Health Highlights: June 18, 2009

Posted: June 18, 2009

Here are some of the latest health and medical news developments, compiled by editors of HealthDay:

Employers, Employees Face Health Insurance Increases: Report

A new report suggests that businesses that provide health insurance coverage for employees may have to deal with a 9 percent cost increase in 2010 and their workers may have to cope with an even larger increase.

The consulting firm PricewaterhouseCoopers said one reason for the rise in costs is because employees concerned about losing their jobs are using their health insurance while it's still available to them, the Associated Press reported. Another factor is increasing medical costs due to rising unemployment.

For its report, PWC surveyed more than 500 employers and health insurers and found that 42 percent of employers would respond to cost increases by passing some of the burden to workers through higher premiums, deductibles or co-payments.

Next year's costs won't be affected by health-care reform legislation currently being debated by lawmakers, said PWC Principal Michael Thompson. However, intense scrutiny of health-care costs may slow price increases, he suggested.

"Nobody wants to be front page news when all the lights are shining on your industry," he told the AP.

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Hillary Clinton Breaks Elbow in Fall

U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton suffered a broken elbow when she fell on her way to the White House on Wednesday.

A statement released by her chief of staff said Clinton was treated at The George Washington University Hospital and then sent home. She's scheduled to have surgery to repair her elbow in the coming week, the Associated Press reported.

"Secretary Clinton appreciates the professionalism and kindness she received from the medical team who treated her this evening and looks forward to resuming her full schedule soon," Chief of Staff Cheryl Mills said in the statement.

Clinton had planned to attend an event Thursday morning to mark World Refugee Day, but that appearance has been removed from her public schedule, the AP reported.

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Asbestos Contamination Prompts Health Emergency in Montana Town

A public health emergency has been declared in a Montana town where more than 200 deaths and thousands of illnesses have been linked to asbestos contamination, the Environmental Protection Agency said Wednesday.

The agency will spend more than $130 million in Libby, Mont., to conduct an extensive, home-by-home cleanup and to provide medical care for people with asbestos-related illnesses. However, the town's 2,600 residents won't be evacuated, the Associated Press reported.

The asbestos contamination is from a vermiculite mine that closed in 1990. Before the closure, mine workers carried asbestos home on their clothes. Previously, some residents in Libby used vermiculite as mulch in their home gardens, and vermiculite covered school running tracks in the town, the news service reported.

The federal government and Maryland-based W.R. Grace & Co. have already spent hundreds of millions of dollars to clean up Libby, the AP reported.

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Chopping Before Cooking Cuts Carrots' Cancer-Fighting Power

Carrots retain more of an anti-cancer compound if they're not cut up before they're cooked, say British researchers.

Carrots that were chopped up before they were boiled contained 25 percent less of the anti-cancer compound falcarinol than carrots that were boiled whole, BBC News reported.

The findings will be presented at a nutrition conference in France.

"Chopping up your carrots increases the surface area so more of the nutrients leach out into the water while they are cooked," explained lead researcher Kirsten Brandt, of Newcastle University's School of Agriculture, Food and Rural Development.

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Blcvdqcp of MT @ Jul 15, 2009 19:15:27 PM

Well, why is this happening in the first place?

Doesn't matter how much he funds. The plan is still the same, not totally self assured. Not fully what we need! There is a Law out there that is spreading like a wild fire. However, it is a matter of fact that in our freedom of living in America. We need to start taking responsibility for ourselves in our retirement due to the lack of our security for retirement just a few years back we all got statements saying we should start putting money away for ourselves to have a more sure foundation of retirement, because you may not see so-so, social security.

So now what with health, it's not necessary these plans that we eventually need to pay back! Nothing is free! So being self assured and insured in ourselves....Just take care of yourself anyways and get a Long term plan, that you pay for rather than a temporary limited needs of medical that isn't at all what it seems to be. Right now I don't have all my homework to tell you the specifics, but yes, it's about time we start paying our own plans and future sicknesses and mishaps because. As far as being self sufficient. That's the way things are looking up to be in these days and age. Our resources are falling out of our reach while we sit around complaining if these funding for health care is even beneficial. Like I said nothing is free, eventually you will need to pay it all back. If not than whom ever is there to go after closest to you, to pay off those medical debts.

Quit sitting around and complaining about whether the government or state is going to take care of us. Go get Long Term Care and get your own basic medical plan. Go learn, go find resources that are out there and does not have anything to do with weather or not the medicare or medicaid will be funded, because guess what? They will still remain the same old limited care providers and we will still complain, while still be unsecured. Do you know what your paying for in the first place when you are with medicare or medicaid? That many of countless people think it's free!?

Francine of HI @ Jun 19, 2009 02:10:32 AM

Insurance is NOT health care

Insurance is NOT health care! Insurance spreads the cost of health care across a group of people because it's too much for any one person to pay for. Insurance would not be necissary, and at one time wasn't necissary because it WAS affordable. There's not ENOUGH competition in health care to bring costs down. There are so few doctors and nurses coming out of school, there are so few hospitals built to handle patient load -- it's no different than regulating the cost of oil like OPEC does. Regulating graduates to keep medical costs or degree students pay high is market manipulation. All these insurance companies need to go... I'm not paying a DIME into insurance and will pay for my own health care.

Mark Thompson of DC @ Jun 18, 2009 23:49:33 PM

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