приложите к заявке актуальные лабораторные анализы и выписки переведенные на анг. или нем. язык, а также по возможности радиологические снимки.
3
When would you like to have your teleconsultation?
Когда Вы хотели бы заказать телеконсультацию?
Name/Position of people who would be present during your teleconsultation.
Имена/должности людей, которые будут присутствовать на телеконсультации:
I would like to order the following teleconsultation:
Я хотел бы заказать телеконсультацию:
20 мин. / 20 min. 350,00 €
40 мин. / 40 min. 650,00 €
60 мин. / 60 min. 900,00 €
I would like to pay by / Я хотел бы оплатить консультацию:
credit card / кредитной карточкой
bank transfer / банковским переводом
Date / signature
Дата / подпись
Bank details:
Beneficiary: Universitätsklinikum Freiburg IMS
Bank: Sparkasse Nördl. Breisgau Freiburg
Account No: 2004 406
Bank Identity: 680 501 01
Swift Code / BIC: FRSPDE66
IBAN: DE08 6805 0101 0002 0044 06
Purpose of payment: Teleconsultation

27 December 2012

GERMANY: RETIRED EMIGRANTS

 From UK DAILY MAIL


Researchers found an estimated 7,146 German pensioners living in retirement homes in Hungary in 2011.
More than 3,000 were in the Czech Republic and more than 600 in Slovakia. There were also unknown numbers in Spain, Greece and the Ukraine, as well as Thailand and the Philippines.
Some told researchers they were there out of choice as costs were lower, while standards of care were often higher.
But many others admitted they moved reluctantly.
Criticism: Experts have described the 'time bomb¿ of increasing numbers unable to afford the growing costs of retirement homes, while others have spoken of 'inhumane deportation' (stock image)
Criticism: Experts have described the 'time bomb' of increasing numbers unable to afford the growing costs of retirement homes, while others have spoken of 'inhumane deportation' (stock image)
According to Germany’s federal bureau of statistics, more than 400,000 senior citizens cannot afford a German retirement home, a figure growing by around 5 per cent a year. This is because many are living for longer while their pensions are stagnating.
As a result, the Krankenkassen – or statutory insurers that make up Germany’s state insurance system – are discussing cheaper care in foreign retirement homes.
EU law prevents state insurers from signing contracts with overseas homes.
But that is likely to change as legislators are forced to respond to Europe’s ageing population.
Artur Frank, the owner of Senior Palace – which finds care homes for Germans in Slovakia – said it was wrong to suggest senior citizens were being ‘deported’.
‘Many are here of their own free will, the results of sensible decisions by their families who know they will be better off,’ he said.

26 December 2012

UK: TYPHOID VACCINE SHORTAGE

Doctors warn travellers of vaccine shortage for deadly typhoid fever

  • Shortage follows a recall by one pharmaceutical company of 88 per cent of its typhoid vaccine stock in October
  • Typhoid fever occurs mostly in developing countries in areas with poor sanitation
  • Proves fatal in up to 30 per cent of cases if left untreated
By Claire Bates
|

Holidaymakers escaping the British winter to exotic climes may struggle to get immunised against typhoid, doctors have warned.
There is a UK shortage of the vaccine for the potentially lethal disease, following a recall by pharmaceutical company of 88 per cent of its stock.
Now travellers are finding that while the immunisation is usually provided free of charge by local GP surgeries many are running out of the vaccine.
Noone is a fan of injections. But some travellers may struggle to get the vaccine they need for typhoid fever
Noone is a fan of injections. But some travellers may struggle to get the vaccine they need for typhoid fever before going abroad
Typhoid fever can be found throughout the developing world, most commonly in South Asia and South East Asia. The UK see around 350 cases a year the majority of which are contracted by those returning from a trip to India, Pakistan and Bangladesh.
The life-threatening bacterial infection is contracted from contaminated food or water and is seen in areas with poor sanitation.
 
