Health Highlights: Nov. 19, 2009

November 19, 2009 RSS Feed Print

  • Senate Introduces Health Reform Bill
  • Poll Shows Americans Support Malpractice Award Limits
  • Movie Theater Popcorn High In Calories and Fat: Study
  • Study Suggests Racial Bias in Kidney/Pancreas Transplants
  • Computer Simulation Mimics Cat Brain
  • Hyper-Resistant Bacteria Major Health Threat: Experts
  • Mini Pump Improves Heart Failure Patients' Survival: Study

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

Senate Introduces Health Reform Bill

The 10-year, $849-billion Senate health reform bill unveiled Wednesday night would require most Americans to have health insurance, provide subsidies to help low-income earners afford coverage, force insurance companies to accept all applicants, increase payroll taxes for the wealthy, and place a new tax on patients who have elective cosmetic surgery.

The bill -- which the Congressional Budget Office estimates suggest would reduce deficits by $127 over a decade -- would not require employers to offer coverage to workers. However, medium and large companies would have to pay a fee if the government had to subsidize their employees' insurance, the Associated Press reported.

The bill, which also proposes cuts in future Medicare spending, was hailed by Democrats and President Barack Obama.

"From Day One, our goal has been to enact legislation that offers stability and security to those who have insurance and affordable coverage to those who don't, and that lowers costs for families, businesses and governments across the country," said Obama, who added that the Senate bill "meets those principles."

But Republicans oppose the bill and vowed a tough fight.

"Higher premiums, tax increases and Medicare cuts to pay for more government. The American people know that is not reform," said Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky.

The bill needs 60 votes to move beyond a must-pass procedural requirement before it can be debated. That vote could take place this weekend, the AP reported.

The House recently passed a more expensive and liberal version of the health-care bill.

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Poll Shows Americans Support Malpractice Award Limits

A new survey finds that many Americans want Congress to put limits on medical malpractice lawsuit awards, which are a major factor in rising medical costs.

The Associated Press poll of 1,502 adults found that 54 percent support making it more difficult for people to sue doctors and hospitals for making mistakes, 32 percent are opposed, and the remainder are undecided or don't know.

Support for limits on malpractice lawsuits was expressed by 61 percent of Republican respondents, 47 percent of Democrats and 58 percent of independents.

According to the Congressional Budget Office, limits on malpractice awards could reduce the federal deficit by $54 billion over 10 years. That's because there'd be a decrease in the number of tests ordered by doctors caring for Medicare and Medicaid patients to protect themselves from lawsuits, the AP reported.

The survey found that 59 percent of respondents said they believe at least half of tests ordered by doctors are unnecessary and are prompted by fear of lawsuits.

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Movie Theater Popcorn High In Calories and Fat: Study

A medium popcorn and soda combo at a Regal movie theater has the same amount of calories as three McDonald's Quarter Pounders with 12 pats of butter, a new study shows.

The nonprofit Center for Science in the Public Interest found that the movie theater combo has 1,160 calories and three days (60 grams) worth of fat. A small popcorn has 670 calories -- equivalent to a Pizza Hut Personal Pepperoni Pan Pizza, CBS News reported.

Regal is the largest movie chain in the United States. Similar fat and calorie levels were found at AMC, the nation's second largest movie chain. The study appears in the December issue of Nutrition Action Healthletter.

"It's hard enough for Americans to maintain a healthy weight even when limiting their eating to breakfast, lunch and dinner," said CSPI senior nutritionist Jayne Hurley, CBS News reported. "Who realizes that they might be taking in a meal's worth of calories during a movie? Splitting a medium popcorn with two other people sounds like a reasonable thing to do, but who would think they're getting an entire day's worth of saturated fat?"

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