Chiropractic OnLine Today's
In The News feature: Part Fourteen.

March 10, 1997 - April 11, 1997

Each week, Chiropractic OnLine Today has searched the top news items dealing with the health industry. Stay on top of the weeks top items, right here!


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    MALPRACTICE INSURERS EYE GROWING ALTERNATIVE MEDICINE MARKET - As chiropractors, acupuncturists and other nontraditional health-service providers gain greater acceptance from the public and from health insurers, they also are drawing increased attention from medical malpractice insurers. [Business Wire, 311 words]

    The maker of Chesterfield cigarettes and other brands has agreed to settle 22 state lawsuits by putting warning labels on cigarette packs that say smoking is addictive, and by admitting smoking causes cancer. Liggett also will acknowledge publicly that tobacco companies have marketed cigarettes to teen-agers as young as 14, Arizona Attorney General Grant Woods said in announcing the settlement. Liggett Group Inc. also agreed to turn over to the states thousands of documents detailing industry-wide discussions on nicotine and other subjects. (Contains Sound Bites)

    Investing in preventive care is a cornerstone of our business because of the tremendous returns it provides.... It keeps health care costs low by preventing serious illness and promoting a healthy lifestyle." -- U.S. Healthcare annual report

    Recently, COT Sports Rehab contributor, Dr. Jan Corwin, received an excellent write up in SF FOCUS a local California Web Publication.

    From a cerebro-vascular, genito-urinary, gastro-intestinal, psycho-therapeutic or mortuary point of view, the rich and famous have never had it so good. It's Called Poor Health for a Reason

    LEGISLATION ELIMINATING MANDATORY CHIROPRATIC X-RAYS UNDER MEDICARE SUBMITTED. Surf here for the report.

    It's that time of year again....Tax Time that is. Surf to a special report from COT and the NY Times about using the Internet to file your taxes by this April 15th deadline. Note: This article was posted on 2/28/97 and updated 3/7/97.

    Primary care physicians who listen to their patients and use a more friendly manner during visits may reduce the risk that they will be sued for malpractice, reports a study funded by the Agency for Health Care Policy and Research (AHCPR) .

    What does the future hold for healthcare professionals?
    A recent NY Times report focuses on this issue.


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  • NewsPage Direct from 4/9/97

    STUDY REVEALS NEW SUPER ANTIOXIDANT; MORE POTENT THAN C, E AND BETA-CAROTENE - A new super antioxidant has been discovered inside the seeds of the increasingly astounding red grape -- whose wine, juice, skin, and now seeds may offer significant protection against certain types of cancer ... [PR Newswire, 669 words]

    PPMS MOVING INTO THE CLINICAL TRIALS INDUSTRY - In its April issue, CenterWatch is reporting that some physician practice management companies are developing clinical-trial programs throughout their networks. [PR Newswire, 288 words]

    WORKERS' COMPENSATION COSTS CONTINUE DOWNWARD TREND - Northern New England companies saved an average of 24 to 29 percent in workers' compensation claim costs during 1996, with the help of Healthsource Employer Services, Inc. , a provider of managed care workers' compensation services in Northern New England. [Business Wire, 874 words]

  • NewsPage Direct from 4/8/97

    AMERICAN MEDICAL ASSOCIATION'S 1996 FEDERAL LOBBYING EXPENDITURES OUTSTRIP NEAREST HEALTH INDUSTRY COMPETITION BY $10 MIL.. - AMA's 1996 IN-HOUSE LOBBYING SPENDING OF $17.1 MIL. FAR OUTPACES expenditures by other health industry interests to influence federal legislation and regulation. [Health News Daily, 265 words]

    NEW YORK MEDICAL COLLEGE RESEARCHERS USE DRUG TO REDUCE SCOLIOSIS IN THE SPINES OF RATS - Clenbuterol, a drug classified as a beta-2 agonist, can reduce the scoliosis that develops in rat spines where the cords have been cut three-quarters of the way through. [PR Newswire, 191 words]

  • NewsPage Direct from 4/7/97

    NEW STUDY VALIDATES CONCEPT THAT EARLY INTERVENTION IMPROVES FINAL OUTCOMES IN CATASTROPHIC WORKERS' COMP CASES - The first phase of a new study, sponsored by Paradigm Health Corp., showed that early intervention in catastrophic workers' compensation cases can produce better medical and financial outcomes. [Business Wire, 374 words]

    SENATORS URGE CIGARETTE TAX - Sens. Edward Kennedy and Orrin Hatch, two of the Senate's more ideologically contrasting members, said Sunday they are joining forces on a bill to provide health care for children by raising taxes on cigarettes. [Associated Press, 459 words]

    STUDY/ HEALTH CARE SLOW TO ADOPT 'NET - The health care industry may be relying more on information and knowledge management than ever before, but security concerns are causing it to embrace Internet technologies more slowly than other industries, a recent Ernst & Young study says. [ComputerWorld, 452 words]

  • A new study confirms that heart disease patients can slow, or even slightly reverse narrowing of their arteries by making lifestyle changes, such as losing weight, cutting fat out of their diet, and exercising.

    In the report, 22% of heart disease patients who made lifestyle changes - without taking cholesterol-lowering medication - had a regression of artery clogging by about 0.03 millimeters per year during a two-year period. The rest of the group, all of whom started the study with their coronary arteries 50% clogged, added an average of 0.04 millimeters of fat to their arteries annually, according to the report in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition. Weight loss, stopping smoking, and to reduce daily cholesterol intake were cited in this article as lifestyle change recommendations. Reuters 4/4/97

  • NewsPage Direct from 4/4/97

    NEW INSIGHT INTO ``STEM'' CELLS IN BRAIN, MARROW - Contrary to what scientists have long believed, the central nervous system has stem cells capable of dividing and forming other kind of cells, researchers reported on Thursday. [Reuters, 402 words]

    STUDY SHOWS WORKERS' COMP COSTS CAN BE CUT WITH MANAGED CARE - By Mike Maharry Knight-Ridder/Tribune Business News TACOMA, Wash.--Apr. 3--Treating injured workers through a pre-paid, managed care system saved money, but left workers less satisfied, a new state workers' compensation study reveals. [The News Tribune, 627 words]

    U.S. DEPT OF LABOR/ FEDERAL RULES GIVE AMERICANS GREATER RIGHTS AND PROTECTIONS FOR HEALTH BENEFITS - Millions of Americans will have important new health benefit protections when they change jobs or lose health coverage under interim regulations announced today by the U. S. Departments of Labor, Health and Human Services and the Treasury. [M2 PRESSWIRE, 1377 words]

    U.S. ISSUES NEW INSURANCE RULES - The government issued new regulations Tuesday that would make it easier for people who change jobs to keep their health insurance. [Associated Press, 196 words]

  • ChiroList

    "The Neurophysiologic Evaluation of the Effects of Patients with Low Back Pain: A Collaborative Study Between U.C.I., L.A.C.C., and Beijing Union Hospital"
    Scott Haldeman, Ph.D., M.D., D.C.