It can cause serious complications such as internal bleeding or splitting of the bowel and can prove fatal if not promptly treated with antibiotics. Typhoid fever kills around 200,000 people around the world each year.
Salmonella typhi is the bacteria that causes typhoid fever. Complications can include internal bleeding
Salmonella typhi is the bacteria that causes typhoid fever. Complications can include internal bleeding
Manufacturer Sanofi Pasteur MSD recalled 16 batches of Typhim Vi vaccine in October because tests found some samples were too weak.
It meant as many as 730,000 people vaccinated between January 2011 and October 2012 could have received only partial protection.
'Stocks of Typhim Vi are still in short supply and this may continue into the early part of 2013,' a Sanofi Pasteur spokesman told The Guardian.
The shortage has been compounded by a decision by manufacturer GlaxoSmithKline to concentrate on products for other childhood vaccination programmes. Its typhoid vaccine, Typherix, will not be available until Summer 2014.
Reports also suggest that travel clinics, which charge around £25 per vaccination only have stocks of the oral vaccine Vivotif. Its effectiveness is reduced if a patient is also taking antimalarials or antibiotics.
A Department of Health spokesman, told Mail Online: 'Typhoid is rare in this country and is usually associated with travel to countries where sanitation is inadequate.
Sanofi Pasteur had to recall 88% of its stock of Typhim Vi in October this year
Shortage: Sanofi Pasteur had to recall 88% of its stock of Typhim Vi in October this year
Vaccine is still available and we are working with manufacturers to help ensure that current supply problems are resolved as soon as possible.'
Travellers can also help themselves by drinking only bottled water and avoiding raw vegetables and drinks with ice cubes.

25 December 2012

UK ECONOMIST: SWITZERLAND BEST COUNTRY

ECONOMIST: BEST COUNTRIES

1) SWITZERLAND
2) AUSTRALIA
3) NORWAY
4) SWEDEN
5) DENMARK
6) SINGAPORE
7) NEW ZEALAND
8) NETHERLANDS
9) CANADA
10 HONG KONG

16) GERMANY & USA

80) NIGERIA (LOWEST)

24 December 2012

MENTALLY ILL NURSE employed by King Edward VII Hosp

From UK DAILY MAIL

Royal nurse found hanged after taking DJs' hoax call about pregnant Duchess of Cambridge had tried to kill herself twice before last year

  • Jacintha Saldanha made two attempts to kill herself last winter
  • The nurse took an overdose during visit to India
  • She survived but tried to jump from a building nine days later
By Abul Taher
|

Nurse Jacintha Saldanha, pictured with her husband Ben Barboza, is believed to have tried to commit suicide twice previously
Nurse Jacintha Saldanha, pictured with her husband Ben Barboza, is believed to have tried to commit suicide twice previously
The nurse who committed suicide after answering a hoax phone call about the Duchess of Cambridge made two attempts to kill herself last winter and had been prescribed antidepressants.
Jacintha Saldanha, who took her own life days after the call from Australian DJs pretending to be the Queen and Prince Charles, attempted to commit suicide last December with an overdose of pills during a family visit to India.
She survived after being rushed to hospital but tried to commit suicide again just nine days later by apparently jumping from a building.
Ms Saldanha, 46, spent several days in intensive care before receiving psychiatric treatment and being prescribed a course of powerful antidepressants for nine months.
Along with the previous suicide attempts, reported in an Indian newspaper, members of Ms Saldanha’s family have revealed that the nurse was so ashamed after taking the hoax call earlier this month that she did not tell her husband or children about it before her death, despite speaking to them by phone several times.
Ms Saldanha was found hanged with a scarf at her living quarters  at the King Edward VII’s Hospital in Central London on December 7.
Three days earlier, Ms Saldanha was the duty nurse who answered the prank call from Mel Greig and Michael Christian, and transferred it to a colleague.
That nurse revealed confidential medical information about the pregnant Duchess, who was being treated at the hospital for acute morning sickness. The call was broadcast in Australia and made headlines around the world.

23 December 2012

UK GP exam results 63% foreign docs FAIL


From UK DAILY MAIL

Scandal of the failing foreign doctors who demand right to sit GP exams a staggering SIX times
  • 63 per cent fail compared with nine per cent of British
  • Language revealed as one of the problems
  • Patients can't check how many attempts they had
By Jo Macfarlane
|

Hundreds of foreign doctors working in the NHS are routinely failing key medical exams, The Mail on Sunday can reveal.

Success rates are so poor that medical associations want doctors to be allowed six attempts at passing the tests rather than the current four.

The revelation raises fears the trainee medics, mainly from India, Pakistan and Nigeria, are not suitably qualified to treat patients despite spending three years working for the NHS before taking the exam.





