2013 etiketine sahip kayıtlar gösteriliyor. Tüm kayıtları göster
2013 etiketine sahip kayıtlar gösteriliyor. Tüm kayıtları göster

8 Mayıs 2014 Perşembe

Syphilis Produced A Massive Comeback In 2013, CDC Warns

By the year 2000, syphilis was regarded all but eradicated in the U.S. But with new data from 2005-1013 released today, the CDC created a shocking announcement: Syphilis is back, with the fee of new cases far more than doubling given that 2005.


“After getting on the verge of elimination in 2000 in the United States, syphilis circumstances have rebounded,” announced Dr. Monica Patton and colleagues in this week’s Morbidity and Mortality Report, launched these days.


Based on very current data (reported as of April 28, 2014), the yearly complete of main and secondary syphilis situations much more than doubled, from 8,724 to 16,663.


The overall per population charge much more than doubled to 5.three cases per one hundred,000 men and women in 2013 from 2.one circumstances of syphilis per one hundred,000 in 2000, when syphilis was at its lowest rate.


A poster from the UK warns of the syphilis comeback there as well. (Photo: wiki media)

A poster from the United kingdom warns of the syphilis comeback there as well. (Photograph: wiki media)



And the numbers are fairly clear about gender it’s practically solely guys acquiring syphilis. The proportion of new syphilis cases that had been in men grew with each yr studied, and in 2013, a whopping 91 percent of all new syphilis instances have been in men. And almost all of individuals were amid guys who recognized themselves as gay or bisexual.


There are also massive racial and ethnic variations among individuals receiving syphilis, the CDC mentioned, with black guys five instances as very likely to contract the ailment as white men, and black girls 13 times far more at threat than white girls. Secrecy close to gay and bisexual intercourse is a significant contributing issue to the spread of the disease, the CDC warned.


Syphilis is not a ailment you can consider lightly. As some of you might bear in mind from 1960s- 70s and 80s-era public well being warnings, syphilis can trigger dementia, blindness, and death if undetected and untreated.


Ladies are especially at danger since syphilis can be mild or even asymptomatic in females. Another issue is that syphilis’s most widespread early signs, such as fever or rash, can be simply confused with other conditions. The sores most folks image as happening with syphilis can be painless and mistaken for an ingrown hair, says the CDC in its education resources.


Ladies who don’t know they have syphilis and get pregnant can seriously endanger their babies syphilis can cause lower birth fat, prematurity, and even stillbirth.


The takeaway: We want to commence screening for syphilis again, at least amongst gay and bisexual males, explained CDC officials. These who have multiple partners should be screened each 3 to 6 months.


For more overall health news, follow me right here on Forbes.com, on Twitter, @MelanieHaiken, and subscribe to my posts on Facebook.



Syphilis Produced A Massive Comeback In 2013, CDC Warns

6 Mart 2014 Perşembe

ten Vital Well being Strategy Positive aspects, 2013













ten Vital Well being Strategy Positive aspects, 2013

3 Şubat 2014 Pazartesi

Uk plastic surgical treatment statistics 2013: which are the most well-liked?

Plastic surgery scalpel near woman

More than 50,000 cosmetic surgery procedures were performed in the UK last year, according to the British Association of Aesthetic Plastic Surgeons. Photograph: amana productions inc/Getty Images/amana images RF




Suck in, declares the latest audit from the British Association of Aesthetic Plastic Surgeons (Baaps), for 2013 recorded a 41% rise in liposuction procedures.


According to Baaps, there were 50,122 surgical procedures performed in 2013 – a rise of 17% on average since 2012. The association represents one in three cosmetic surgeons in the UK.


The audit which highlights an “impressive double-digit rise in all cosmetic procedures”, reports that not a single individual procedure saw a decrease on the year – a trend it claims has not been seen since pre-recession.


Breast augmentation (otherwise known as ‘boob jobs’) remained the most popular procedure overall. Denis Campbell writes today:



Demand [for cosmetic surgery] grew despite the scandal over potentially hazardous PIP breast implants and grew by levels unseen since before the recession began in 2008.


Breast enlargement remains the most popular procedure, with 11,135 augmentations performed in 2013 – up 13% year-on-year – according to figures collected by the British Association of Aesthetic Plastic Surgeons (BAAPS).



But the biggest increase on the year was for liposuction. A total of 4,326 liposuction procedures were performed last year – an increase of 41% on the year. It was the sixth most popular procedure among women and the fourth most popular among men.


The Baaps credit the rise in liposuction with a possible backlash against non-surgical treatments for body contouring, claiming that patients may have found these “less effective than advertised.” Rajiv Grover, consultant plastic surgeon and president of the Bapps said:



The continued double digit rise of cosmetic surgery underlines the fact that whether it is breast augmentation or antiageing procedures like facelifting the public are choosing tried and tested surgical methods rather than the magical-sounding quick fixes that fail to deliver promised results.



The Baaps data does not include non-surgical “lunchtime” plastic procedures, such as botox injections.


According to the review of the regulation of cosmetic interventions by the Department of Health in 2013, the value of UK cosmetic procedures was worth £2.3bn in 2010 and is estimated to rise to £3.6bn by 2015. The report also stated that non-surgical procedures account for nine out of ten procedures and 75% of the market value.


Although the Baaps figures only include surgical procedures, these still provide an interesting insight into cosmetic surgery trends. We’ve picked out some of the key numbers from its 2013 audit below.


Women



In the UK, women accounted for 90.5% of all cosmetic procedures in 2013 with a total of 45,365 procedures.


Breast augmentation was the most popular with 11,123 surgical procedures carried out in 2013 – a rise of 13% on the previous year. Blepharoplasty (eyelid ops) were the second most popular cosmetic procedure followed by face or neck lifts in third place.


