Monday, November 30, 2015

After Concussion Symptoms Fade, Slowed Blood Flow in Brain May Persist

After Concussion Symptoms Fade, Slowed Blood Flow in Brain May Persist

Doctor-Patient Relationship May Suffer When Technology Takes Over: Study

Doctor-Patient Relationship May Suffer When Technology Takes Over: Study

​What is Spice? - The Newnan Times-Herald

​What is Spice? - The Newnan Times-Herald

McCarthy predicts no gov't shutdown over Planned Parenthood - Yahoo Finance

McCarthy predicts no gov't shutdown over Planned Parenthood - Yahoo Finance

Children with pets have less stress - Medical News Today

Children with pets have less stress - Medical News Today

Probiotics 'offer no health benefits' for preterm infants - Medical News Today

Probiotics 'offer no health benefits' for preterm infants - Medical News Today

Bullies May Face Higher Odds of Eating Disorders: Study

Bullies May Face Higher Odds of Eating Disorders: Study

Teens More Cautious About Sex When Parents Set Rules, Study Finds

Teens More Cautious About Sex When Parents Set Rules, Study Finds

Georgia largely fails to halt nurse 'impostors' | Albany Herald

Georgia largely fails to halt nurse 'impostors' | Albany Herald

Congress returns to looming deadlines on budget, highways - Yahoo Finance

Congress returns to looming deadlines on budget, highways - Yahoo Finance

Drugmakers Plan to Defend Prices by Proving Value of Medicines

Drugmakers Plan to Defend Prices by Proving Value of Medicines
By Kerry Young, CQ Roll Call : Nov. 25, 2015

Executives from the nation’s biggest drugmakers are telling their investors and stock analysts that they will defend the high prices of their products by showing the benefits that they can deliver in maintaining and restoring health.

Proving the medicines can deliver significant results will become “a more significant component of the pricing discussion,” said Dominic Caruso, the chief financial officer for Johnson & Johnson, on a webcast from the Credit Suisse conference earlier this month.

“We think that that’s a good thing,” Caruso said. “Raising the bar for innovation to be associated with meaningful outcomes, we think, will solve the pricing dilemma" for companies able to make strong cases for their products.

Caruso is among the executives from drugmakers with household names and jealously protected reputations that are trying to distance their companies from the backlash sparked largely by smaller firms. The Senate Committee on Aging has said it intends to hold a December hearing on drug prices following an uproar about Turing Pharmaceuticals, led by Martin Shkreli. The panel has asked Turing to explain why it licensed the Daraprim tablet used to fight life-threatening parasitic infections in people with compromised immune systems and then raised the price from $13.50 to $750 a tablet. Daraprim has been approved in the United States since 1953, according to federal records.

Marquee members of the Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America want the public to see a difference between their companies, which they say make significant investments in the hunt for new medicines, and firms like Turing. J & J, Merck & Co. and Eli Lilly & Co. each spent between $4.7 billion to $8.5 billion on medical research last year.

Merck Chief Executive Kenneth C. Frazier, who also serves as the chairman of PhRMA's board, said he tries to "very hard to distinguish between" what he calls "the innovation-based companies that do take a value approach to pricing" and "a few companies that I think are unrepresentative of the entire industry."

"While there's a lot of noise out there, my experience in Washington is that people do recognize that this industry is important, that these innovations are critical to society," Frazier said on an October call with analysts about quarterly financial results.

Merck's roots as a company date to the 1880s. Its legacy for charitable contributions includes developing and providing for free a drug to combat a parasitic infection that causes an affliction called river blindness. Kenilworth, New Jersey-based Merck now is working on fighting several kinds of cancer by spurring reactions in the immune system, as well as drugs for Alzheimer's disease and diabetes.

“People do recognize that this industry is important, that these innovations are critical to society, that we, for example, need a disease-modifying agent for Alzheimer's,” Frazier said. “People see what these immuno-oncology drugs are doing, and they know that that's just the beginning of what we can do as an industry.”