    This project attempts to study the relationship between the chiropractic lesion and muscle spindle afferent activity, utilizing previously established techniques addressed to quantifying neurophysiological functions. It is the aim of the proposed study to develop an electrophysiogical profile that will aid in the diagnosis of spinal dysfunction. It is proposed that utilization of quantitative analysis of paraspinal muscle evoked potentials and H-reflexes from different muscles of the lower limbs will result in the development of specific electrodiagnostic profiles in patients with low back pain. Utilizing the opportunity to recruit patients from the Medical University of China Beijing Hospital, this study will also allow the observation of Chinese methods of manipulation and permit their comparison with western chiropractic methods.

    Frank M. Painter, D.C. Frank-meister@msn.com Alternative Care Chiropractic Center

    Chiropractic Resource Page: www.chiro.org/

  • According to a report in the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences' journal Environmental Health Perspectives, a team of California and Ohio scientists said today that maternal exposure to cigarette smoke is associated with a doubled risk of a rare but "devastating" condition called persistent pulmonary hypertension of the newborn, in which infants starve for oxygen because blood is not pumped through the lungs to the body.

    In persistent pulmonary hypertension of the newborn, or PPHN, the newborn baby's blood continues to flow as it did when the fetal lungs were not functioning and life-giving oxygen was derived from the mother, through the placenta. Without medical help, which may include a heart-lung bypass, the infant may die. IntelliHealth 3/27/97

  • NewsPage Direct from 4/1/97

    NUTRITION; GARLIC COMPOUNDS INDICATED TO INHIBIT MAMMARY TUMOR FORMATION - Nutrition; Garlic Compounds Indicated To Inhibit Mammary Tumor Formation Researchers have returned to Mother Nature's medicine cabinet for compounds to combat cancer, high cholesterol, and bacterial infections. [Cancer Weekly Plus, 445 words]

    (As always, COT recommends seeking advice from a qualified healthcare professional before beginning any nutritional program.)

    NEW YORK MEDICAL COLLEGE AND AETNA U.S. HEALTHCARE JOIN TO ENHANCE PHYSICIAN EDUCATION - New York Medical College and Aetna U.S. Healthcare announced today a first-of-its-kind joint venture to promote and financially support the continued professional development of managed care physicians while exposing the physicians of tomorrow to the principles of managed care. [PR Newswire, 436 words]

  • Nationally, only about 15 percent of children wear helmets, and the rate is far lower for teen-agers and for young people in poor or urban communities. A study in the November issue of Pediatrics estimated that if all children wore bike helmets, 184 deaths and 116,000 head injuries would be prevented annually.

    A bicycle helmet is one of the most effective safety devices available, reducing the risk of head injuries by 85 percent, Rivara said. By contrast, seat belts in automobiles reduce the risk of fatal injuries by 45 percent, and motorcycle helmets reduce the risk of head injuries by 28 percent. The National Center for Injury Prevention and Control, part of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, has financed helmet promotion programs in nine states. NY Times 3/31/97

  • NewsPage Direct from 3/31/97

    STRETCH IT OUT/ EXERCISE EASES PAINFUL PERIODS - A regular exercise routine will pay off in more ways than looking fit in a bathing suit this summer -- you can ease monthly menstrual cramps. Keeping fit improves circulation and helps your body produce chemicals that can counteract painful periods. [PR Newswire, 394 words]

    (As always, COT recommends seeking advice from a qualified exercise professional before beginning an exercise program.)

  • NewsPage Direct from 3/28/97

    FAMILIES USA STUDY SHOWS ONE IN THREE CHILDREN LACK HEALTH INSURANCE; HALF OF UNINSURED CHILDREN GO WITHOUT FOR YEAR OR LONGER - One in three children in the U.S. lacked health insurance for at least one month in 1995 and 1996, according to a study released today by the national health consumer group Families USA. [PR Newswire, 584 words]

    GOV'T GIVES MAMMOGRAM ADVICE - Moving to end one of the most contentious issues in medicine, the government is recommending that women in their 40s get routine mammograms to check for breast cancer. [Associated Press, 810 words]

    STRIKING DOCTORS OUT IN FORCE FOR PARIS PROTEST@ (ADDS MEETING WITH CABINET MINISTERS) - Thousands of striking junior hospital doctors from across France demonstrated in Paris on Thursday, winning a meeting with cabinet ministers to discuss their protests at government plans to brake health spending. [Reuters, 532 words]

    MORE EVIDENCE FOUND OF VIRAL LINK TO MS@ (RELEASE AT 0001 GMT FRIDAY, MARCH 28) - Danish researchers said on Friday they had found more evidence of a viral link to multiple sclerosis , and said a common type of herpes virus could be to blame. [Reuters, 360 words]

    GUILFORD RECEIVES PATENT FOR COMPOUNDS THAT PROMOTE NERVE GROWTH - Guilford Pharmaceuticals Inc. today announced that the company has been issued U.S. Patent No. 5,614,547 from the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office relating to the compositions and uses of a series of compounds that promote nerve growth and repair for the treatment of neurodegenerative [PR Newswire, 429 words]

    RSI IS STILL A WORKPLACE PROBLEM-MEDICAL JOURNAL@ (RELEASE AT 0001 GMT MARCH 28) - Repetitive strain injury has become an expensive problem for employers and health services, but quick and proper care prevents the worst complications, a Canadian expert said on Friday. [Reuters, 307 words]