Liposuction procedures saw the biggest increase – 3,772 procedures were performed in 2013 (an increase of 43% since 2012). Although none of the top ten surgical procedures for women recorded a decrease, some did see a slight decline in popularity; abdominoplasty dropped from sixth most popular in 2012 to seventh in 2013 and fat transfer procedures have dropped from seventh place to eighth.


Men



Men had 9.5% of all cosmetic procedures in 2013 with a total of 4,757 in total – a rise of 16% on 2012.


Rhinoplasty was the most popular with 1,037 surgical procedures carried out last year. Eyelid ops were the second most popular procedure for men in 2013, followed by breast reduction.


Liposuction procedures saw the biggest rise with a 28% increase on 2012. 554 men opted for liposuction last year according to the Bapps data. Although none of the top ten surgical procedures for men saw a decrease in numbers, otoplasty (ear correction) dropped from fourth most popular procedure for more men to fifth.


The downloadable spreadsheet has the Bapps data going back to 2008.
































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































Plastic surgery statistics, UK


Source: Baaps




Type of procedure




Sex




2008




2009




2010




2011




2012




2013




Breast augmentation

Men & Women

8449

8565

9430

10015

9854

11135

Blepharoplasty (eyelid surgery)

Men & Women

5130

5443

5779

6057

6829

7808

Face/Neck Lift

Men & Women

4547

4241

4756

4968

5660

6380

Breast Reduction

Men & Women

3845

4703

4207

5291

4859

5476

Abdominoplasty (tummy tuck)

Men & Women

3638

3403

3147

3375

2989

3466

Liposuction

Men & Women

3249

3509

3369

3581

3071

4326

Rhinoplasty

Men & Women

3065

3836

4207

4518

4180

4878

Fat transfer

Men & Women
     
2551

2882

3302

Otoplasty (ear correction)

Men & Women

1260

1349

1114

1170

1066

1213

Brow lifts

Men & Women

1004

1433

1513

1543

1812

2138

ALL PROCEDURES

Men & Women

34187

36482

38274

43069

43172

50122

Breast augmentation

Women

8449

8537

9418

10003

9843

11123

Blepharoplasty (eyelid surgery)

Women

4520

4827

5127

5373

6071

6921

Face/Neck Lift

Women

4355

4005

4493

4700

5324

6016

Breast Reduction

Women

3522

4122

4218

4501

4217

4680

Abdominoplasty (tummy tuck)

Women

3526

3268

3039

3251

2882

3343

Liposuction

Women

2770

3010

2896

3070

2638

3772

Rhinoplasty

Women

2367

2959

3214

3475

3228

3841

Fat transfer

Women
     
2331

2641

3037

Otoplasty (ear correction)

Women

752

807

618

649

563

670

Brow lifts

Women

932

1324

1390

1418

1663

1962

ALL PROCEDURES

Women

31183

32859

34413

38771

39070

45365

Breast augmentation

Men

0

28

0

12

11

12

Blepharoplasty (eyelid surgery)

Men

610

616

652

684

758

887

Face/Neck Lift

Men

192

236

263

268

306

364

Breast Reduction

Men

323

581

741

790

642

796

Abdominoplasty (tummy tuck)

Men

112

135

108

124

107

123

Liposuction

Men

479

499

473

511

433

554

Rhinoplasty

Men

698

877

993

1043

952

1037

Fat transfer

Men
     
220

241

265

Otoplasty (ear correction)

Men

508

542

496

521

503

543

Brow lifts

Men

72

109

123

125

149

176

Other

Men

10

0

12
     

ALL PROCEDURES

Men

3004

3623

3861

4298

4102

4757


Download the data


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Uk plastic surgical treatment statistics 2013: which are the most well-liked?

9 Ocak 2014 Perşembe

Nations with highest and lowest lifestyle expectancies for individuals born in 2013 charted

The United Kingdom has a existence expectancy of 80, putting it in 15th spot within Europe.


Europe has 22 countries with a daily life expectancy of much more than 80 years outdated, with San Marino, Andorra, Switzerland and Italy ranking the highest.


In Asia Taiwan, Jordan, Israel, Hong Kong, Singapore, Japan and Macau all have lifestyle expectancies more than the age of 80.


Nevertheless there are also 13 nations where the lifestyle expectancy is in the 60s, and Afghanistan has a daily life expectancy of only 50.


In North Korea folks born in 2013 can count on to dwell to 69 which is 6 years higher than in Cambodia or Laos.


The vast majority of countries in the Americas have a daily life expectancy in the 70s, with the United States falling behind six other countries including Bermuda and Canada with a lifestyle expectancy of 79.


Africa has an regular lifestyle expectancy of only 60 with numerous nations possessing life expectancies in their 50s which includes Uganda (54) and Nigeria (52).


Those born in South Africa last 12 months can expect to live to only 49 in accordance to the visualisation.


It also is made up of a timeline of how life expectancy has altered throughout background.


In the Neolithic Era era daily life expectancy was only twenty.


The visualisation was created by visual journalist Marcelo Duhalde who mentioned he desired to create a “waterfall” impact.


The countries nearer the black abyss have a decrease existence expectancy than the ones further away from it.


The information was compiled from the CIA’s Planet Factbook and the Encyclopedia Britannica



Nations with highest and lowest lifestyle expectancies for individuals born in 2013 charted

3 Ocak 2014 Cuma

The FDA Approvals Of 2013: A Watershed?

Santa Claus had no last-minute approvals in his sack, and we ended the 12 months with 27 new drugs (Exhibit 1.). This is a important drop from the 37 we had last yr, and a disappointment to many who had hoped that final year’s surge would be sustained. [Note: this tally excludes three imaging agents, but adds back three biologicals authorized by CBER: Rixubis (nonacog gamma), recombinant aspect IX for hemophilia B NovoEight (turoctocog alfa), recombinant factor VIII for hemophilia A and FluBlok, recombinant flu vaccine.]


