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Tuesday, November 14, 2006
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Mississippi Administrators, Licensees Owe No Duty To Nursing Facility Residents. JACKSON, Miss. - The Mississippi Supreme Court on Oct. 26 found that a nursing home administrator and facility licensee do not owe a duty of care or a fiduciary duty to nursing home residents, saying such a requirement would be duplicative of the duties already owed by the nursing home business owner or proprietor (Guy J. Howard, et al. v. The Estate of Earline B. Harper, by and through Talmadge L. Harper, administrator of the Estate of Earline B. Harper, et al., No. 2005-IA-00115-SCT, and Guy J. Howard, et al. v. The Estate of Melvin Thead, by and through Sandra Patton, adminstratrix of the Estate of Melvin Thead, et al., No. 2005-IA-00117-SCT, Miss. Sup.; 2006 Miss. LEXIS 626).
Full story on lexis.com [LexisNexis® Mealey's™ Nursing Home Liability Legal News]
6:12:00 AM
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[Trends] The 'Graying' Of Group Health Insurance.
We examine differential declines in private insurance by income and age. We show that older, higher-income people in working families are more likely to retain private coverage as premiums rise, and we project these effects on future coverage rates. The analysis suggests that trends are leading to the "graying" of the employment-based health insurance system, where older, higher-income people get private health insurance, and others increasingly have public coverage or go without. These changes raise questions about the private health care system’s ability to pool health risks. Population aging could interact with rising premiums and place additional pressure on an already strained employment-based health insurance system.
[Health Affairs recent issues]
6:09:40 AM
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Monday, November 13, 2006
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Saturday, November 11, 2006
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Friday, November 10, 2006
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November 10, 2006 – The power wheelchair industry,
and many advocate groups that joined them, seem to be headed for a
significant victory over the rule by the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid
Services that was to make a substantial cut in the payments for these
devices on November 15.
2:09:07 PM
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Thursday, November 09, 2006
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Wednesday, November 08, 2006
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Tuesday, November 07, 2006
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Monday, November 06, 2006
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10 "Quick Fixes" For Elder Home Safety. Falls are the leading cause of injury and accidental death in adults over the age of 65, according to the American Occupational Therapy Association. Fengyi Kuo, assistant professor of occupational therapy at the University of Indianapolis, says the remedy to this problem at home is safety awareness and implementation of prevention practices. [click link for full article] [Health News from Medical News Today]
6:31:02 AM
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Suzuki's Fuel Cell Wheelchair
A fuel-cell-powered wheelchair prototype named the MIO generates it own electricity, reducing odds of being stranded
6:14:58 AM
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Sunday, November 05, 2006
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Improving Quality Of End-Of-Life Care. Researchers have evaluated improvements in the end-of-life care in intensive care units (ICU) and have shared their findings in a special supplement to Critical Care Medicine, the journal of the Society of Critical Care Medicine. The supplement is dedicated entirely to end-of-life care in the critical care setting. [click link for full article] [Health News from Medical News Today]
7:16:59 AM
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More Sensitive Tool For Detecting Dementia. A screening tool for dementia developed by Saint Louis University geriatricians appears to work better in identifying mild cognitive problems in the elderly than the commonly used Mini Mental Status Examination, according to a new study.Physicians routinely administer the Mini Mental Status Examination (MMSE) to patients who they believe may have Alzheimer's disease. [click link for full article] [Seniors / Aging News From Medical News Today]
7:16:31 AM
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Friday, November 03, 2006
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Wednesday, November 01, 2006
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Cognitive Decline Is Often Undetected Study Shows. Many patients over the age of 65 who are hospitalized with an acute illness experience a subtle change in their cognitive ability that often goes undiagnosed, untreated and underreported. As a result, a patient's ability to make decisions about his or her medical treatment may be negatively impacted.These findings by Sharon Inouye, M.D., M.P.H. [click link for full article] [Seniors / Aging News From Medical News Today]
10:05:31 AM
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AARP Attorneys Represent Nursing Home Residents Who Seek Community Based Care
Attorneys with
AARP Foundation Litigation are once again representing residents of the
Laguna Honda nursing facility, the largest residential care facility in
the United States, as they seek to enforce their civil rights.
9:53:56 AM
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Tuesday, October 31, 2006
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Mistakes In Nursing Homes Often Not Brought To Light, USA. The issue of nursing home quality is getting more attention as baby boomers age. It is estimated by the U.S. Census Bureau that 35 percent of the total population will be older than 65 by 2020. A recent study by a University of Missouri-Columbia nursing researcher found that a shift in attitude is needed to improve the quality of care in nursing homes.According to the study, preventable errors in the healthcare system are the eighth most common cause of death. [click link for full article] [Seniors / Aging News From Medical News Today]
10:53:57 AM
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How To Prevent Bedsores From Becoming Deadly. It's a good thing we toss and turn in bed. That movement continually redistributes the pressure between our bodies and the mattress. If illness or injury prevents you from moving around, pressure builds up on specific areas of the body. This can cause skin and other tissues to die, creating a bedsore. A few simple steps, however, can help prevent these painful, dangerous, and costly sores, reports the November 2006 issue of the Harvard Health Letter. [click link for full article] [Caregivers / Homecare News From Medical News Today]
10:53:43 AM
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Saturday, October 28, 2006
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Tuesday, October 10, 2006
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Basic thoughts on health insurance from economists. David Cutler and Richard Zeckhauser review “The anatomy of health insurance” in chapter 11 of the Handbook of Health Economics. The chapter provides an overview of the economics field’s insight regarding health insurance. The authors summarize the literature’s findings into 5 main lessons listed below:
- Risk spreading versus incentives: Health insurance involves a fundamental tradeoff between risk spreading and appropriate incentives. Increasing the generosity of insurance spreads risk more broadly but also leads to increased losses because individuals chose more care (moral hazard) and providers supply more care (principal-agent problems).
- Integration of Insurance and provision: Medical care is unlike other insurance markets in that insurers are often involved in the provision of the good in addition to insuring its cost. The integration of insurance and provision, intended to align incentives has increased over time. Managed care, where the functions are united, is an extreme version. Under it, doctors have dual loyalties, to the insurer as well as the patient.
- Competition and consumer identity: When consumer identity affects costs, competition is a mixed blessing. Allowing individuals to choose among competing health insurance plans can allocate people to appropriate plans and provide incentives for efficient provision. But it can also bing with it adverse selection–the tendency of the sick to prefer the most generous plans. Adverse selection induces people to enroll in less generous plans so they can be in a healthier pool, and gives plans incentives to distort their offerings to be less generous with care for the sick.
- Information and long-term insurance: More information about individual risk levels allows for more efficient pricing of risk, but portends a welfare loss from incomplete insurance contracts.
- Health insurance and health: The primary purpose of health insurance and delivery is to improve health. Unfortunately, conclusive results are not in on which insurance and provision arrangements do this most effectively.
[Healthcare Economist]
9:10:48 AM
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© Copyright
2006
Norman G. DeLisle, Jr..
Last update:
12/18/2006; 8:35:43 AM.
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