21 December 2012

UK DISSEMINATED TB

From UK DAILY MAIL

Killed by TB, aged 21:Student had rare form of illness that doctors thought was meningitis

  • Craig White, from Boston, Lincs, suffered from headaches and nausea but assumed it was linked to his medication for Crohn's disease, his family said
  • His condition deteriorated on Dec 5 and he died a week later in hospital
  • He tweeted 'Head feels like it's going to explode!' just weeks earlier
By Claire Bates, Nick Enoch and Hannah Roberts
|

Craig White died from tuberculosis after suffering crippling headaches for a week
Craig White died from tuberculosis after suffering crippling headaches for a week
A student has died after  contracting a rare form of tuberculosis.
Craig White, 21, suffered from intense headaches and nausea in the months leading up to his death.
The aspiring sports journalist, from Boston in Lincolnshire, initially dismissed his symptoms as side effect of the steroids he was taking for Crohn’s disease, his family said.
When his condition worsened after a meal with friends on December 5, he was admitted to Boston's Pilgrim Hospital two days later but died on December 12.
Mr White, an aspiring sports journalist, had tweeted friends just weeks before he died asking if anyone knew of a pill more effective than paracetamol, as his 'head feels like it's going to explode!'
The Health Protection Agency said a post-mortem examination this morning identified disseminated tuberculosis - a rare form of the disease - as the provisional cause of death.
Further investigations into Mr White's case will now be carried out by Professor Robert Forrest, the coroner for South Lincolnshire.
Adjourning the inquest, Professor Forrest said: 'There are still a lot of details we need to establish into the tragic death of Craig Adam White. This may take a few months.'
The HPA said it was likely he contracted TB by breathing in infected droplets from a sufferer several months ago as it takes a long time for symptoms to develop.
TB, which was rife in Britain until the 1950s, is an increasing and worrying problem in urban areas. Rising immigration has seen a surge in cases in the last 20 years.
 
Cases dropped from 50,000 a year in the 1950s to 5,000 in the 1980s.
Last year there were just over 9,000 cases. London has the highest rate of infection, followed by Birmingham.
Seventy per cent of cases occur among recent migrants to Britain from countries where the disease remains prevalent such as the Indian sub-continent and sub-Saharan Africa.
Craig
Craig White
Craig White, 21, had suffered from crippling headaches for weeks preceding his death. A post-mortem examination found disseminated tuberculosis as the provisional cause of death
Craig White
The last tweet sent by Craig White. He died two weeks later
It is not known whether Mr White had recently travelled abroad.
The HPA is now offering screening for the infection to his friends at the University of Lincoln.
Mr White was a keen supporter of Manchester City football club and had a fan blog. He was in his third year of his journalism degree.
After his death, his girlfriend Laurie Caumette, who visited him in hospital, tweeted: 'Can't believe I'll never see you smile again or hear the sound of your voice and hear you laugh. I'm going to miss you so much.'
The official Manchester City twitter feed said: 'All at #MCFC send our condolences to the friends & family of City fan & @mcfcview blogger @cwhiteuk who sadly passed away recently.'
In a statement issued by the HPA, Dr Katie Geary said cases of disseminated TB were rare but not unheard of in the UK.
Dr Geary said: 'Our thoughts are with the family at this sad time.
'As part of normal practice, all close contacts considered to be at risk of contracting the disease will be offered screening to see if they’ve been exposed to the infection.'
She added: 'Exposure to the infection through contact with someone who has the illness does not mean that an individual will go on to develop TB.
the lung disease that NHS fears is out of control.jpg
'Transmission occurs through coughing of infectious droplets and usually requires prolonged close contact with an infectious case.'
Disseminated TB develops in the small number of infected people whose immune systems do not successfully contain the primary infection.
Those who take immune-suppressing medications are at higher risk for disseminated TB, because of their weaker immune systems.
Disseminated disease can occur within weeks of the primary infection. Sometimes, it does not occur until years after you become infected.
Low doses of immune system suppressants are often administered for Crohn's disease.
Steroids are known to suppress the immune system.