Collectively, Massive Pharma bagged 14 registrations (52%), up from 12 last 12 months. This is the very first time since 2004 that it has grabbed a majority of approvals. But success was uneven, rewarding only 6 out of 13 companies in that group. GSK and J&ampJ led the pack with five and three registrations respectively! (Exhibit 2).  If one seems to be back more at the final 5 years, one particular can see a fair degree of consistency in between the figures for 2012 and for the 2009-2013 period. This suggests that the concentration of approvals on half of Big Pharma may possibly reflect these companies’ capability to innovate rather than fortunate fluctuations.


10 drugs (37%) targeted novel modes of action, which is slightly down from the final two many years (46% and 48%). Only six medicines (22%) had been biologicals, also down from 2012 (thirty%). Four drugs (15%) received priority evaluations vs. 27% the year before.


Across therapeutic regions, oncology dominates with eight approvals, reflecting the wave of innovation that is benefiting this group. Anti-infectives come in second with 5 approvals, such as four antivirals. CNS, an location that has struggled with a string of clinical failures, is down to 3 approvals  (Exhibit three).



Discussion


General, 2013 was great or great for half of large pharma, and forgettable for the rest. Is this the beginning of a split in the group that has prolonged dominated the business? Some businesses may possibly counter that approval statistics is a lagging indicator that reflects previous performance and not the promise of their pipelines. If one particular seems at FDA’s Breakthrough Designations, nonetheless, which is a top indicator of pipeline good quality, they have a tendency to display the identical picture, and cluster close to the companies that have been most successful (Exhibit two). Success looks to beget achievement, which suggests that today’s winners could also be tomorrow’s winners.


One thing stays worrisome: eleven new medicines per 12 months — the common large pharma output for the last 5 many years — is not sufficient to assistance these companies’ $ 370 billion of recent product sales, specifically considering that only three or four will grow to be blockbusters. The giddy guarantees to deliver 2 medication per 12 months consistently have not materialized, and there is no indication that they will. Only J&ampJ has achieved this outstanding degree of performance in excess of the final five years.


If one examines the information for the complete class of 2013, it appears that the conventional distinction in between the historic “Big Pharma” and the rest — usually called “Small Pharma” for ease — is receiving blurred. 4 “Small Pharma” firms — Gilead, Novo, Celgene, and Biogen Idec — with industry caps ranging from $ 66 bn to $ 115 bn, have really outgrown the smaller “Big Pharma”. Interestingly, three of them had been created in the 1980s, and thrive on R&ampD budgets that are typically much less than half those witnessed in huge pharma.  Are they the future of Big Pharma?


Whilst we may see new members joining the elite Big Pharma club, the romantic relationship among the two groups is really turning into much more symbiotic than aggressive. Only 8 of the 27 medicines accredited final 12 months have been found by the companies that registered them. Amongst Massive Pharma, the ratio is three out of 14 (21%), and in all situations the innovation that was in-licensed came from a Little Pharma company.


This raises exciting questions about the sourcing of innovation. If considerably of it is to be found outdoors corporate walls, a single might anticipate the organizations that are very best at connecting with the daring thinkers from startups and academia to fare better. This outreach capability is undoubtedly a power of J&ampJ’s Innovation Centers  and Janssen Labs, and other firms are experimenting with related approaches, such as Bayer’s CoLaborator, Merck’s Calibr, Pfizer’s CTIs, Sanofi’s Innovation difficulties, and GSK’s open innovation labs and Discovery Quickly Track Competitors.


Pharmaceutical innovation has come a lengthy way because the canine days of 6 sigma, and the spread of innovation-friendly initiatives across the market is encouraging. But, there continue to be considerable issues — this kind of as the declining peak income of new medicines, and excessive charges —  but the success of the organizations that led the class of 2013 must be a signal of hope to the rest of the market. Firms that have worked hardest at transforming themselves are obtaining outcomes. Let’s hope that a lot more of them will be recognized in 2014.


FDA_Exhibit 2



The FDA Approvals Of 2013: A Watershed?

31 Aralık 2013 Salı

The Apothecary"s 2013 Year In Evaluation: Americans Care Most About Obamacare"s Steep Premium Hikes

2012 was a Presidential election year, in which health care policy was front-and-center. We figured 2013 would revert back to normal, and we at The Apothecary wouldn’t match our 2012 traffic. Boy, were we wrong. As Obamacare moved from theory to reality, Americans were looking for real-world information on how the law would affect them. And you ended up finding us, smashing all of our previous traffic records in the process. As The Apothecary moves to its new home, here’s a look back at our top 20 articles of the year, and our thoughts for the future.


Surging traffic driven by Obamacare’s chaotic rollout


In 2012, we had a record year for traffic at The Apothecary, with approximately 2 million unique visitors. (The most widely read article, clocking in at 98,339 views, was “How Obamacare Dramatically Increases The Cost Of Insurance For Young Workers,” a piece which continues to have relevance today.)


In 2013, we exceeded ten million unique visitors, with approximately 11 million total visitors and 14 million page views. The largest driver of traffic to The Apothecary was Yahoo, followed by Google, Facebook, Drudge, and Twitter. Yahoo and Facebook, in particular, surged in importance compared to 2012, as more and more people shared articles they liked with their friends on social networks.


Our best month was October—the chaotic first month of Obamacare’s rollout—in which The Apothecary reached 2.2 million unique visitors, 2.4 million total visitors, and 3.5 million page views. In 2012, not one Apothecary article exceeded 100,000 page views. In 2013, more than 30 did. Two broke a million.


So much of our success is due to the talented people at Forbes, led by Lewis D’Vorkin, who built this platform from the ground up. If you want to understand the future of digital journalism, read Lewis’ blog. His team of techies work day in and day out to make sure that Forbes is taking advantage of every tool out there, so that writers like us can reach as many readers as possible.


The Apothecary’s top 20: Thanks, Obamacare!


