Popular Articles
Benefits Of Grapefruit

ATS Medical Announces Participation In The International Society For Minimally Invasive Cardiothoracic Surgery Meeting
ATS Medical, Inc. (Nasdaq: ATSI), manufacturer and marketer of state-of-the-art cardiac surgery products and services, announced participation in the upcoming International Society for Minimally Invasive Cardiothoracic Surgery (ISMICS) Meeting in San Francisco on June 3-6, 2009. The ISMICS meeting is a significant gathering of cardiovascular surgeons from around the world whose interests include the latest developments in less invasive forms of heart surgery. The annual ISMICS meeting provides an excellent venue for the Company to exhibit its growing portfolio of clinically relevant products designed to meet the needs of cardiac surgeons.
generic viagra online
Antidepressants Aid Electroconvulsive Therapy In Treating Severe Depression
Combining antidepressant drugs with electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) does a better job of reducing symptoms of severe depression and causes less memory loss than using ECT alone, according to a new study by researchers at Wake Forest University School of Medicine and colleagues.
News of the day
Let's Get Moving For Heart Children's Health!
The Children"s Heart Federation (CHF) launches Let"s Get Moving for Heart Children"s Health: a call to action to include children with congenital heart disease in PE at school and to increase their access to sport in the community, at its House of Common"s reception today (14 May) in the presence of Gerry Sutcliffe MP, Minister for Sport and one hundred delegates, including representatives of nine leading sports development organisations. The event, which takes place during Children"s Heart Week (9-17 May), is designed to highlight the right of children and young people with congenital heart disease (CoHD) to sporting opportunities, in order to tackle the exclusion of pupils with CoHD from PE.
Endocrinology

Lobbyists Elbow For Attention As Health Reform Votes Loom

The conservative message on health care is that President Obama"s revamp of the health care system in America will produce a costly government-run program that limits patient choice, The Associated Press reports. "It"s selling that view to the public that"s tough. As the right drums up opposition to the plan, it is competing against an aggressive White House, a still-brawny Obama political operation and well-funded progressive groups that are using the Internet, television and other techniques to mobilize grass-roots support." "Even as Congress holds initial votes on competing health care bills and special interests spend millions lobbying, liberals and conservatives are waging a less visible struggle for public support. The goal is motivating enough voters to express their views to sway wavering legislators. In many ways it"s David and Goliath, with Goliath played by the still-popular Obama and his allies. They include Organizing for America, the Obama campaign organization now melded into the national Democratic Party, which has an e-mail list of reputedly up to 13 million names. ò€¦ The Republican National Committee is the closest thing conservatives have to the giant Organizing for America. But the GOP has yet to match the Democrats" reach or clout and has been distracted by earlier, unrelated dustups between party Chairman Michael Steele and conservatives including talk show host Rush Limbaugh" (Fram, 7/16). But conservative groups are busy in their own camps trying to influence decisions on reform, The (Eureka, Calif.) Times Standard reports: " Humboldt Tea Party Patriots, the same group that staged a tax day protest, is hoping to get a group of opponents to government run health care to gather in front of North Coast (Calif.) Congressman Mike Thompson"s office Friday to air their feelings of displeasure with the proposed legislation, which would cover tens of millions of uninsured Americans" (Greenson, 7/16). In the meantime, a new poll finds Americans torn over health care, McClatchy/The Detroit Free Press reports. "On one key question, the poll found Americans split over the benefits of being able to buy insurance from a new government program. While 40% said they thought it would lower the quality of their care, 21% said it would improve the quality and 36% said it wouldn"t make any difference. The rest had no opinion. The survey also found 38% saying the availability of government insurance would bring down their family"s costs, 27% said it would raise their costs and 31% said it wouldn"t make any difference. The poll found Americans almost evenly divided when they were asked to choose the primary goal for health care legislation, with 46% saying it should expand coverage and 44% saying it should control costs" (Thomma, 7/16). The poll also found 91 percent of Americans support tax breaks for small business to help them provide insurance, while a majority oppose a national sales tax, a tax on soft drinks and a tax on employer-provided health insurance, The Dallas Morning News reports (7/16). 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.


Add your comment:
Name:
Site address: http://
Your message:
Enter today\\\\'s date, 2 digits
(spam protection):