    STUDY SAYS HMO COPAYMENTS TRIPLED - The average health maintenance organization copayment for a doctor visit rose from $1.18 in 1987 to $4.15 in 1993, according to a study due for publication. [BEST NEWS, 246 words]

    NEW SURVEY SHOWS SLEEPLESSNESS AND PAIN TAKING TOLL ON U.S. WORKFORCE - A staggering 47 percent of U.S. workers say they have trouble sleeping, and about two-thirds of these employees - an estimated 36 million Americans - believe that sleeplessness negatively affects their job performance in such areas ... [Business Wire, 849 words]

  • NewsPage Direct from 3/25/97

    LEADING HMO ALLOWS FOR RATINGS - One of the nation's leading HMOs will allow members who have an operation to rate the hospital, surgeons and nurses in a report card that will be given to other patients facing the same surgery. [Associated Press, 803 words]

    CHILDREN'S HEALTH COVERAGE DECLINED FROM 73% TO 66% BETWEEN 1989 AND 1995, ACCORDING TO MARCH 24 GAO REPORT. - CHILDREN EXPERIENCED LARGEST LOSS OF PRIVATE HEALTH INSURANCE COVERAGE from 1989 to 1995, a period of declining overall private coverage, according to a General Accounting Office report released March 24. [Health News Daily, 465 words]

    KEMPER INSURANCE TO OFFER MAGNACARE PPO TO NEW YORK WORKERS COMPENSATION CUSTOMERS - Kemper Insurance Companies is teaming up with the PCMS MagnaCare preferred provider network to provide more high-quality and cost-effective medical care for Kemper's workers compensation customers in New York. [PR Newswire, 349 words]

    DIGITAL REVISES PERFORMANCE STANDARDS FOR HMOS - Continuing a commitment to providing its employees high quality, managed health care, Digital Equipment Corporation has released the "Third Edition of Digital's HMO Performance Standards." The Standards - ... [PR Newswire, 633 words]

  • NewsPage Direct from 3/24/97

    INSURERS BEGIN TO SHOW INTEREST AS ALTERNATIVE MEDICINE MOVES INTO THE MAINSTREAM - Alternative therapies have made inroads into the medical mainstream, and some insurers are hoping to tap into the financial clout of this growing industry, according to an article in the March life/health edition of Best's Review. [Business Wire, 373 words]

    WCRI/ STUDY SHEDS LIGHT ON RETURN TO WORK - CAMBRIDGE, Mass.-New research about return to work for workers compensation claimants helps identify injured workers who are at high risk for a late return. [Business Insurance, 570 words]

    FACE OF WORKERS COMP TO CHANGE SIGNIFICANTLY IN NEXT DECADE/ EXEC - CAMBRIDGE, Mass.-Managed care of workers compensation claimants will undergo a shakeup in the coming decade that will help return the workers comp system to its no-fault roots, an insurer executive predicts. [Business Insurance, 673 words]

    PSOS WOULD BE "COMPETITIVE THREAT" IN SHORT TERM IF DIFFERENT FEDERAL SOLVENCY, ENROLLMENT STANDARDS BECOME LAW, SMITH BARNEY EXECUTIVE SAYS. - PSOs LIKELY WILL NOT REPLACE CLOUT OF HEALTH PLANS that are now building brand-name loyalty through large national networks, Geoff Harris, Smith Barney managing director, predicted during a March 21 forum sponsored by the Center for Studying Health System Change. [Health News Daily, 570 words]

  • NewsPage Direct from 3/21/97

    ORIGIN OF 1918 FLU PANDEMIC FOUND - The 1918 influenza virus that killed more than 20 million people worldwide originated from American pigs and is unlike any other known flu bug, say researchers. They warn that it could strike again. [Associated Press, 679 words]

    LEGISLATIVE NEWS/ GENETIC INFORMATION. - Genetic information: Employment organizations "should be restricted from access to genetic information contained in medical records released by individuals as a condition of employment, in claims filed for reimbursement of health care costs ... [Health News Daily, 108 words]

    METRACOMP RELEASES EMPLOYER SURVEY RESULTS - MetraComp Inc. has released the results of its second annual employer survey. Conducted by Practical Marketing Solutions Inc., the study identified how managed care firms were selected and how services were used ... [Business Wire, 539 words]

    MEASURE TO KEEP STATE COMPETITIVE WOULD HAVE SAVED BUILDERS 'MILLIONS OF DOLLARS A YEAR' VIRGINIA REJECTS SHIPYARD INJURY BILL - VIRGINIA'S House of Delegates has dealt a serious blow to some of the largest US shipyards by defeating legislation that supporters insisted would save builders millions of dollars a year in compensation costs for injured workers. [Lloyd's List, 516 words]

    LOUISIANA NAMES OVER 100 INSURERS IN TOBACCO CASE@ (REFILING) - Louisiana's attorney general has named about 120 insurance companies, including The Hartford and Lloyds of London, as defendants in a lawsuit against the tobacco industry seeking to recover ``billions'' in Medicaid costs. [Reuters, 679 words]

    LEHIGH VALLEY HOSPITAL AND HEALTH NETWORK - LEADER IN DEVELOPMENT OF ROBOTIC LABORATORY; FIRST IN COUNTRY WITH CONTINUOUSLY OPERATING SYSTEM - Lehigh Valley Hospital is the first hospital in the country to install and have in continuous operation the latest robotics technology in its clinical laboratory, Health Network Laboratories . [PR Newswire, 885 words]

  • NewsPage Direct from 3/19/97

    COMPLETE WELLNESS TO INTEGRATE CLINICS - Complete Wellness Centers Inc said on Tuesday it signed management agreements to medically integrate 12 additional chiropractic clinics, bringing the total of such contracts to 77. [Reuters, 109 words]

    PROVIDER PROFILES POPULAR WITH PHYSICIANS - Nearly 77 percent of workers' compensation physicians who receive provider profiles considered the tool valuable, according to a recent survey conducted by MetraComp Inc. [Business Wire, 567 words]