The disease mainly affects the lungs, where it can cause calcium deposits which make it difficult to breathe.
It can also travel to other parts of the body including the brain, kidneys, bones and joints.
Symptoms can include fever and night sweats (both sometimes experienced by Crohn's sufferers), an unexplained prolonged cough, unexplained weight loss or blood in phlegm.
However, many people who are infected never develop symptoms - although the bacteria remain in the body, they are not infectious.

16 December 2012

NHS MDs to work 7/7

From UK DAILY MAIL

NHS doctors to be forced to work weekends for the first time in push for improved  seven-day a week care

  • Oupatients appointments and surgical procedures could be carried out on Saturdays and Sundays for the first time
  • The shake up is part of plans by Sir Bruce Keogh, medical director of the new NHS Commissioning Board
By Steve Nolan
|


Seven days: Sir Bruce Keogh plans to introduce seven day working to the NHS
Seven days: Sir Bruce Keogh plans to introduce seven day working to the NHS
Outpatients appointments and surgical procedures could soon be scheduled for the weekend as the National Health Service looks set to move to a seven-day working week.
Until now, surgery, certain scans and screenings were only performed during the week, but in a shake up planned by Sir Bruce Keogh, medical director of the new NHS Commissioning Board,  Saturday and Sunday hours will be written into medical professional's contracts.
Under the proposals, GPs would also be expected to treat patients at weekends.
Sir Keogh said that the NHS should no longer operate for the convenience of staff and not patients.
He told the Sunday Times: 'Our system has been based around providing as good a working environment as you can for the people who work in the health service, which isn't necessarily matched with what the people who want services have.
'If you wanted a day case operation, and you didn't want to take a day off work, why can't you have it on a Saturday or Sunday?'
'Tesco have had to go through this  - it was a complex issue for them - we will need to look at the terms and conditions or service of people.'
 
He added that having empty clinics and operating theatres on a Saturday and Sunday is a wasted of NHS resources.
Research by the board found that a patient admitted to hospital on a Sunday was 16 per cent more likely to die than if they were admitted on a Wednesday.
Keogh can introduce the changes and implement financial rewards and penalties to ensure that hospitals follow the guidelines.
Contract changes: Many medical professionals will have to work Saturdays and Sundays for the first time
Contract changes: Many medical professionals will have to work Saturdays and Sundays for the first time
The plans will no doubt anger doctors who will be keen to protect their current working hours.
Medical professionals will not receive any extra money for working weekends but will be given days off in the week instead.
The proposals will be fully outlined in the NHS Commissioning Board's first planning guidance which will detail how health funds will be spent ahead and which will be released on Tuesday.
The British Medical Association (BMA) last night rejected the idea that that the medical profession could learn from private firms such as Tesco.


15 December 2012

UK Dr.Helen McGLONE PhD wins claim for Pap. smear errors.

UK from DAILY MAIL

 £2m for victim of cancer unable to have children... but she wants even more following two botched smear tests by health board

  • Helen McGlone (PhD Physics) had two smear tests but pre-cancerous cells not spotted
  • The 33-year-old was forced to have a hysterectomy when it was discovered
  • She sued for £20million for loss of earnings but was awarded £2million
  • Lord Bannatyne rejected her claim at Edinburgh Court of Session
  • Her lawyer said she is considering appealing the award
By Victoria Allen
|

