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Growing Number Of Top Women Donors Support American Red Cross
More than 350 leading women donors from across the country will gather at the American Red Cross national headquarters in Washington, D.C., on June 8 for a two-day summit on philanthropy and service.

White House Budget Chief Says Issue Of Abortion Coverage In Health Reform Still Under Debate
In an appearance on "Fox News Sunday," White House Office of Management and Budget Director Peter Orszag said that he is "not prepared to say explicitly" whether health care reform legislation would prohibit the use of federal tax revenue to fund abortion coverage, the New York Times reports. Orszag"s statement came in reply to a question asking whether he was prepared to say that "no taxpayer money will go to pay for abortions." Orszag said, "It"s obviously a controversial issue, and it"s one of the questions that is playing out in the debate" (Pear/Liptak, New York Times, 7/20).Sen. Judd Gregg (R-N.H.), who also appeared on "Fox News Sunday," said, "No matter what your views are on abortion, you shouldn"t ask people to use their tax dollars if they think that abortion is taking a life." Gregg added, "I would hate to see the health care debate go down over that issue. We do really need health care reform, and it has to be substantive. ... So hopefully we won"t get ourselves wrapped around the wheel of abortion in this debate" (FoxNews.com, 7/19). According to the Times, there is an ongoing behind-the-scenes debate over handling abortion coverage in health overhaul legislation. The debate affects both the public insurance plan the legislation would create and private insurers, who would receive tens of billions of dollars in federal subsidies to expand coverage for low- and moderate-income U.S. residents. A provision in the House health reform bill (HR 3200) calls for a federal advisory committee to advise the HHS secretary on an "essential benefits package" that most insurers would be required to provide. Abortion-rights opponents want abortion coverage excluded from the package, while abortion-rights advocates say the decision should be left to medical professionals. House committees working on health reform legislation have rejected Republican amendments that would have restricted abortion coverage. The Hyde Amendment, first enacted in 1976, prohibits the use of federal Medicaid money for abortion services. However, abortion-rights opponents argue that federally subsidized coverage of the uninsured would not be subject to the existing restrictions. The National Right to Life Committee issued an analysis of the House bill, stating, "There is no doubt that coverage of abortion will be mandated, unless Congress explicitly excludes abortion from the scope of federal authority to define "essential benefits."" According to the group, even if the HHS secretary did not require abortion coverage, "federal courts would interpret the broadly worded mandatory categories of coverage to include abortion" (New York Times, 7/20).
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With A Doctor's Help Obese Women With PCOS Can Lose Weight
Simple weight-loss advice from a physician and regular follow-up helped obese women with polycystic ovary syndrome lose a substantial amount of weight, a new study found. The results were presented at The Endocrine Society"s 91st Annual Meeting in Washington, D.C.
Cardiovascular

State Regulators Embrace Health Reforms, But Insist Oversight Remains With Them

While state insurance regulators are working hard to keep most insurance oversight squarely in their hands, they are actively promoting new federal mandates and rules for health insurance-with a major caveat, according to a story in BestWeek U.S./Canada. The National Association of Insurance Commissioners is willing, even eager, for federal health care reform to provide a uniform landscape for the nation. Health insurance is too complex, and the problems too large in scope, for the states to act alone, said Pennsylvania Insurance Commissioner Joel Ario, vice chairman of the NAIC"s Health Insurance and Managed Care Committee. But insurance commissioners are insistent that states must retain full flexibility to implement and enforce health insurance regulations. The NAIC condemned the inclusion of a "Health Choices Commissioner" in H.R. 3200, which recently cleared two House committees (BestWire, July 17, 2009). "I"m in favor of the federal government writing rules on how exchanges operate, but states should have flexibility to implement it," Ario said. BestWeek Europe reports that if it is to maintain a leading role in the global market by 2020, the U.K. insurance industry must focus more closely on its customers, improve its risk management skills, forge a partnership with government and become more attractive to capital, according to the Insurance Industry Working Group. The goal, the U.K. Treasury said in a report published by the group, is to see the country emerge by that year as "the leading global insurance center." Also in BestWeek U.S./Canada, these days, state legislators who want to retain their status as masters of the insurance domain are finding it difficult to get a seat at the table. Before the Obama administration unveiled the most sweeping financial regulatory reform proposals since the Great Depression, it invited major players in insurance to a meeting at the Old Executive Office Building. Property/casualty insurers were there, as were life insurers. The National Association of Insurance Commissioners was represented. The National Conference of Insurance Legislators was not. Bestweek


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