    MERGER MANIA IN MEDICAL CARE NOT LIKELY TO CONTINUE, ECONOMIST SAYS - The pace of mergers among health care institutions is likely to slow or even reverse direction, Stanford economist Victor Fuchs writes in the March 19 issue of the Journal of the American Medical Association. [Business Wire, 873 words]

    KAISER PERMANENTE ANNOUNCES PLANS FOR FLEXIBLE MEDICARE HMO PRODUCT - Officials at Kaiser Permanente, the state's largest health-maintenance organization , Tuesday announced that it has submitted Medicare point-of-service products under the names Kaiser Permanente Senior Advantage Gold and Senior Advantage Gold Plus ... [Business Wire, 663 words]

  • WASHINGTON -- Elderly people in health maintenance organizations often find that they cannot obtain the medical services they need because HMOs limit their ability to appeal adverse decisions on treatment, federal investigators said today. NY Times 3/18/97

  • NewsPage Direct from 3/18/97

    DECLINE IN CHRONIC DISABILITY AMONG U.S. ELDERLY SAVES MEDICARE BILLIONS NEW STUDY SUGGESTS CUTS IN BENEFITS AND TAX HIKES ARE THE WRONG APPROACH TO SOLVING MEDICARE'S FINANCIAL CRISIS <> - A steady decline in chronic disability among this nation's older population has saved Medicare billions of dollars and shows that tax hikes and proposed cuts in benefits are the wrong approach to solving Medicare's financial crisis. [PR Newswire, 675 words]

    HEALTH INSURERS PUSH FOR MEDICARE DEBATE - The Medicare debate in Washington has focused mostly on short-term solutions that involve tinkering with premium levels, adjusting benefits and cutting reimbursements to doctors, hospitals, health plans and other providers. [BEST NEWS, 317 words]

  • NewsPage Direct from 3/17/97

    FEDERAL JUDGES ALLOWING MORE SUITS AGAINST HMOS - By Richard A. Oppel Jr. Knight-Ridder/Tribune Business News AUSTIN, Texas--Mar. 14--While Texas legislators debate letting injured patients file malpractice lawsuits against HMOs, the Clinton administration and some judges are making it easier for managed care firms to be sued. [The Dallas Morning News, 1460 words]

    BELGIAN SCIENTISTS CLAIM MS BREAKTHROUGH - Two Belgian scientists say they have discovered the cause of multiple sclerosis , fanning hopes that a vaccine for the nerve disease could be developed. [Reuters, 335 words]

    NURSES ACCUSE KAISER OF FATAL DELAYS IN CARE THEY SAY LONG WAITS FOR TRANSFER FROM RICHMOND CAUSED 3 DEATHS - At least three critically ill people have died since January after waiting to be transferred from Kaiser Permanente's Richmond hospital to other medical centers that were "miles away," a nurses' union charged yesterday. [SAN FRANCISCO CHRONICLE, 373 words]

  • NewsPage Direct from 3/14/97

    STUDY FINDS U.S. FIRMS MOVING STEADILY TOWARD VALUE-BASED PURCHASING OF HEALTH CARE; LONG-TERM PARTNERSHIPS SEEN AS BEST DEFENSE FOR COMING COST SPIKE - Cost may still be the most important criterion, but the nation's employers increasingly factor in quality when purchasing health care for their workers, according to the Second Annual Study on Value in Health Care conducted jointly by the Washington Business Group ... [PR Newswire, 1030 words]

    MISSISSIPPI COURT RULES TOBACCO MEDICAID SUIT CAN PROCEED (ADDS QUOTES, INDUSTRY REACTION, DETAILS) - In a blow to the tobacco industry, Mississippi's highest court on Thursday ruled that the first state Medicaid suit seeking to recoup health care costs of smokers can go to trial. [Reuters, 771 words]

    TOBACCO TAX PLAN TO FUND KINDS - The federal cigarette tax would nearly triple under a plan to provide health insurance to children proposed Thursday by Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, and Sen. Edward Kennedy, D-Mass. [Associated Press, 327 words]

    BILL WOULD DISCLOSE HIV STATUS - States would be required to alert people to possible contacts with HIV-infected individuals under a bill being advanced by a Republican congressman. [Associated Press, 362 words]

    OKLAHOMA BILL SEEKS PAY FOR DOCTORS WORKING WITH LONG-DISTANCE PATIENTS - By Jon Denton Knight-Ridder/Tribune Business News OKLAHOMA CITY--Mar. 13--Supporters of telemedicine in Oklahoma are cheering the progress of a legislative bill that removes the need for person-to-person contact to qualify for insurance reimbursement. [The Daily Oklahoman, 459 words]

  • NewsPage Direct 3/12/97

    MEDICARE HMO MONTH-TO-MONTH ENROLLMENT OPTION ENHANCES COMPETITION AND QUALITY GENERAL ACCOUNTING OFFICE REPORT SUGGESTS. - MEDICARE HMO LIMITED ENROLLMENT PERIODS MAY OFFER "MODEST SAVINGS" in expenditures for some patient populations, but those savings may be offset by decreased enrollment in HMOs, the General Accounting Office advises in a recent report. [Health News Daily, 834 words]

  • NewsPage Direct 3/11/97

    PARKINSON'S DISEASE; GENE THERAPY PROTECTS NEURONS FROM PARKINSON'S DAMAGE - Parkinson's Disease; Gene Therapy Protects Neurons from Parkinson's Damage Scientists have used gene therapy to protect nerve cells in an animal's brain by boosting the production of a key protein messenger that staves off symptoms of Parkinson's disease. [Gene Therapy Weekly, 1503 words]

    SPOTLIGHT REPORT/ BENEFITS/ ADMINISTRATION & ONLINE RESOURCES/ POOR OVERSIGHT MAY REWARD HURT WORKERS TOO RICHLY - Most companies are incurring needless costs to compensate employees injured on the job because the administration of benefit programs for those workers is not sufficiently coordinated by the company. [Business Insurance, 709 words]

    SPOTLIGHT REPORT/ BENEFITS/ ADMINISTRATION & ONLINE RESOURCES/ COORDINATING BENEFITS CAN SPEED INJURED EMPLOYEES' RETURN TO WORK - Companies can encourage injured employees to return to work if they integrate benefits to avoid providing employees duplicate or excessive compensation while off work. [Business Insurance, 787 words]