Here are our 20 most widely-read articles of 2013, with traffic stats as of this morning. 19 of the 20 had to do with the Affordable Care Act.


1. Rate Shock: In California, Obamacare To Increase Individual Health Insurance Premiums By 64-146% (1,494,891 views). California was the first state to report what health insurance premiums would look like under Obamacare. The state spun the numbers to make them look like they were lower than expected—a spin that was uncritically repeated by the White House, Paul Krugman, and progressives on down the line. In this article, I took my own look at the new premiums, and came to the opposite conclusion: Healthy Californians who shop for coverage on their own will see drastic premium hikes.


The piece set a Forbes record for fastest article to one million page views.


2. Obamacare’s Website Is Crashing Because It Doesn’t Want You To Know How Costly Its Plans Are (1,385,035 views). In early October, Healthcare.gov gained the title of Worst Website Rollout in World History. But what people hadn’t yet appreciated was that a big part of the reason why the rollout got botched was political. The Obama administration was so worried that Americans would be upset about rate shock under Obamacare, that it initially required users to enter all sorts of personal information before browsing plans. This crashed the back-end servers.


3. Obamacare Will Increase Health Spending By $ 7,450 For A Typical Family of Four (632,705 views). Back in 2008, Senator Obama and his team of Harvard health economists promised that his health plan would save “$ 2,500 per family per year.” They arrived at this estimate by projecting how much money Obamacare would save, and dividing by the number of families in America. In September, when Chris Conover replicated Obama’s analysis, and found that Obamacare would increase the average family’s health spending by $ 7,450, heads exploded across the left.


4. Obama To Labor Unions With Multi-Employer Health Plans: Drop Dead (602,918 views). One of the most fascinating stories of 2013—and one that Apothecary readers especially responded to—was the increasing discomfort of labor unions with Obamacare. At the AFL-CIO quadrennial convention in September, unions passed a resolution roundly criticizing the law (see #9 below). Obama responded by explaining that a key change in the law that unions were seeking couldn’t be altered by executive fiat.


5. Yet Another White House Obamacare Delay: Out-Of-Pocket Caps Waived Until 2015 (541,216 views). Of all the ways in which the White House unilaterally delayed the implementation of Obamacare, this August delay—of the law’s caps on out-of-pocket health plan expenses—generated the most traffic.


6. Double Down: Obamacare Will Increase Avg. Individual-Market Insurance Premiums By 99% For Men, 62% For Women (535,733 views). Days before the official October 1 launch of Obamacare’s insurance exchanges, the Department of Health and Human Services released a memo claiming that premiums under Obamacare would be “lower than originally expected.” I analyzed their data with my colleagues at the Manhattan Institute and came to a different conclusion.


7. Enrollment In Obamacare’s Federal Exchange, So Far, May Only Be In ‘Single Digits’ (507,927 views). Given all of the hype, and all of the preparation, and all of the millions of people who visited Healthcare.gov on its first day of operation, it turned out that less than ten people—ten—actually signed up for health insurance.


8. Government Takeover: White House Forces Obamacare Insurers To Cover Unpaid Patients At A Loss (468,731 views). The first article from December on this list details one of the most egregious examples of unilateral, extralegal activity by the White House: using Mafia-style pressure tactics to force insurers like Aetna, Humana, and Molina to eat the losses caused by Obamacare’s bungled insurance exchanges.


9. Labor Unions: Obamacare Will ‘Shatter’ Our Health Benefits, Cause ‘Nightmare Scenarios’ (415,797 views). In July, three of the nation’s most prominent labor leaders—Jimmy Hoffa, Joe Hanen, and D. Taylor, fired off a letter to Harry Reid, complaining that Obamacare would “shatter not only our hard-earned health benefits, but destroy the foundation of the 40 hour work week that is the backbone of the American middle class.”


10. On Labor Day 2013, Welfare Pays More Than Minimum-Wage Work In 35 States (371,234 views). The only non-Obamacare article on the list. In August, Cato Institute scholars Michael Tanner and Charles Hughes published a study estimating that federal welfare programs—in particular, cash welfare, food stamps, Medicaid, and housing assistance—paid out so much that many welfare recipients have no incentive to seek work. I proposed a solution employed in Sweden: taxing welfare benefits so they are taken into account for income eligibility purposes.


11. Not Qualified For Obamacare’s Subsidies? Just Lie — Govt. To Use ‘Honor System’ Without Verifying Your Eligibility (347,814 views). One of the biggest concerns about Obamacare—one that will become an even larger story in 2014 and 2015—is how easy it will be to game the system and gain taxpayer-funded subsidies that you’re not actually eligible for. A related story will be how the IRS claws back subsidies from well-intentioned people who made mistakes on their application, or whose life circumstances have changed.


12. Democrats’ New Argument: It’s A Good Thing That Obamacare Doubles Individual Health Insurance Premiums (286,162 views). In response to my piece on rate shock in California, some progressive columnists argued that rate shock was a good thing, because it offered important “consumer protections” and ensured that sick people would be charged no more than healthy people for the same insurance plan. I replied that this was a more intellectually honest argument than pretending that rate shock doesn’t exist.


After the Washington Post’s Ezra Klein went back and forth a few times on this topic, we sat down in his offices for a 45-minute wonk fest on the ins and outs of Obamacare’s new insurance regime. We joked at the time that our discussion would be so boring that no one would watch it. But a week doesn’t go by when someone doesn’t come up to me thanking us for our wide-ranging, substantive discussion.


13. 49-State Analysis: Obamacare To Increase Individual-Market Premiums By Average Of 41% (281,754 views). Our definitive analysis of health insurance premiums under Obamacare, relative to what they were in pre-Obamacare 2013. The accompanying interactive map, where you can learn about premiums and subsidies for men and women in your age range, itself generated over 300,000 page views.


