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Rep. Pitts To Offer Amendment Excluding Abortion Coverage From House Health Care Bill
Rep. Joe Pitts (R-Pa.) said he plans to introduce an amendment to the House health care overhaul bill (HR 3200) that would prohibit insurers from being required to cover abortion, unless the woman"s life is at risk or the pregnancy is a result of rape or incest, CQ Today reports. Pitts said he will offer the amendment Thursday at the first House Energy and Commerce Committee mark-up session.The House bill would authorize the Obama administration to craft minimum benefit standards for health insurance plans, CQ Today reports. President Obama has said that he considers reproductive health care an essential service. Democrats say Republicans are trying to expand the Hyde amendment"s exclusion on using federal Medicaid funding to cover abortion to all health care services. Rep. Diana DeGette (D-Colo.), vice chair of the Energy and Commerce Committee, said, "I think that if anti-choice Republicans or others see this as an opportunity to expand prohibitions on a legally allowed and medically appropriate practice, then they are wrong." She added, "We are not going to use the health care bill to expand prohibitions on a legal medical practice, period." Pitts, Rep. Christopher Smith (R-N.J.) and other supporters of the amendment say it is necessary to block the administration from requiring abortion coverage. The committee has blocked three of Smith"s abortion-related amendments so far this year (Wayne, CQ Today, 7/15).

FDA Recommends Gardasil Recipients Sit, Lie Down After Receiving Vaccination
In a posting aimed at health care professionals, FDA on its Web site on Wednesday said that recipients of Merck"s human papillomavirus vaccine, Gardasil, should be closely observed afterward for 15 minutes while they remain seated or lying down to avoid the possibility of fainting, the Wall Street Journal reports. FDA said that since October 2007, Gardasil"s labeling for both health care providers and patients has included a discussion about fainting. The agency said the strengthened recommendation comes in response to reports of "traumatic injuries" among some recipients who experienced fainting (Corbett Dooren, Wall Street Journal, 6/10). Gardasil protects against the strains of HPV that cause most cases of cervical cancer and genital warts. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommends that girls ages 11 and 12 receive the three-dose vaccine before they are sexually active. Girls and women ages 13 to 26 who have not been vaccinated or completed the vaccine series also should receive the vaccine (CDC fact sheet, June 2008). On Wednesday, FDA also approved changes to Gardasil materials that place warnings about fainting in a more prominent place on drug labels and handouts. The agency said that the new recommendations are intended to "prevent falls and injuries" (Wall Street Journal, 6/10).
News of the day
Weight Determines The Future Cognitive Development Of Children Born Very Premature
Researchers of the Department of Neuroscience and Health Sciences of the University of Almería and Hospital Torrecárdenas are carrying out an assessment of the physical neuropsychological characteristics of children born before 32 weeks" gestation or whose weight is lower than 1500 grams -very premature-. The main aim of this project, coordinated by M Dolores Roldán Tapia, from the UAL, is to accurately define the origin of brain damage, so as to stimulate the affected area early thus causing the adequate cognitive and motric development of the individual.
Cardiovascular

Health Benefits Tax Gains Support In Congress, Opponents In Business

"You can think of Congress"s efforts to pay for health reform as being a little bit like a battle to slay a many-headed Hydra," writes the New York Times" economic columnist, David Leonhardt. Congress has floated idea after idea for paying for comprehensive health reform, but their proposals have failed to make ends meet because they "do not raise revenue as quickly as health costs rise." Most new taxes - such as a surtax on the rich proposed in the House - increase only as quickly as the economy, while health costs have inflated much more quickly over the last decade. One way around the problem is to tax something that grows as quickly as health costs: health spending. "If Congress taxes health care, the revenue has a chance of rising with health spending. A health tax will also create an incentive for workers and businesses to slow the growth of health spending - thus reducing the amount of taxes needed to pay the nation"s health bill." The Senate Finance Committee, whose anxiously awaited proposal could be released this week, "has been considering precisely such a tax, on the health benefits that Americans receive from their employers." One problem with the plan is that new taxes on workers - or employers - are not politically popular (Leonhardt, 7/28). One solution is a plan to shift that tax to insurers that offer "individual plans valued at more than a certain limit, likely $25,000 or higher. The insurers would have to pay an excise tax on such policies, and the cost would likely be passed on to employers," the Wall Street Journal reports. The plan could also curb growing health costs by charging insurers, employers and perhaps workers more for "plans that encourage unnecessary tests and procedures." Existing proposals in the House hope to pay for health care by increasing taxes for top earners, but given that the tax on insurers offering gold-plated plans would grow comparably with health costs and give everyone involved a reason to restrain spending, some congressman are now growing interested. Majority Whip Jim Clyburn, D-S.C., called the tax on benefits "a better way" to pay for reform than boosting income taxes. Majority Leader Steny Hoyer said it"s a "reasonable alternative" (Hitt and Bendavid, 7/29). Not everyone is enamored, however. In addition to insurers, who the tax targets, many big businesses could also be forced to pay direct taxes under the latest benefits-tax plan, which was first proposed by Sen. John Kerry, D-Mass, Kaiser Health News reports. More than half of all workers who receive insurance through their employers are actually covered directly by their companies, business that are said to be "self-insured." Under Kerry"s proposal, those companies would be taxed just like insurers if the benefits they offer employees add up to more than the $25,000-a-year threshold (Gold, 7/29). In addition, "some insurance experts say the reason certain plans are so expensive isn"t that they"re providing lavish benefits like full-body diagnostic scans and tummy tucks. Instead, the super-high premiums are likely being charged to older, sicker people, either as individuals buying their own coverage, or working for a small employer," the Associated Press reports (Alonso-Zaldivar, 7/28). 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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