  • NewsPage Direct 3/10/97

    CHIRONET INC. RECEIVES FULL DELEGATION FROM PACIFICARE OF OREGON - ChiroNet Inc., received full delegation for quality improvement, utilization management, credentialing, and claims processing, from PacifiCare of Oregon. [Business Wire, 207 words]

    TUBERCULOSIS STRATEGY PLANNED - Public health experts warn that the number of people infected with tuberculosis is continuing to grow, in part because the antibiotics that could control the disease are often used incorrectly. [Associated Press, 791 words]

    TEXAS GOVERNOR, SENATE CRITICIZE HMO FOR SUPPRESSING REPORT - By Bruce Hight Knight-Ridder/Tribune Business News Mar. 7--A health maintenance organization drew sharp criticism from Gov. George W. Bush and state senators Thursday after it managed to suppress, at least temporarily, an apparently critical report by the Texas insurance commissioner. [Austin American-Statesman, 778 words]

  • NewsPage Direct 3/7/97

    GENETIC DISCOVERY GIVES CLUE TO CANCER - REPORT (PLS TO UKI SCREENS) - British researchers said on Thursday they had found a genetic explanation for why cancer cells grow into uncontrollable tumours. [Reuters, 264 words]

    ADMINISTRATION'S HEALTH CARE FRAUD AND ABUSE INITIATIVE DUE WEEK OF MARCH 10; AARP SEEKING EXPANSION OF SENIORS' ROLE IN DETECTING MEDICARE FRAUD. - ADMINISTRATION's HEALTH FRAUD BILL DUE NEXT WEEK WOULD PRODUCE MEDICARE SAVINGS, Health Care Financing Administration chief Bruce Vladeck told reporters March 6. [Health News Daily, 803 words]

    RURAL TELEMEDICINE TAKING HOLD - As many as one-third of America's rural hospitals are using telemedicine to improve patient care. [Business Wire, 904 words]

  • The latest federal health survey says more Americans are overweight now than 20 years ago, with at least one-third of all adults now carrying excess weight.

    The data is from the Third National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES III), conducted between 1988 and 1994, which compared children, teens and adults with standard measurements of the same groups taken in the 1960s. The results are part of the Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report issued by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta.

    Officials say obesity is a major cause of heart disease, diabetes, arthritis and several types of cancer in the United States. AP 3/7/97

  • A new study (International Journal of Cancer (1997;70:512-517)) has shown that heavy alcohol consumption, as well as high sugar intake, are associated with an increased risk of small intestine cancer, called adenocarcinoma. And for men, smoking cigarettes and a heavy consumption of heterocyclic amines - substances found in fried bacon, ham, and barbecued or smoked meat and fish - increase the risk as well, according to a report in the International Journal of Cancer.

    Those who consumed the most sugar (more than 25 grams of sugar a day), mainly from that added to coffee or tea or from nondiet soft drinks, had four times the risk of small bowel cancer as those who ate the least (less than 5 grams). Reuters 3/6/97

  • Recently, San Francisco Giant's outfielder, Barry Bonds, injured himself after falling down a stairwell.

    According to this AP report, Bonds skipped the Giants' practice Tuesday while a chiropractor worked on him, and pronounced himself fine - though still sore - before heading over for an MRI.

    "The chiropractor helped out a lot. I feel 100 percent better. I got adjusted. I was all jammed up," he said. "I'm fine. I'm real fine." AP 3/3/97

  • As if we didn't have enough evidence already ....

    Secondhand smoke kills at least 4,700 nonsmoking Californians each year and causes respiratory illnesses in tens of thousands of children, according to a new state study from the California Environmental Protection Agency.

    The state EPA report concludes that there is sufficient evidence from the body of existing research to conclude that secondhand smoke is responsible for a wide variety of health problems, including premature births, sudden infant death syndrome, lung cancer and heart disease.

    Among the findings of the California study is that secondhand tobacco smoke hits the children of smokers especially hard. The study blames secondhand smoking for up to 3,000 new childhood asthma cases in California each year and for as many as 188,000 doctor visits for middle-ear infections. AP 3/2/97

  • NewsPage Direct 3/5/97

    AOA OFFERS RECOMMENDATIONS TO OFFSET PHYSICIAN OVERSUPPLY - The American Osteopathic Association acknowledged that a serious projected oversupply of physicians exists in the U.S., and offered several recommendations to Congress on how to legislate physician workforce reform during a press conference on February 28 in Washington, DC. [PR Newswire, 506 words]

    NCPA AND CONGRESSIONAL EXPERTS PRESENT HEALTH INSURANCE SOLUTIONS FOR MEDICARE AND THE UNINSURED - The future of American health insurance coverage remains tenuous. Medicare is nearly bankrupt. Forty million Americans are uninsured. [PR Newswire, 857 words]

    HEALTH COST BENCHMARKING STUDY FINDS POINT-OF-SERVICE MANAGED CARE PLANS LEAST COSTLY AMONG THE MANAGED CARE OPTIONS HOWEVER, HMOS CONTINUE TO BE MOST EFFECTIVE IN CONTROLLING COSTS - A benchmarking analysis of 1995 healthcare spending by employers demonstrates that while the most cost- effective benefits delivery method is managed care, there is a wide range of results for managed care programs ... [PR Newswire, 778 words]

    ROLF PROGRAM MAY SAVE BOULDER BUSINESSES MILLIONS IN WORKERS' COMPENSATION - Carly Schulaka Knight-Ridder/Tribune Business News Mar. 4--The simple tasks people do every day at work -- talking on the phone, typing on a keyboard or using a mouse on a computer -- can cause painful medical problems for employees and huge workers' compensation costs for employers. [Carly Schulaka, 1196 words]

  • NewsPage Direct 3/4/97

    CBO MEDICARE ANALYSIS CREDITS ADMINISTRATION WITH ONLY $82 BIL. OF CLAIMED $100 BIL. IN FIVE-YEAR SAVINGS; MEDICAID SAVINGS WOULD TOTAL $7 BIL. - ADMINISTRATION $18 BIL. SHORT ON MEDICARE SAVINGS GOAL, CBO ASSERTS in its March 3 analysis of President Clinton's FY 1998 budget plan. [Health News Daily, 386 words]