National Debate
Yet there’s growing anger among cancer patients and physicians against pharmaceutical giants like Merck because of the prices charged for their newer cancer drugs. Merck’s Keytruda cancer drug, which works by acting on the immune system, costs $12,500 a month. That puts it beyond the reach of some patients unless they can get financial assistance. The protests of oncologists are muted in contrast to the widespread public vitriol sparked by Shkreli, but they are more likely to persist and perhaps have a greater influence on the debate ahead on drug prices.

Former Obama administration adviser Ezekiel J. Emanuel, a trained oncologist, sees the December hearing planned by the Senate Committee on Aging plans as only one of the earliest steps Congress will take in looking at the costs of medicines. It’s unlikely that Congress will take any substantive action on drug pricing in this session or even the two-year 115th session that starts in 2017, but the level of public anger makes it likely that the federal government may take action in time, said Emanuel, who is now a professor at the University of Pennsylvania and a senior fellow at the liberal Center for American Progress. Drugmakers in the meanwhile would do well to look for strategies to cool this rage and put some voluntary limits on the costs of their products, he told CQ HealthBeat.

"We're just at the start of a national debate,” Emanuel said in the interview. "If they don't come to the table with something that does keep costs under control, you are going to see a lot more pressure."

Pharmaceutical companies and their advocates have long argued that these firms charge high prices in the United States to cover the risks of drug research. Lilly last month, for example announced that it would discontinue development of the experimental evacetrapib medicine for clogged arteries. It's publicly claiming a loss associated with this drug of as much as $90 million, which will be accounted for in the company's financial results for the last three months of 2015, or the fourth quarter.

For the third quarter, which ended in September, Lilly reported a profit of $800 million and revenue of $4.96 billion. That equals roughly 16 cents of profit for each $1 taken in. The firm spent $1.14 billion on research, and more than $2.8 billion on production, marketing, selling and administrative expenses.

Like his peers at J&J and Merck, Lilly Chief Executive John C. Lechleiter was asked by stock analysts on an October conference call about third-quarter results to weigh in on Washington’s concerns about drug pricing and profits. Lechleiter, a research scientist who climbed the ranks at Lilly, said complaints about drug prices often surface around presidential campaigns, as the industry remains a popular target with politicians.

Like his peers at J&J and Merck, Lechleiter said that he will emphasize the work Lilly is doing in fighting diseases such as diabetes in defending its prices. Pharmaceutical companies have a "great story to tell," said Lechleiter, whose firm brought the first insulin injections to the market in the 1920s and the Prozac antidepressant in the 1980s.

“I’ve never been as optimistic as I am about the chances we have as an industry to really make a difference for patients,” said Leichleiter, who joined Lilly in 1979. “We have got to keep telling the story, keep reminding people.”



Wednesday, November 25, 2015

Breast-Feeding May Cut Risk of Type 2 Diabetes for Some Women

Breast-Feeding May Cut Risk of Type 2 Diabetes for Some Women

Could Obesity Be Wired Into Some Children's Brains?

Could Obesity Be Wired Into Some Children's Brains?

Ban Crib Bumpers Because of Rising Deaths, Researchers Say

Ban Crib Bumpers Because of Rising Deaths, Researchers Say

First Year of Life Poses Highest Risk for Child Abuse: Study

First Year of Life Poses Highest Risk for Child Abuse: Study

Private Rooms May Save Money By Cutting Hospital Infection Rates

Private Rooms May Save Money By Cutting Hospital Infection Rates

Shock as Mayo Clinic cuts loose Waycross hospital | Georgia Health News

Shock as Mayo Clinic cuts loose Waycross hospital | Georgia Health News

Georgia stresses treatment for pregnant drug users | Georgia Health News

Georgia stresses treatment for pregnant drug users | Georgia Health News

Obamacare Medicaid expansion could cover 290,000 in Alabama | AL.com

Obamacare Medicaid expansion could cover 290,000 in Alabama | AL.com

Monday, November 23, 2015

E-Cigarette Ads Boost Use Among Young Adults, Study Finds

E-Cigarette Ads Boost Use Among Young Adults, Study Finds

ADHD Medications Linked to Sleep Problems in Kids

ADHD Medications Linked to Sleep Problems in Kids

States still fail to deliver physician quality metrics - FiercePracticeManagement