14. Obama Officials In 2010: 93 Million Americans Will Be Unable To Keep Their Health Plans Under Obamacare (232,974 views). As President Obama’s “if you like your plan, you can keep your plan” promise was exposed as untruthful, the White House tried to rebound by claiming that “only 5 percent” of Americans were affected by insurance plan cancellations. But it turned out that back in 2010, the Obama administration published in the Federal Register an estimate that the majority of people with employer-sponsored coverage—tens of millions—would also have their old plans rendered illegal.


15. Ohio Dept. Of Insurance: Obamacare To Increase Individual-Market Health Premiums By 88 Percent (232,656 views). In June, Ohio Lt. Gov. Mary Taylor published an analysis estimating that premiums under Obamacare in Ohio would be 88 percent higher than those in 2013. Our own analysis (see #13 above) found that rates would decrease for most Ohioans under the law, a fact that frustrated conservatives in the Buckeye State. (Sorry, guys.) As the Washington Post’s Glenn Kessler explained, Some of the difference can be explained by the fact that our analysis accounts for people in the old market who paid higher rates due to pre-existing conditions. In addition, some differences in our methodology rewarded Ohio for boasting a broad diversity of health plans under the Obamacare exchange.


16. The Obamacare Exchange Scorecard: Around 100,000 Enrollees And Five Million Cancellations (183,224 views). One of the most remarkable statistics about Obamacare, as we enter the new year, is that there will actually be fewer people with health insurance on January 1, 2014 than there were the year before.


17. The New York Times Tries—And Fails—To Protect Obamacare From Health Insurance ‘Rate Shock’ (168,090 views). In New York, under Obamacare, rates will fall from previous levels. The White House, and its friends at the New York Times, trumpeted this news in order to claim that “Obamacare is working.” But the Times piece had two fatal flaws: (1) it ignored the fact that New York’s previous health insurance market was unaffordable due to Obamacare-like regulations, making New York’s situation non-generalizable to the rest of the country; and (2) it ignored wide intrastate variation, resulting in New York City experiencing rate decreases, while upstate New York would face hikes.


18. Utter Chaos: White House Exempts Millions From Obamacare’s Insurance Mandate, ‘Unaffordable’ Exchanges (163,514 views). The most recent piece on the list—published on December 20—reflects on the most significant executive-branch alteration to Obamacare to date: its gutting of the law’s individual mandate for anyone who faced cancellation of their old insurance plan in the non-group market. Will the controversial mandate survive another year? Time will tell.


19. After Insurance Industry Pow-Wow, White House Delays Obamacare’s Individual Mandate By Six Weeks (160,062 views). Back in October, the administration delayed the individual mandate for everyone by six weeks, because of all the problems with the Healthcare.gov website and the state-based exchanges.


20. Democratic Congressman: ‘Not Fair’ To Subject Congress To Obamacare Just Like Everyone Else (153,184 views). Apothecary readers were absorbed by the so-called “Congressional exemption” in Obamacare. The law included a hastily-drafted provision that required members of Congress and their staffs to enroll in Obamacare’s exchanges. The upshot of the way the provision was written was that these individuals faced meaningful hikes in their health-insurance expenses. In this particular article, Robert Book discusses comments from Connecticut Democrat John Larson, who complained that it “is simply not fair” that this provision was in the law.


Three lessons drawn by Chris Conover


Apothecary contributor Chris Conover, a professor at Duke and an adjunct fellow at the American Enterprise Institute, says that we saw in 2013 “a pyramiding cascade of delays, followed by a tsunami of very predictable policy cancellations, and ending with a disastrous rollout of the exchanges that exceeded the worst fears and predictions of most Obamacare critics.” Other than that, Chris, how was the play?


“Three lessons,” Chris says, “seem paramount.” They are:




  • Haste makes waste.  While Congress debated health reform for over a year prior to passage, the Hail Mary pass process used to engineer final passage in the aftermath of Scott Brown’s victory in Massachusetts produced a half-baked and too-often ncoherent muddle.  This ultimately may culminate in a crippling court decision in early 2014 that will enforce the letter of the law (rather than mystically divine congressional intent) by prohibiting the payment of premium subsidies for covered obtained through federally-run exchanges.  The resultant chaos will make the end of 2013 look like a picnic.  This outcome was entirely avoidable had Congress adopted a more deliberative process in early 2010 instead of trying to cram through a massive bill on a party line vote.


  • Power corrupts. The bill as passed handed extraordinary and far-reaching powers to Secretary Sebelius. While we had earlier seen abuses of her power in 2010 with the arm-twisting of health insurers to adopt policies regarding children with pre-existing conditions that went well beyond the letter of the law, such abuses reached full flower in 2013.  The one-year delay of the employer mandate–however sensibly from a pure policy perspective–was just one stark illustration of the willingness of this president and his minions to circumvent whatever constitutional or statutory constraints may stand in the way of getting his signature domestic policy achievement in place in whatever fashion maximizes his party’s political advantages. Indeed, Obamacare accounts for fully half of the top 10 violations of constitutional authority compiled by legal scholar Ilya Shapiro.


  • Don’t expect private sector performance from public agencies.  Inside accounts of the disastrous rollout of the exchanges—with state exchanges generally performing only modestly better than the federally-run exchanges—were replete with instances in which political calculations trumped sensible policy and/or business choices.  Prudence counseled delay whereas politics dictated the opposite.  Efforts by Congress to perform its proper role in monitoring and oversight likewise were stymied by politically-motivated efforts to stonewall the ugly truth of what was likely to transpire on October 1. To this day, the administration continues to be less than forthcoming about the numbers and characteristics of who has enrolled on the exchanges and more importantly, how many are actually paying customers.  A crew this inept in handling an exchange that next year was only expected to provide coverage to less than 3% of Americans surely cannot be credibly viewed as prepared to manage a single payer health care system for all Americans. Single payer health care never was a good idea to begin with:  the egregiously inept rollout of the Obamacare exchanges has now handed proponents of such a system a nearly impossible rhetorical task. In the face of such abysmal real world performance by the federal government, what possible assurance can proponents possibly provide that it could manage an entire health care system any better?