Disappointed: Dr Helen McGlore, at Edinburgh Court of Session, sued for £20million after two smear tests failed to spot pre-cancerous cells
Disappointed: Dr Helen McGlone, at Edinburgh Court of Session, sued for £20million after two smear tests failed to spot pre-cancerous cells
A woman left unable to have children after a health board failed to spot her cancer has been awarded more than £2million in damages.
Helen McGlone, 33, claimed medical negligence ended her prospects of a high-flying career in the financial sector and will force her to use a surrogate mother to have children.
But the money given to her for loss of earnings at the Court of Session fell far short of the £20million for which she had sued.
In a written ruling issued yesterday, Lord Bannatyne rejected the physics graduate’s claim that a lucrative career was a certainty before her two botched smear tests. Instead, he said her chances of getting a top City job during the financial crash of 2008 were only 30 per cent.
Dr McGlone was said to be ‘disappointed’ by the award. She is still seeking compensation from NHS Greater Glasgow and Clyde to pay for a surrogate mother in the US after being forced to undergo a radical  hysterectomy when her cancer was discovered two years too late.
Following the decision, she said: ‘I am still working through the detail of what has been published today.
‘Only someone who has suffered a serious cancer and the resulting treatment can truly appreciate the pain, fear and loss that come with it.
‘I was fortunate in that I survived,  but I certainly had to fight hard to do so. This case is about protecting other women from an atrocious, preventable cancer and I will continue to do everything I can for them.'
The 33-year-old, who was born in Falkirk, Stirlingshire, had planned to have as many as four children – but was left unable to become a mother by a double medical blunder.
She had two cervical smears in 2005 and 2006, both of which failed to spot pre-cancerous cells.
Her eventual diagnosis came by accident after she graduated with a particle physics doctorate from Glasgow University and moved to Switzerland to work for the European Organisation for Nuclear Research, CERN.
After cutting her hand, she discovered she had medical insurance and, as one of a number of medical checks, was given a smear test.
The cancer was caught so late that she was forced to have radical surgery. Her chances of survival during  chemotherapy were given as just over 50 per cent, but she battled through – although she can no longer have children.
Then began a long-running legal fight to get the health board to take responsibility for this, ending in a judgment last year that it was to blame.
Dr McGlone listened to four weeks of evidence earlier this year on her loss of earnings from the cancer, which she claims has left her with post- traumatic stress disorder and unable to work.
Giving evidence, she said she was on the point of getting her first job as a quantitative analyst with a top financial institution. She claims she would have made £15-£20million over the course of her career.
Lord Bannatyne ruled at Edinburgh Court of Sessions said the chances of Dr McGlone getting a top City job was just 30 per cent
Lord Bannatyne ruled at Edinburgh Court of Sessions said the chances of Dr McGlone getting a top City job was just 30 per cent
However, the written judgment revealed she had applied to 12 banks following her diagnosis and had been offered a job by none. Moreover, there are only 600 such posts in London, with women filling only 7 per cent.
These considerations led to the compensation figure being downgraded.
Lord Bannatyne also said Dr McGlone was a woman who was ‘driven, highly competitive, calculating, committed to getting on and highly focused’ and that he believed she would find other work.
Taking into account her suffering, loss of earnings and pension, as well as plastic surgery to cover scars, she was awarded £2,026,750.
That may increase following a further hearing on other financial matters. No date has yet been fixed for damages relating to her surrogacy treatment – which, if awarded, would be unprecedented in British courts.
Stephen Hay, head of litigation at Gildeas Solicitors, which represented Dr McGlone, said she was considering an appeal.
He added: ‘She was initially disappointed when she heard the headline figure. She put forward a case where her income would be £300,000 a year until the age of 55 and to be told her loss of earnings will be £1.7million is clearly a significant difference.
‘But the main thing for her has always been that other women should not have to go through this.’
A spokesman for NHS Greater Glasgow and Clyde said yesterday that its legal team was still going through the 100-page written judgment and that any further statement at this time would be ‘inappropriate’.

14 December 2012

UK Lead poisoning from Chinese Face Paint.


From UK DAILY  MAIL

LEAD POISONING from CHINESE FACE PAINTING KITS

Parents are being warned not to buy face painting sets for their children without checking them after thousands were found to contain lead.
More than 7,000 Tartan Collection paint pot sets have been imported from a factory in China by Chelford Ltd in Salford, Greater Manchester, and sold on to outlets throughout the UK.
The sets could cause brain damage in very young children - and only 324 out of the 7,200 sets have been recovered.
Chelford Ltd has been ordered to pay more than £14,000 at Manchester Magistrates' Court for breaching product safety laws.

A health alert has been issued after thousands of these face painting sets containing poisonous lead were sold to shops
Joel Cope from Chelford Ltd Salford who sold face paint to shops which had lead in them
Danger: The Tartan Collection sets which contain lead (left) and the UK boss who distributed them, Joel Cope

Boss Joel Cope, 39, was also hauled into court and fined £1,200 for putting the public's health at risk.