    EX-EMPIRE BLUE CROSS EXECUTIVE CONVICTED OF PERJURY@ (ADDS WEISSMAN'S LAWYER'S COMMENT, DETAILS) - The former top financial officer of Empire Blue Cross Blue Shield, a major non-profit health insurer, was convicted Monday of perjury and obstructing a Senate subcommittee investigation. [Reuters, 528 words]

  • NewsPage Direct 3/3/97

    ALTERNATIVE REMEDIES ENTER THE MAINSTREAM/ MARKETERS WIELD BIGGER BUDGETS, STAR ENDORSERS AS PRESENCE ON SHELF INCREASES - Leveraging consumer dissatisfaction with traditional healthcare, marketers of alternative remedies and supplements are launching more significant ad efforts and finding greater acceptance in drugstores. [Advertising Age, 1057 words]

    AMA, AAMC URGE TERMINATION OF PUBLIC FUNDING OF FOREIGN NATIONALS' MEDICAL RESIDENCIES IN CONSENSUS STATEMENT RELEASED BY SIX ASSOCIATIONS FEB. 28. - MEDICAL EDUCATION ESTABLISHMENT REITERATES STANCE ON LIMITING RESIDENCY SLOTS, in an effort to address the country's oversupply of physicians. [Health News Daily, 589 words]

    STUDY SHOWS THAT INFANTS FEEL AND REMEMBER CIRCUMCISION PAIN - A study led by Hospital for Sick Children researchers has demonstrated that not only do male infants feel pain during circumcision, they remember that pain six months later when they receive their routine vaccination. [Canada NewsWire, 357 words]

  • NewsPage Direct 2/26/97

    BREAST CANCER; UNCONVENTIONAL THERAPIES RELEASED IN RESEARCH INITIATIVE - Breast Cancer; Unconventional Therapies Released in Research Initiative Comprehensive, easy to understand information packages about six unconventional therapies often used by women with breast cancer [Cancer Weekly Plus, 568 words]

    EMERGENCY CARE ACCESS BILL INTRODUCED BY REP. CARDIN, SEN. GRAHAM WOULD REQUIRE COVERAGE BASED ON PRESENTING SYMPTOMS RATHER THAN FINAL DIAGNOSIS. - CARDIN/GRAHAM EMERGENCY CARE ACCESS BILL WOULD AMEND KASSEBAUM/KENNEDY LAW, using enforcement mechanisms similar to those included in the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act. Rep. Ben Cardin and Sens. Bob Graham and Barbara Mikulski introduced the measure at a Feb. [Health News Daily, 348 words]

    WORK RECOVERY AND HIH WINTERTHUR TO ENTER JOINT VENTURE IN AUSTRALIA, NEW ZEALAND AND PACIFIC RIM - Work Recovery, Inc. announced today the signing of a Shareholders Agreement with HIH Winterthur Underwriting and Agency Services Ltd. to form an Australian joint venture, ERGOS Asia Pacific Pty. [PR Newswire, 505 words]

    CBO SEES NO ACCELERATION IN MEDICARE MANAGED CARE ENROLLMENT UNDER ADMINISTRATION'S PLAN; HHS SECRETARY SHALALA PREDICTS 3% ENROLLMENT INCREASE. - CLINTON MEDICARE PROPOSAL WOULD INCREASE MANAGED CARE ENROLLMENT relative to current policy, according to the Administration. In a Feb. 25 address to the American Association of Health Plans, HHS Secretary Donna Shalala said that about 23% ... [Health News Daily, 629 words]

    ACROSS-THE-BOARD REDUCTION OF MEDICARE HMO REIMBURSEMENT RATE WOULD NOT ADDRESS FLAWS IN AAPCC METHODOLOGY AND CONTRIBUTE TO OVERPAYMENT, EXPERTS ADVISE. - MEDICARE COULD SAVE BILLIONS IN HMO PAYMENTS BY USING PRE-ENROLLMENT DATA already available in the program's fee-for-service sector to adjust county-based AAPCC rates, the General Accounting Office testified Feb. 25. [Health News Daily, 546 words]

    MANAGED CARE LEGISLATION GLANCE - - Key provisions of managed care legislation introduced Tuesday: - _Prohibit plans from interfering in doctor-patient discussions. [Associated Press, 139 words]

    THE AMERICAN ASSOCIATION OF HEALTH PLANS CONGRATULATES HUMANA HEALTH CARE PLANS OF CHICAGO FOR WINNING THE NATIONAL EXEMPLARY PRACTICE PROGRAM AWARD - Humana Health Care Plans of Chicago is the winner of the 1997 AAHP National Exemplary Practice Program Award. The Humana Chicago Breast Care Management System was created to manage the identification and treatment of women with breast cancer. [PR Newswire, 345 words]

  • NewsPage Direct 2/25/97

    MINNESOTA COALITION OF TOUCH THERAPISTS AND SOMATIC EDUCATORS ANNOUNCES SPRING CONFERENCE - The Minnesota Coalition of Touch Therapists and Somatic Educators, a non-profit, inclusive organization created to educate, represent, and promote the art and science of touch therapy and somatic education throughout the state ... [PR Newswire, 414 words]

    HHS IG RELEASES CLINICAL LAB MODEL COMPLIANCE GUIDELINES TO COINCIDE WITH ANNOUNCEMENT OF $325 MIL. SETTLEMENT WITH SMITHKLINE BEECHAM. - CLINICAL LABS SHOULD ENSURE THAT CLAIMS TO FEDERAL PROGRAMS ARE "MEDICALLY NECESSARY," according to a model compliance plan released by HHS Inspector General June Gibbs Brown Feb. 24. "We recognize that laboratories do not and cannot treat patients or make medical necessity [Health News Daily, 477 words]

    FEATURE/MANAGED CARE LOWERS HEALTH CARE COSTS FOR EMPLOYERS, ACCORDING TO 197 EMPLOYEE BENEFITS SURVEY - Employers that contract with health maintenance organizations incur health care costs that are 4 percent lower than the national average making this form of managed care th e most cost-effective of the health care alternatives generally available to employers. [Business Wire, 353 words]