States still fail to deliver physician quality metrics - FiercePracticeManagement

Looming doctor shortage threatens care | The Augusta Chronicle

Looming doctor shortage threatens care | The Augusta Chronicle

UPDATE 5-Aetna, Anthem reassure investors on Obamacare business | Reuters

UPDATE 5-Aetna, Anthem reassure investors on Obamacare business | Reuters

HHS proposes more consumer-friendly rules for ACA health plans - The Washington Post

HHS proposes more consumer-friendly rules for ACA health plans - The Washington Post

Sunday, November 22, 2015

Teasing Girls About Weight May Cause Lasting Harm

Teasing Girls About Weight May Cause Lasting Harm

Most First-Time Moms Plan to Follow Vaccine Schedule

Most First-Time Moms Plan to Follow Vaccine Schedule

Kids Who Take ADHD Meds More Likely to Be Bullied, Study Finds

Kids Who Take ADHD Meds More Likely to Be Bullied, Study Finds

New 'Collar' Aims to Help Shield Brain From Concussion

New 'Collar' Aims to Help Shield Brain From Concussion

GBI video warns against infant co-sleeping | Albany Herald

GBI video warns against infant co-sleeping | Albany Herald

Georgians plagued by surprise medical bills | www.wsbtv.com

Georgians plagued by surprise medical bills | www.wsbtv.com

Letter to the Editor: The importance of rural health | Georgia Health News

Letter to the Editor: The importance of rural health | Georgia Health News

Blue Cross keeps big edge in state benefit plan | Georgia Health News

Blue Cross keeps big edge in state benefit plan | Georgia Health News

Specialty drugs now cost more than the median household income - The Washington Post

Specialty drugs now cost more than the median household income - The Washington Post

Feds vow flexibility on ramping up Medicaid | Georgia Health News

Feds vow flexibility on ramping up Medicaid | Georgia Health News

UnitedHealth Warns Of Marketplace Exit – Start Of A Trend Or Push For White House Action? | Kaiser Health News

UnitedHealth Warns Of Marketplace Exit – Start Of A Trend Or Push For White House Action? | Kaiser Health News

Thursday, November 19, 2015

Drug Overdose Rates Soaring Among U.S. Youth

Drug Overdose Rates Soaring Among U.S. Youth

Your Parenting Style May Affect Your Child's Obesity Risk : LIFE : Tech Times

Your Parenting Style May Affect Your Child's Obesity Risk : LIFE : Tech Times

UnitedHealth May Quit Obamacare in Blow to Health Law - Bloomberg Business

UnitedHealth May Quit Obamacare in Blow to Health Law - Bloomberg Business

Drug price regulation needed, healthcare leaders say - Modern Healthcare Modern Healthcare business news, research, data and events

Drug price regulation needed, healthcare leaders say - Modern Healthcare Modern Healthcare business news, research, data and events

Pregnancy: Excess Weight Before Increases Infant Mortality Risk : Health & Medicine : Science World Report

Pregnancy: Excess Weight Before Increases Infant Mortality Risk : Health & Medicine : Science World Report

Healthcare shocker: Medicaid is very good for kids - LA Times

Healthcare shocker: Medicaid is very good for kids - LA Times

First insights into changes to developing brain caused by gene associated with autism - Medical News Today

First insights into changes to developing brain caused by gene associated with autism - Medical News Today

Study: Preschoolers need more outdoor time at child care centers - Medical News Today

Study: Preschoolers need more outdoor time at child care centers - Medical News Today

Kids with Medicaid, CHIP get more preventive care than those with private insurance - Medical News Today

Kids with Medicaid, CHIP get more preventive care than those with private insurance - Medical News Today