A Trading Standards investigation found the sets, which were discovered on sale at shops in Salford and Rochdale, included lead which can be absorbed through the skin.
It is not known how many painting sets have been bought or used.
Salford City Council is now warning parents to stay away from the face paint sets when buying Christmas presents.
Importer: Chelford Ltd in Salford, Greater Manchester, where the poisoned face painting sets were brought in
Importer: Chelford Ltd in Salford, Greater Manchester, where the poisoned face painting sets were brought in
Salford mayor Ian Stewart said: 'It's very worrying, especially at this time of year, that these dangerous items have found their way on to the high street.
'It's really important that the public are extremely vigilant. These sets can be very dangerous, particularly to small children.'
Mr Cope admitted six breaches of product safety regulations in his role as managing director of Chelford Ltd, based at Agecroft Trading Estate in Langley Road, Salford, as well as a further six identical offences on behalf of the company.
Cope, from Lancaster Drive, Prestwich, was in charge of the firm - which specialises in keyrings and stationery - when it sold the 7,200 Tartan Collection face paint and stencil sets, containing lead, to shops around the country.

Some were found on sale at Pound Paradise store in Gerald Street, Salford, and others in Budget Greeting Cards Ltd in Milnrow, Rochdale.

DANGERS OF LEAD POISONING

  • Lead can be highly toxic - especially harmful to children - if it enters the body in large enough amounts
  • Exposure to it can damage the heart, bones, intestines and kidneys. It can cause crippling pain, confusion, headaches, and even lead to coma and death.
  • It has also been linked with infertility and nervous damage.
  • Traditionally used as a pigment, the sale of lead-based paint was banned in the UK in 1992.
  • It followed mounting evidence the substance was a serious risk to health.
Salford trading standards officers bought a test sample from Pound Paradise and discovered they were toxic.
The court heard that Salford trading standards officers were first contacted about Chelford Ltd last year by health officials in Ireland who had discovered the firm's paints on sale there contained lead.
 
The officials told Cope that the paints were potentially toxic, but he did not immediately recall the items in the UK, the court heard.

Laura Raine, prosecuting for Salford council, said: 'He used the excuse that he thought the laws were different in Ireland.'

Trading standards later issued a notice ordering Chelford to recall the paints.

Toby Sasse, representing Chelford Ltd and Cope, said his clients had co-operated with the investigation and admitted guilt.

Mr Sasse said Cope had been given misleading advice by consultants who suggested he was complying with the correct regulations.
He said Cope was carrying out further testing of the paints when trading standards became involved

13 December 2012

JAPAN: LEAD POISONING during EDO PERIOD

From UK DAILY MAIL

How Japan's samurai caste was toppled by MAKE UP: Lead poisoning left the warriors' children backward and physically deformed

  • Samurai women's fashion for lead-based facial cosmetics affected their children through breast milk
  • Study shows the bones of youngsters from Japan's Edo period contained levels of the toxic metal dozens of times higher than is safe
  • Effects of lead poisoning in children include learning disabilities, behavioural problems and mental retardation
By Allan Hall and Damien Gayle
|


Fearsome: But a study shows that Japan's samurai warrior caste was brought down by a fashion for lead-based make up among their women
Fearsome: But a study shows that Japan's samurai warrior caste was brought down by a fashion for lead-based make up among their women
The fierce Samurai warriors of Japan feared no-one and lived in the hope of dying as heroes in battle.
But in the end they were done for by ... make-up.
Researchers have found that children of the samurai class suffered severe lead poisoning because of the cosmetics used by their mothers and grew up deformed, disabled and backward.
These handicaps left them unable to cope with political crises, leading to instability that led to the eventual downfall of their feudal system, the study claims.
Tamiji Nakashima of Japan's University of Occupational and Environmental Health studied the bones of Samurai children and adults to discover their cause of death.
Based on chemical and X-ray analysis, the bones of the children in the study contained levels of lead dozens of times higher than both the male and female adults, the researchers told Germany‘s Der Spiegel magazine.
'The median value for the children three years of age and under was over fifty times higher than that of their mothers,' it said.
White facial powder used by the women was the cause. 'During the Edo period, cosmetics became popular and the vogue was usually introduced by actors, courtesans and geisha, through prints and popular literature, and by beauticians who helped establish fashions,' the researchers said.
'The white face powders used in those days were made from mercury chloride and white lead. Lead levels in the bones of adult women were roughly double those of men in the study.
'And their breast milk was likely highly-contaminated, leading to the very severe lead levels in the youngest children.
'The high lead concentrations in the samurai children of the Edo period may have left them intellectually incapable of dealing with the final political crisis between 1853–1867, resulting in the downfall of the Shogunate.
'A ruling class afflicted with brain damage isn't a recipe for success. As samurai were the ruling class, severe political insecurity could develop when highly lead-contaminated samurai children grew up.'
Modern geisha's parade in Tokyo: But the fashion for pale make-up begun by their forebears in the Edo period created problems
Modern geisha's parade in Tokyo: But the fashion for pale make-up made with lead and mercury begun by their forebears in the Edo period meant women from the upper echelons contaminated their children causing the youngsters to suffer a range of ill-effects that led to learning disabilities and behavioural problems
According to the World Health Organisation, lead causes a variety of ill effects, and is particularly harmful to children. Too much lead damages the nervous and reproductive systems, causes high blood pressure and anaemia, and accumulates in the bones.