My new role as Forbes Opinion Editor


2013 was also an interesting year for me personally. I published my first book, How Medicaid Fails The Poor, thanks to Roger Kimball and his team at Encounter Books. And, as some of you may know, starting on January 1, I’m taking on a new role as Opinion Editor at Forbes.


This will mean big changes for The Apothecary in the new year. First off, the blog will move from Forbes’ Business channel to its Opinion channel. Second, we’ll be merging The Apothecary and its outstanding team—Josh Archambault, Robert Book, Chris Conover, Nicole Fisher, John R. Graham, Jeet Guram, and Paul Howard—with the Opinion channel’s fleet of prominent health-care writers, including Scott Atlas, John Goodman, Paul Hsieh, Merrill Matthews, and Sally Pipes.


This means that the Forbes health policy coverage will be bigger and better than ever before. And we’ll be adding new writers as well. Overall, my mandate is to bring between 75 and 100 new contributors to Forbes Opinion, across all subject areas.


Follow us on Twitter and Facebook to stay abreast of these developments. 2014 figures to be another pivotal year for Obamacare, as the law finally goes into full operation, and remains a key factor in the 2014 mid-term elections. See you then and Happy New Year!


*    *    *


Avik’s new book, How Medicaid Fails the Poor, is now available in paperback, Kindle, and iBooks versions.


Follow @Avik on Twitter, Google+, and YouTube, and The Apothecary on Facebook.


Or, sign up to receive a weekly e-mail digest of articles from The Apothecary.


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The Apothecary"s 2013 Year In Evaluation: Americans Care Most About Obamacare"s Steep Premium Hikes

30 Aralık 2013 Pazartesi

Autism 2013: Communication Breakdown


Out of Order Not Working Properly Elevator Sign

Photo credit: stevendepolo




A minor more than a year ago, I wrote in this room about what autistic people want from science. The listing consisted of five products that addressed both deficits relevant to autism–sensory interventions and communication assistance–and quality-of-life aspects, like schooling, social attitudes about autistic folks, and housing and employment problems. As I noted in that submit:



What you won’t see on this listing are wishes for cure or prevention or identifying a cause, places where most autism research focuses. Though some members of the autistic community who did not respond in this (unscientific) survey have expressed a want for cure, the concepts of cure and prevention bother several autistic people. For these autistics, targeting cure and prevention implies that they need to be prevented or cured, rather than appreciated and acknowledged for what they have to contribute, speaking or not, as element of the neurological diversity of the human species.



Likely the ideal-recognized autism organization in the United States is Autism Speaks. They’ve not too long ago come underneath intense fire from several in the autism local community since of their institutional insistence on characterizing autism as a universal personal and parental burden — a monster out to steal kids and damage parental dreams — rather of as the developmental, neurobiological problem it is, one particular with a massive assortment of possible emergent properties since, nicely, packs of neurons and all that. Naturally, offered the current negativity about their organization from all corners of the autism local community, 1 might expect or at least hope for some evidence of contrition or the proffering of a freshly snapped olive branch.


However their ultimate salvos of the year present no hints of this kind of peacemaking. They’ve launched their record of 2013′s “Top Ten Advances in Autism Research,” established by their “science workers and scientific advisory committee.” The list provides us research involving early detection, prevention, genetics, “rare but genuine optimal outcomes,” epigenetics, a correlational discovering of GI concerns and autism that didn’t appear to inform us anything at all we did not currently know, and the inevitable mouse study that showed no results relevant to autism and social behaviors but may well hold prospective for OCD research. It is not surprising to me, but very little on this checklist comes shut to reflecting study that autistic men and women would like to see come into concentrate. It is not that this kind of function doesn’t exist. It does. It just didn’t make the list.


Ok, so it’s science. Genetics and epigenetics et al. constitute hot things, what qualifies as “sexy” in science. Jobs, skills of every day living, education, quality of life? About as sexy as dishwashing. So what about just a list of what autistic individuals may have to say? How did Autism Speaks do with that? Here’s their record of the “10 Inspiring and Informative Blogs of 2013.” What they really mean is blog posts, and  their only measure of what’s informative and inspiring is … page hits (a.k.a. “popularity”). And the blog posts have been all hosted at Autism Speaks. Naturally, that means that autistic representation ran a minor quick, in spite of their promise that the listing consists of “Autism Speaks staff, mothers and fathers and advocates on the specturm (sic)” (underscore mine). As in, only one particular of the 10 featured posts seems to have been written by an autistic individual, a person who now occurs to not be significantly of a fan of Autism Speaks, both.


Selecting posts based on recognition is a cop-out, of program, a way to avoid ownership of identifying high quality and relevance. If I have been to use only that criterion for my posts, this 1 would be the top publish at The Science Consumer for 2013 (sigh). Rather than go that route, however, I’ll choose my top five posts from this room using a different criterion: How critical I want folks would find them. Here they are.



  1. Autistic Individuals Are More Likely To Keep Jobs When …

  2. Are Autism, Gut, GFCF, And Nervousness Connected?

  3. Is Being Female Protective Against Autism?

  4. If A Parent Murders An Autistic Child, Who Is To Blame?

  5. Exactly where Are All Of The Older Autistic Men and women?


Satisfied new yr. Here’s hoping the new 12 months brings some amelioration of the actual deficit of the autism community: a failure to communicate … and to pay attention. Isn’t it time?