    ADMINISTRATION MEDICARE HMO PLAN ALLOWS THREE ANNUAL PAYMENT OPTIONS, SHARES OVERALL STRUCTURE WITH 1995 GOP PLAN. - MEDICARE HMOs WOULD SELECT HIGHEST-PAYING OF THREE RATES EACH YEAR, under a White House reform plan that would remove the managed care payment system's current direct link with fee-for-service spending. [Health News Daily, 720 words]

  • NewsPage Direct 2/24/97

    CONNECTICUT MEDICAID HMO PAYMENT BASED ON BIDS RATHER THAN 95% OF FEE-FOR-SERVICE BEING PROPOSED BY GOV. ROWLAND. - CONNECTICUT MEDICAID WILL SWITCH HMO RATES TO COMPETITIVE BIDS from 95% of fee-for-service costs, Gov. John Rowland said in a mid-February budget message to Connecticut's legislature. [Health News Daily, 473 words]

  • NewsPage Direct 2/21/97

    CLINTON ACTS TO INFORM MEDICAID PATIENTS FULLY - President Clinton acted Thursday to ensure that poor people who receive government health benefits are fully informed about treatment options and urged Congress to give all Americans similar help. [Reuters, 352 words]

  • NewsPage Direct 2/20/97

    MANAGED CARE IN WORKERS COMPENSATION/ NCCI STUDY SEES 11.6% SAVINGS IN FLORIDA - A Florida law requiring managed care in all workers compensation cases is expected to save the state's employers 11.6 percent on average, according to a new study. [PR Newswire, 367 words]

    NCPA/ FEDERAL POLICY CAUSING RISING NUMBER OF UNINSURED; THINK TANK OFFERS PLAN TO INSURE ALL AMERICANS - Government policy denies many low-income working Americans and their children the same tax incentives to purchase health insurance that it gives most middle and upper-income workers, according to the National Center for Policy Analysis . [PR Newswire, 638 words]

    PERS CHOICE, LIFEGUARD, BLUE SHIELD, AND OMNI WINNERS IN CALPERS HEALTH ENROLLMENT - The health plan open enrollment period for members of the California Public Employees' Retirement System is over, and the winners are PERS Choice and Lifeguard -- among the losers is Foundation Health. [Business Wire, 621 words]

  • NewsPage Direct 2/19/97

    MANAGED-CARE PRODUCTS, SERVICES ARE KEY TO HEALTH OF THE BLUES - The ability to provide competitive managed- care products will be the long-term key to the sound health of Blue Cross & Blue Shield plans, A.M. Best Co. says in a report published this week. [Business Wire, 288 words]

    OXFORD HEALTH PLANS REPORTS 105 PERCENT EARNINGS INCREASE IN FOURTH QUARTER - Oxford Health Plans, Inc. today reported that fourth quarter 1996 net earnings rose 105 percent on a revenue increase of 64 percent when compared with the fourth quarter of 1995. [PR Newswire, 890 words]

  • NewsPage Direct 2/18/97

    AMERICANS SPEND $15 BILLION A YEAR ON UNPROVEN MEDICINE - Americans are spending $15 billion a year on alternative medicine therapies that aren't medically proven, according to biologists and medical doctors at the AAAS meeting. [SEATTLE POST-INTELLIGENCER, 411 words]

    DESPITE SUCCESSFUL APPLICATIONS, HEALTH CARE INDUSTRY LAGS IN USE OF INTERNET TECHNOLOGIES ERNST & YOUNG STUDY CITES SECURITY ISSUES AS MAJOR BARRIER - With a few notable exceptions, the health care industry lags behind most other industries in its use of Internet technologies, according to an in-depth study conducted by Ernst & Young LLP. [PR Newswire, 949 words]

    HAWAII OKS SUITS AGAINST COMP INSURERS - HONOLULU-Some insurers worry that a recent Hawaii Supreme Court decision allowing employees to sue workers compensation insurers could generate new lawsuits and increase their costs. [Business Insurance, 1106 words]

  • NewsPage Direct 2/14/97

    MS SCIENTIFIC RESEARCH FOUNDATION ANNOUNCES $4.7 MILLION FOR GENETIC RESEARCH -- LARGEST MS RESEARCH GRANT EVER - The largest grant ever made for multiple sclerosis research is enabling Canadian scientists to zero in on why certain people are more susceptible to developing MS, an often disabling disease of the central nervous system. [Canada NewsWire, 972 words]

    OKLAHOMA COMMITTEE APPROVES WORKERS COMPENSATION REFORM BILL - By John Perry Knight-Ridder/Tribune Business News OKLAHOMA CITY--Feb. 13--The House version of a workers compensation reform bill, aimed at changing Oklahoma's status as a state with high employer costs and low workers' benefits, was passed out of committee Wednesday. [The Daily Oklahoman, 537 words]

    A report out of Reuters today describes a cervical spine incident caused by excessive lateral bending of the neck while holding a phone receive in place.

    After holding the phone in place for 32 minutes while ironing her clothes, a 36 year old women developed neck pain, which was later diagnosed via CAT Scan, as carotid - artery dissection, a condition where her carotid artery had been blocked by accumulation of blood in her arterial wall.