LEAD POISONED THE ANCIENTS - AND CONTINUES TO AFFECT US

Although lead poisoning was among the first known environmental hazards, from ancient times right up until relatively recently people were fond of its diverse uses and believed they could minimise the risk.
Many believed that limiting exposure would limit the danger to health, without realising that everyday low-level exposure to it made them vulnerable to chronic lead poisoning.
The Romans used lead extensively in building aqueducts from about 500BC to 300AD, despite Julius Caesar's engineer Vitruvius reporting that 'water is much more wholesome from earthenware pipes'. It is even thought lead poisoning may have contributed to the decline of the Roman Empire.
Throughout the Middle Ages, the metal continued to be widely used for a range of applications, but it wasn't until the Industrial Revolution that lead poisoning became common in the work setting.
The introduction of lead paint for residential use in the 19th century increased childhood exposure to lead; for millennia before this, most lead exposure had been occupational.
Toxicity in children from lead paint was finally recognised in 1897 and France, Belgium, and Austria banned white lead interior paints in 1909; the League of Nations followed suit in 1922.
However, in the U.S., laws banning lead house paint were not passed until 1971, and it was phased out and not fully banned until 1978.
The 20th century saw an increase in worldwide lead exposure levels due to the increased widespread use of the metal. From the Twenties, lead was added to petrol to improve its combustion and lead from exhaust fumes persists today in soil.
The levels found today in most people are orders of magnitude greater than those of pre-industrial society.  Due to reductions of lead in products and the workplace, acute lead poisoning is rare in most countries today.
However, low-level lead exposure is still common.
It is especially harmful to the developing brains of foetuses and young children, with it interfering with the metabolism of calcium and Vitamin D and causing irreversible effects including learning disabilities, behavioural problems and mental retardation.
At very high levels lead poisoning causes convulsions, coma and, eventually, death.
Dr Nakashima's team studied the bones of children who lived as far back as 400 years ago during Japan's Edo period, when the country was ruled by a series of shoguns who presided over a feudal system upheld by the Samurai caste.
After sampling the lead in their rib bones and taking X-rays of some of the youngsters' long arm and leg bones they found children with enough lead in their systems to cause severe intellectual impairment.
Those under three were the worst off, with a median level of 1,241 micrograms of lead per gram of bone - more than 120 times the level thought to cause neurological and behavioural problems.
With global lead pollution much lower in the before the beginning of the industrial revolution, Dr Nakashima's researchers surmised that the contamination must have been caused by the make-up worn by women of the Samurai caste.
His study showed that the women of the era had far higher levels of lead in their bones than men, and this contamination was passed on to youngsters while nursing.
Their analysis of the bones of those who didn't make it adulthood suggested that many who survived their childhood probably suffered from severe intellectual impairment, LiveScience reported.
'We assume that facial cosmetics were one of the main sources of lead exposure among the samurai class because they were luxuries at that time,' Dr Nakashima told LiveScience.
'The lower class people (farmers and fishermen) did not have the luxury of using cosmetics and the laws strictly prohibited [them] from using cosmetics because they were workers.'