Autism 2013: Communication Breakdown

2013, 12 months of the coalition climbdown | Alex Andreou

Nick Clegg

‘A new record in November three U-turns in 3 days … Given that this last a single is a U-flip on a previous U-flip, experts disagree as to no matter whether an completely new political manoeuvre demands to be established – the full double spin.’ Nick Clegg. Photograph: Carl De Souza/AFP/Getty Photographs




January: the horsemeat hash heats up


The coalition parties renew their vows in the now infamous “Ronseal” speech then quickly begin bickering once again. But January was truly all about food. There is horsemeat in your burger – despite the fact that most likely not the posh variety George Osborne buys. The government categorically denied that this had something to do with budget cuts and deregulation. A National Audit Workplace report in October concluded it was everything to do with price range cuts and deregulation. Meanwhile, minister for public wellness Anna Soubry reckons she can inform poor individuals by their bodyweight. Also, she is shocked poor people don’t have dining tables. Oh and eating lunch at your desk is disgusting.


February: Gove backtracks on the baccy


Possessing had to abandon his strategies for a return to O-ranges in September 2012, Michael Gove is forced into an even a lot more humiliating retreat over his proposed English baccalaureates. He nevertheless vows to reform GCSEs radically he just does not know precisely how. The auction for the sale of 4G rights yields £1.2bn significantly less than Osborne had anticipated. Only dilemma is that, in an act of brilliant political manoeuvring, Osborne has currently used the cash. The loss of Britain’s AAA rating a day later hardly came as a shock, except to Osborne, to whom most issues come as a surprise. Meanwhile, in the Eastleigh byelection, the Tories’ 11th target seat, they come third behind Ukip. Cue considerably immigrant bashing by all.


March: help is supplied to the housing bubble


Jeremy Hunt is forced to rewrite regulations opening up the NHS to even more private supplier involvement four weeks prior to they come into impact. Iain Duncan Smith succumbs to pressure and announces a host of exemptions from the bedroom tax 3 weeks prior to it is due to come into force. The chancellor (fresh from defending bankers’ bonuses in Brussels) delivers a price range which hides disappointing economic figures behind Aid to Acquire schemes although denying they might fuel a housing bubble. By November, the Financial institution of England will act to rein in such schemes amid fears they may well fuel a housing bubble.


April: IDS’s budgeting bunkum blows up


On April Fools’ Day, most of the coalition’s cuts consider full impact. Osborne reckons Mick Philpott, convicted that week, is an intriguing situation examine for the state subsidising “lifestyles like that”. Duncan Smith reckons he could reside on £53 a week. When asked to demonstrate it, the quiet man goes really quiet. Then Margaret Thatcher dies and for a handful of weeks everything goes soft-focus and mournful. Parliament is recalled for a marathon session of tributes, much to the shock of the Speaker, who saw this kind of a recall as a reaction to national emergencies only.


May possibly: Ukip upsets the immigration cart


Ukip does really well in the nearby elections, to the detriment of all established events. The two coalition parties are left especially bruised by the experience. David Cameron reacts swiftly by inserting hard speak on welfare and immigration in the Queen’s speech, but his implacable backbenchers are not content and press ahead with a private members’ bill on an EU in-out referendum. The month ends as it began for the Tories – badly – with Patrick Mercer MP resigning right after being embroiled in a “income for concerns” scandal, brought to light by the BBC’s Panorama programme.


June: George hits the planet stage – as Jeffrey


George Osborne George Osborne – or is that Jeffrey? Photograph: Ray Tang/Rex


It is unveiled that a business managed by Conservative celebration chairman, Lord Feldman, gave thousands of pounds in donations to the celebration, while paying no corporation tax. Kay Sheldon, the Care High quality Commission whistleblower, accuses Andrew Lansley of threatening to sack her. Osborne tries to capture the planet stage by producing a huge presentation on tax avoidance at the G8 summit, but his plan is foiled by Barack Obama referring to him repeatedly as Jeffrey. Jeffrey ends the month with however another investing evaluation which clobbers welfare and council solutions, like a prepare to make the newly unemployed wait a week just before getting in a position to declare positive aspects.


July: cigarettes and alcohol slide


Much more coalition wheeling and dealing, with Cameron forced to carry forward programs on tax incentives for married couples to avert nevertheless yet another backbench revolt, and the Lib Dems reportedly pushing for concessions on the tax-free of charge private allowance in return. G4S, one of the government’s important private partners in the privatisation of criminal justice services, faces a fraud investigation for allegedly overcharging. In want of a drink and a fag, the government scraps programs to introduce minimum pricing for alcohol and softens its perspective on cigarette packaging, amid allegations concerning Lynton Crosby’s romantic relationship with tobacco companies.


August: Cameron kicks up a stink over Syria


The month is dominated by the Syrian crisis and ends with the biggest blow to Cameron’s authority as prime minister. When parliament refuses to vote in favour of potential military action, the PM throws his toys out of the pram and rules out any this kind of action for great, even if conditions adjust, with large repercussions across the globe. This is a impetuous leader at his irritable worst.


September: every person will get thrilled about power


The month begins with two coalition U-turns in two days on introducing “lowest bidder wins” rules into legal aid contracts and controversial lobbying legislation which, charities claimed, would affect their capacity to campaign. It ends with, most likely, the single greatest headache for the government this 12 months – Ed Miliband’s announcement that he will freeze vitality costs ought to he be elected in 2015. What follows is a dazzling show of accusations that he is a conman, harebrained schemes in response, begging to the huge 6 providers behind the scenes, guidance to put on woolly jumpers and crackdowns made to deflect attention from the story that just will not go away.


October: the rules are broken, the rules are altered


Iain Duncan Smith Iain Duncan Smith ‘retroactively altered the rules’. Photograph: Anthony Devlin/PA Wire/Press Association Pictures


Royal Mail shares go on sale at what most commentators considered was the vastly undervalued cost of £3.thirty each and every. At the finish of December the price is nevertheless hovering approximately £2.4bn over the government valuation. Following judges choose that the state flouted its personal rules by forcing Cait Reilly to operate for Poundland, the Department for Operate and Pensions spends vast sums of power and income to battle the selection on appeal, before finally getting defeated in the supreme court. Alternatively of altering the offending carry out, Duncan Smith has currently retroactively transformed the guidelines. An honourable mention need to go to the environment secretary, Owen Paterson, who accuses badgers of “moving the goalposts” when the pilot cull does not yield the results expected.