Charges Filed Against Makers of Nutritional Supplements

Charges Filed Against Makers of Nutritional Supplements

More Than 8 Percent of Kids With Cancer May Be Genetically Prone to the Disease

More Than 8 Percent of Kids With Cancer May Be Genetically Prone to the Disease

Scientists Spot Gene That Could Make Bacteria Resistant to All Antibiotics

Scientists Spot Gene That Could Make Bacteria Resistant to All Antibiotics

Phoebe Sumter Medical Center holds Rural Healthcare Summit | Albany Herald

Phoebe Sumter Medical Center holds Rural Healthcare Summit | Albany Herald

Tuesday, November 17, 2015

Digital glasses help children with lazy eye - Medical News Today

Digital glasses help children with lazy eye - Medical News Today

Rectal Thermometer Remains Gold Standard for Spotting Fever

Rectal Thermometer Remains Gold Standard for Spotting Fever

Certain Antibiotic Might Combat Children's Wheezing Episodes

Certain Antibiotic Might Combat Children's Wheezing Episodes

More Gluten Before Age 2 Linked to Celiac Disease in At-Risk Kids

More Gluten Before Age 2 Linked to Celiac Disease in At-Risk Kids

If you smoke, Mayor Kasim Reed wants to help you quit - Atlanta Business Chronicle

If you smoke, Mayor Kasim Reed wants to help you quit - Atlanta Business Chronicle

Prenatal programs for the poor need a bigger role in Georgia | Georgia Health News

Prenatal programs for the poor need a bigger role in Georgia | Georgia Health News

In Caring For Sickest Infants, Doctors Tap Parents For Tough Calls | Kaiser Health News

In Caring For Sickest Infants, Doctors Tap Parents For Tough Calls | Kaiser Health News

Friday, November 13, 2015

Sharp Increase in U.S. Babies Born With Syphilis: CDC

Sharp Increase in U.S. Babies Born With Syphilis: CDC

California Vaccine Refusers Cluster in Rich, White Areas

California Vaccine Refusers Cluster in Rich, White Areas

Adult Obesity Still Growing in U.S., Youth Rates Hold Steady: CDC

Adult Obesity Still Growing in U.S., Youth Rates Hold Steady: CDC

CDC: Child Autism Rate Now 1 in 45 After Survey Method Changes

CDC: Child Autism Rate Now 1 in 45 After Survey Method Changes

Retail clinics to surpass 2,800 in next two years - FierceHealthcare

Retail clinics to surpass 2,800 in next two years - FierceHealthcare

Another rescue of a Georgia hospital? | Georgia Health News

Another rescue of a Georgia hospital? | Georgia Health News

Consumer Coalition Forms to Fight U.S. Health Insurance Mergers - The New York Times

Consumer Coalition Forms to Fight U.S. Health Insurance Mergers - The New York Times

Alabama governor says he is 'looking' at Medicaid expansion | The Kansas City Star

Alabama governor says he is 'looking' at Medicaid expansion | The Kansas City Star

Thursday, November 12, 2015

Pediatric Medical Home Champion to Receive Distinguished National Award

Pediatric Medical Home Champion to Receive Distinguished National Award

Losing a Parent in Childhood May Raise Suicide Risk Decades Later

Losing a Parent in Childhood May Raise Suicide Risk Decades Later

Newborn Probiotic Use Tied to Lower Risk of Type 1 Diabetes

Newborn Probiotic Use Tied to Lower Risk of Type 1 Diabetes

Recall issued on Atlanta-made Bueno by Contigo Kids Straw Tumblers - Atlanta Business Chronicle

Recall issued on Atlanta-made Bueno by Contigo Kids Straw Tumblers - Atlanta Business Chronicle

5,500 Montanans Sign Up For Expanded Medicaid Coverage In First Week | MTPR

5,500 Montanans Sign Up For Expanded Medicaid Coverage In First Week | MTPR

In first week, 5,500 Montanans signed up for expanded Medicaid c - KRTV.com | Great Falls, Montana

In first week, 5,500 Montanans signed up for expanded Medicaid c - KRTV.com | Great Falls, Montana

Tuesday, November 10, 2015

Could self-weighing be harmful for teens and young adults? - Medical News Today

Could self-weighing be harmful for teens and young adults? - Medical News Today

Challenges for Extreme Preemies Can Last into Teens

Challenges for Extreme Preemies Can Last into Teens

Health assessment stirs questions . . . even before it’s released (video) | Georgia Health News

Health assessment stirs questions . . . even before it’s released (video) | Georgia Health News