10 December 2012

PHILADELPHIA CHILDREN'S HOSPITAL

From UK DAILY MAIL

Girl, 7, cured of leukaemia after scientists 'reprogramme' immune cells to destroy the cancer

  • New therapy creates 'guided missile' T-cells by attaching antibodies to them
  • Nine of 12 patients in the study, including two children, responded to treatment
  • Experts call for more trials and it could be some time before treatment is available here
By Niamh O'doherty
|

A seven-year-old girl has been 'cured' of leukaemia after a new therapy in which her T-cells the immune system's killer cells — were bio-engineered to become 'guided missiles' to seek out and destroy the leukaemia, a new study shows.
She had relapsed following conventional treatment for acute lymphoblastic leukaemia (ALL), which can sometimes avoid detection by the T-cells.
Ken Campbell, Clinical Information Officer at Leukaemia & Lymphoma Research, said the results of the study were encouraging for both children and adults diagnosed with leukaemia.
Results of a clinical trial revealed nine of the 12 patients with advanced leukaemia, including two kids, responded to the new treatment
Results of a clinical trial revealed nine of the 12 patients with advanced leukaemia, including two kids, responded to the new treatment
'Treatments which modify the body’s own immune system to fight leukaemia have shown much promise in recent years,' he said.
'What is significant about [the] therapy is that the severe side-effects associated with this form of treatment seem to be greatly reduced when combined with other drugs.
'This is a small study of just 12 patients. Larger clinical trials are needed to determine how effective this treatment could be and as a result it should be some time before it is available in the UK.'
 
Previous studies have developed modified T-cells as a treatment for ALL, which is a B-cell leukaemia — a type of lymphoid leukaemia which affects the B-cells of the immune system.
The new study looked at CTL019 therapy, which programmes the T-cells to recognise and attack specific invading disease cells in this case, cancerous B-cells.
This can help attack cancer cells which fly under the radar of immune surveillance and evade detection by T-cells, according to researchers from the Children's Hospital of Philadelphia and University of Pennsylvania.
Ken Campbell of Leukaemia & Lymphoma Research said larger clinical trials are needed to determine how effective this treatment could be, and as a result it should be some time before it is available in the UK
Ken Campbell of Leukaemia & Lymphoma Research said larger clinical trials are needed to determine how effective this treatment could be, and as a result it should be some time before it is available in the UK
Results of the clinical trial, which will be presented at the American Society of Hematology annual meeting in Atlanta, revealed nine of the 12 patients with advanced leukaemia including two kids responded to treatment.
One of the nine responding patients is the seven-year-old girl with acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) the most common childhood leukaemia and most common childhood cancer.
Although physicians can cure roughly 85 per cent of ALL cases, the remaining 15 per cent of such cases stubbornly resist treatment.
The researchers found the activity that destroyed leukaemia cells also stimulated a highly activated immune system, which made the child very ill.

CTL019 TREATMENT: TARGETING CANCER CELLS

CTL019 therapy involves using bio-engineered T-cells to recognise and attack specific invading disease cells — in this case, cancerous B-cells.
Shimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T-cells are engineered to specifically target B-cells, which become cancerous in certain leukaemias. 
CD19 is a protein found only on the surface of B-cells, so by creating an antibody that recognises CD19, and physically connecting that antibody to T-cells, the researchers have created a 'guided missile' that locks in on and kills B cells, attacking B-cell leukaemia.
To counteract the toxic side effects, they used two immunomodulating drugs that blunted the over-active immune response and rapidly relieved the child's treatment-related symptoms.
The immunomodulating drugs did not interfere with the CTL019 therapy's anti-leukaemia benefits, which have persisted six months after the infusion of cell therapy.
This persistence is essential, because the engineered T-cells remain in the patient's body to protect against a recurrence of the cancer.
These results were so effective that the approach is now being successfully incorporated into CTL019 treatments for adults as well.
Paediatric oncologist Dr Stephan Grupp of The Children's Hospital of Philadelphia said: 'These engineered T-cells have proven to be active in B-cell leukaemia in adults.
'We are excited to see that the CTL019 approach may be effective in untreatable cases of paediatric ALL as well.
'Our hope is that these results will lead to widely available treatments for high-risk B-cell leukaemia and lymphoma, and perhaps other cancers in the future.'
Dr Susan Rheingold said: 'This type of pioneering research addresses the importance of timing when considering experimental therapies for relapsed patients.
'To ensure newly relapsed patients with refractory leukaemia meet criteria for options like CTL019, we must begin exploring these innovative approaches earlier than ever before.
'Having the conversation with families earlier provides them more treatment options to offer the best possible outcome.'