    According to the report, her pain lasted for 20 hours, with ear ringing continuing for another 28 hours. Doctors in Paris, France, attributed the manner in which she held the phone as the causative factor. For more information see the New England Journal of Medicine (1997;336:516). Reuters - 2/14/97

  • NewsPage Direct 2/13/97

    WHITE HOUSE PLANS SEPARATE LEGISLATION ON MEDICARE FRAUD AND ABUSE, HHS SECRETARY SHALALA SAYS AT HOUSE WAYS & MEANS COMMITTEE HEARING. - MEDICARE FRAUD AND ABUSE STAND-ALONE BILL TO BE SUBMITTED TO CONGRESS by the Administration, HHS Secretary Donna Shalala told the House Ways & Means Committee Feb. 12. [Health News Daily, 577 words]

  • NewsPage Direct 2/12/97

    BALLY TOTAL FITNESS AND CONTINUCARE TOGETHER LAUNCH OUTPATIENT REHABILITATION PROGRAM WELLNESS AGREEMENT BETWEEN BALLY AND CONTINUCARE TO CREATE <> - Bally Total Fitness and Continucare Corporation today announced they have entered into an agreement to provide comprehensive outpatient rehabilitation services at Bally's fitness centers. [PR Newswire, 431 words] LAWMAKERS OFFER BILL TO PROTECT ELDERLY - A bipartisan coalition of lawmakers Tuesday unveiled a bill to add new consumer protections to ''Medigap'' insurance policies that most senior citizens use to supplement federal Medicare health coverage. [Reuters, 298 words]

    HCFA TAKING HANDS-OFF APPROACH TO STATES' INDIVIDUAL MARKET REFORM EFFORTS UNDER HEALTH INSURANCE REFORM LAW; 35 STATES PLAN TO ADOPT ALTERNATIVE MECHANISMS. - HCFA NOT HOLDING STATES TO "LETTER-PERFECT COMPLIANCE" WITH KASSEBAUM-KENNEDY LAW's individual market requirements at this time, Administrator Bruce Vladeck told the Senate Labor and Human Resources Committee Feb. 11. [Health News Daily, 600 words]

    CIGNA REPORTS RECORD FULL YEAR 1996 RESULTS; FULL YEAR INCOME OVER $1 BILLION - NOTE: TRUNCATED STORY ** CIGNA Corporation today reported fourth quarter 1996 operating income of $261 million, or $3.47 per share, versus $277 million, or $3.62 per share, reported in the fourth quarter of 1995. [PR Newswire, 1509 words]

  • NewsPage Direct 2/11/97

    DEFINITIVE LOOK AT ALTERNATIVE MEDICINE - Here is how Oxford Health Plans Inc. defines the alternative medicine practices it offers: Acupuncture originated in China more than 5,000 years ago. It is based on the belief that good health depends on a balanced flow of qi-vital life energy. [Business Insurance, 297 words]

    HMO ESTABLISHES ALTERNATIVE CARE NETWORK - Although one regional health maintenance organization is now offering employers a network of alternative medicine pro-viders, other managed care groups are unlikely to follow suit. [Business Insurance, 938 words]

  • NewsPage Direct 2/10/97

    800 ALA. WOMEN SUE NORPLANT - More than 800 Alabama women have filed a lawsuit against the makers and distributors of the Norplant contraceptive, claiming they suffered health problems and adverse side effects. [Associated Press, 187 words]

    MEDICAL HOTLINE BUSINESS BOOMS - For the frantic parent with a child sick at 2 a.m., the weekend athlete with a painful injury and the worker just diagnosed with diabetes, medical hotlines are becoming the equivalent of ``Dr. [Associated Press, 1019 words]

    SEN. MCCAIN MEDICARE OVERPAYMENT BILL CALLS FOR PREPAYMENT SCREENING OF PROVIDER CLAIMS; SEPARATE BILL FEATURES FINANCIAL INCENTIVESFOR BENEFICIARY WHISTLEBLOWERS. - REDUCTION IN MEDICARE OVERPAYMENT COSTS ACT" WOULD USE FEES, PREPAYMENT SCREENING to discourage Medicare providers from overbilling the federal government. [Health News Daily, 659 words]

  • NewsPage Direct 2/7/97

    POLISH PARLIAMENT SEALS HEALTH CARE REFORM - Polish legislators on Thursday gave their final go-ahead on a bill reforming the country's inefficient communist-era health care service. [Reuters, 337 words]

    PROGRESS SEEN TOWARD PARKINSON'S GENE THERAPY - In a development that could one day lead to new therapies for Parkinson's disease, U.S. scientists said Thursday they have used gene therapy in rat brains to protect nerve cells that make a crucial chemical. [Reuters, 328 words]

    PRESIDENT CLINTON'S DISCRETIONARY HHS BUDGET FOR FY 1998 REFLECTS PRIORITIES FOR AIDS SERVICES, TREATMENT, QUALITY RESEARCH. - ADMINISTRATION BUDGET INCLUDES $1 BIL. MORE FOR RYAN WHITE IN FY 1998, or about $40 mil. more than was allocated in FY 1997, in its budget request released yesterday. [Health News Daily, 561 words]

    NEW TELEMEDICINE SYSTEM TO LESSEN DEMAND FOR MALAYSIAN MEDICAL SPECIALISTS - MALAYSIA--A new "telemedicine" system, utilizing telecommunications and user-friendly medical examination software, will obviate the need for on-site medical specialists in Malaysia, according to one of the system's inventors. [Comline, 114 words]

  • NewsPage Direct 2/5/97

    PROVIDER NETWORK SIZE DIFFERS BY REGION, PROFIT STATUS AND MODEL AND PLAN TYPE - Provider networks are, on average, more comprehensive in the Pacific region than in any other region of the country, according to a new exclusive survey by The Managed Care Information Center. [PR Newswire, 391 words]

  • NewsPage Direct 2/4/97

    1997 HEALTH CARE COSTS CONTINUE AT MODERATE LEVELS; COSTS FOR RETIREES AGE 65 AND OLDER TO JUMP SIGNIFICANTLY - The relatively moderate pace of growth in employee health care costs for large employers will continue in 1997, with an average overall increase for active employees of only 3% compared to 4% in 1996, according to the Towers Perrin 1997 Health Care Cost Survey. [PR Newswire, 935 words]

  • NewsPage Direct 2/3/97

    HEALTH QUALITY ISSUES MERIT FURTHER EXAMINATION, PHYSICIAN LAWMAKERS AGREE; EIGHT DOCTORS CURRENTLY SERVING IN 105TH CONGRESS. - PHYSICIAN PRESENCE, INFLUENCE IN CONGRESS GROWING, with six doctors elected to the House and one to the Senate since 1994. The views of physicians in the 105th Congress thus may play a larger role in congressional deliberations than ever before. [Health News Daily, 1256 words]


  • Please note: Chiropractic OnLine Today provides recounts of these studies for informational purposes only. Readers are urged to review further information or contact your Doctor of Chiropractic for other preventive health measures.

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