Health insurer Cigna reports better-than-expected profit | Reuters

Health insurer Cigna reports better-than-expected profit | Reuters

Regulators Urge Broader Health Networks - The New York Times

Regulators Urge Broader Health Networks - The New York Times

Health Systems Dipping Into The Business Of Selling Insurance | Kaiser Health News

Health Systems Dipping Into The Business Of Selling Insurance | Kaiser Health News

Monday, November 9, 2015

Bariatric Surgery Benefits for Teens Appear Durable | Medpage Today

Bariatric Surgery Benefits for Teens Appear Durable | Medpage Today

Complications in the Nursery Have Long Lasting Effects for Preterm Babies

Complications in the Nursery Have Long Lasting Effects for Preterm Babies

Parent Aimed TV Ads for Children's Beverages Pour On Sugar Coated Health Messages

Parent Aimed TV Ads for Children's Beverages Pour On Sugar Coated Health Messages

Just One Energy Drink Sends Young Adults' Stress Hormone Levels Soaring

Just One Energy Drink Sends Young Adults' Stress Hormone Levels Soaring

Another rural hospital going out of business | Georgia Health News

Another rural hospital going out of business | Georgia Health News

​Trammell: Medicaid expansion not benefiting Georgians - The Newnan Times-Herald

​Trammell: Medicaid expansion not benefiting Georgians - The Newnan Times-Herald

Congress continues probe into failing Obamacare co-ops | McClatchy DC

Congress continues probe into failing Obamacare co-ops | McClatchy DC

Thursday, November 5, 2015

Children of Stressed Parents May Be Prone to Obesity

Children of Stressed Parents May Be Prone to Obesity

Doctors Who Order More Tests Sued Less Often

Doctors Who Order More Tests Sued Less Often

Scarlet Fever Resurfacing in Some Parts of the World

Scarlet Fever Resurfacing in Some Parts of the World

Breast-Feeding May Not Help Prevent Allergies in Kids, Study Claims

Breast-Feeding May Not Help Prevent Allergies in Kids, Study Claims

Junk Food Not to Blame for America's Obesity Epidemic: Study

Junk Food Not to Blame for America's Obesity Epidemic: Study

Many ERs don't give sexually assaulted teens recommended treatment - FierceHealthcare

Many ERs don't give sexually assaulted teens recommended treatment - FierceHealthcare

State’s grade on premature births drops | Georgia Health News

State’s grade on premature births drops | Georgia Health News

Tuesday, November 3, 2015

New Advisory Says Some Athletes With Heart Conditions OK to Play

New Advisory Says Some Athletes With Heart Conditions OK to Play

Weight Gain a Challenge for Children With Autism: Study

Weight Gain a Challenge for Children With Autism: Study

Georgia Supreme Court sends Dougherty malpractice case to jury | Albany Herald

Georgia Supreme Court sends Dougherty malpractice case to jury | Albany Herald

Struggling rural county in vanguard of telemedicine revolution | Georgia Health News

Struggling rural county in vanguard of telemedicine revolution | Georgia Health News

Federal health officials approve Montana Medicaid waiver | Montana

Federal health officials approve Montana Medicaid waiver | Montana

Monday, November 2, 2015

Weight, Exercise May Affect Children's Thinking Skills

Weight, Exercise May Affect Children's Thinking Skills

Dogs in the Home May Lower Kids' Odds for Asthma

Dogs in the Home May Lower Kids' Odds for Asthma

Most Preschoolers Use Tablets, Smartphones Daily

Most Preschoolers Use Tablets, Smartphones Daily

Teens Do Listen to Parents' Advice About Sex: Study

Teens Do Listen to Parents' Advice About Sex: Study

New chief named at Blue Cross of Georgia | Georgia Health News

New chief named at Blue Cross of Georgia | Georgia Health News

Young Children Have Almost Universal Exposure to Mobile Media Devices

Young Children Have Almost Universal Exposure to Mobile Media Devices

Many Parents Unaware of Emergency Plans at Kids' Pre-schools

Many Parents Unaware of Emergency Plans at Kids' Pre-schools

One in Five Pediatricians Drops Families Who Refuse Vaccines: Survey

One in Five Pediatricians Drops Families Who Refuse Vaccines: Survey