November: U-turns are made on U-turns


A new record 3 U-turns in three days! These came at the end of the month on payday loans, with the government agreeing to cap the total cost after many years of resistance, proposed leverage ratios created to make banks financially far more secure and finally proposals on plain packaging of cigarettes getting miraculously revived. Given that this last 1 is a U-turn on a preceding U-turn, specialists disagree as to whether or not an totally new political manoeuvre wants to be established – the total double spin – but the degree of difficulty was undoubtedly high.


December: shuffling the statistics pays off


The chancellor delivers his autumn statement, in which, it turns out, issues are going much far better than we all thought. Having revised the forecast for 2013 from 2% down to one.two% last yr, then to .eight% in March, the chancellor was in a position to revise it back up to 1.four%. For this he was hailed a genius and named “Briton of The Year” by the Occasions. Cameron is criticised by the judge in the Grillo trial for saying he is in Staff Nigella. Getting regarded a adverse advertising campaign to persuade Bulgarians and Romanians that the Uk really is a horrid area earlier in the year, ministers make a decision that having Keith “do you adore this nation?” Vaz man the borders personally is a considerably more affordable and equally successful option.


Satisfied new 12 months, coalition!




2013, 12 months of the coalition climbdown | Alex Andreou

29 Aralık 2013 Pazar

The Prime Ten Brain Science And Psychology Research Of 2013


fMRI scanner in the basement of Green Hall

fMRI scanner at a neuroscience lab (Photo credit: Wikipedia)




This Best 10 record is not meant to be exhaustive (offered how numerous scientific studies are published each 12 months, it in no way could be), but it’s a sturdy sampling of extraordinary work being performed all around the world, moving us closer to solving some very vexing puzzles about brains and behavior.


1. How the Brain Requires Out Its Trash While We Rest


In 2013, layers had been peeled back from two interrelated mysteries: the function of sleep, and how the brain removes its waste byproducts.


Although it is been recognized for some time that the brain does not right use the body’s lymphatic program (our body-broad filtering and waste elimination system) to dump its toxic waste, the mechanism that it does use wasn’t recognized till 2012. The research team that produced this discovery was led by University of Rochester neurosurgeon, Maiken Nedergaard, who dubbed the brain’s waste-removal mechanism the “glymphatic program.”


The glymphatic method relies on cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) to flush out neurotoxins by means of pathways separate from the lymphatic technique. Between the harmful toxins that are flushed is beta amyloid, a protein that clumps in the brains of Alzheimer’s sufferers.


In 2013, Nedergaard’s research staff followed up on this discovery by identifying “hidden caves” that open in the brain whilst we rest, enabling cerebrospinal fluid to flush out neurotoxins by means of the spinal column.


The implications of this analysis can’t be overstated:  failing to get sufficient rest isn’t just a negative idea for all of the causes we already know, but over time it could also lead to neurological disorders like Alzheimer’s.  If the study’s findings are correct, our brains need to have sleep to get rid of waste byproducts like amyloid beta that eventually grow to be brain killers.


The research was published in the journal, Science.


two. To Your Brain, Me is We


A 2013 study from University of Virginia researchers supports a discovering that’s been gaining science-fueled momentum in current many years: the human brain is wired to connect with other people so strongly that it experiences what they knowledge as if it is happening to us.


The researchers had participants undergo fMRI brain scans although threatening to give them electrical shocks, or to give shocks to a stranger or a buddy.  Results showed that areas of the brain responsible for threat response – the anterior insula, putamen and supramarginal gyrus – grew to become energetic beneath risk of shock to the self that significantly was expected.


When researchers threatened to shock a stranger, people identical brain areas showed virtually no action. But when they threatened to shock a pal, the brain areas showed exercise virtually identical to that displayed when the participant was threatened.


“The correlation between self and buddy was remarkably related,” mentioned James Coan, a psychology professor in U.Va.’s College of Arts &amp Sciences who co-authored the examine. “The obtaining shows the brain’s impressive capability to model self to other people that individuals near to us become a component of ourselves, and that is not just metaphor or poetry, it’s extremely genuine.”


The study was published in the journal, Social Cognitive and Affective Neuroscience.


three. Your Brain Sees Even When You Really don’t


A 2013 study published in The Journal of Neuroscience suggests that the brain can “see” a person else’s actions even when the capacity to visually see has been destroyed.


Cortical blindness refers to the loss of vision that happens when the main visual cortex no longer functions, usually as the end result of damage. There’s no longer an ability to visually perceive the globe in the sense with which we’re most acquainted (even even though the eyes nevertheless technically operate), but that does not necessarily mean the brain no longer sees.


In this research a patient with full cortical blindness could even now react to one more person’s gaze. Whilst in an fMRI machine, the patient was exposed to gazes directed at him and gazes directed away from him. On the face of it, neither must matter. His visual cortex couldn’t perceive any kind of gaze. But the brain scan indicated that yet another element of his brain undoubtedly could.


The patient’s amygdala, the brain spot related with figuring out regardless of whether external stimuli is a risk, showed a distinctly distinct activation pattern when the gaze was directed at the patient than when directed away from him.



The Prime Ten Brain Science And Psychology Research Of 2013

The Most Science Fictional News Stories of 2013 In Images

As libertarian law pupil Cody Wilson demonstrated in May possibly, it’s attainable to 3D print an whole, doing work firearm. His level: 3D printing is generating all physical objects–even unsafe weapons–into downloadable info, blurring the line amongst the first amendment’s safety of speech and the second amendment’s proper to bear arms.



The Most Science Fictional News Stories of 2013 In Images