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BMA Scotland Chairman Urges MSPs Not To Play Politics With Public Health
Speaking at the Annual Conference of the British Medical Association (BMA), Dr Peter Terry, chairman of the BMA Scotland urged MSPs to put party politics aside and stand together to improve health. He also underlined the need for legislation on the price of alcohol as an effective measure to tackle Scotland"s drink problem.
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Brain Irradiation In Lung Cancer
A national Radiation Therapy Oncology Group (RTOG) study led by a Medical College of Wisconsin Cancer Center physician at Froedtert Hospital in Milwaukee has found that a course of radiation therapy to the brain after treatment for locally advanced non-small cell lung cancer reduced the risk of metastases to the brain within the first year after treatment. The study was presented at the American Society of Clinical Oncology annual meeting in Orlando, June 1.
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World Health Organization Publishes First Indoor Air Quality Guidelines On Dampness And Mould
WHO publishes its first guidelines on indoor air quality, addressing dampness and mould (WHO guidelines on indoor air quality: dampness and mould. Copenhagen, WHO Regional Office for Europe, 2009 (See Here).
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Study Questions Whether Ontario's Primary Health Care Reforms Serve The Sick And Poor

Ontario has invested millions of dollars into the healthcare system in response to a serious doctor shortage. But despite improvements in primary care, a study out of the Institute for Clinical Evaluative Sciences (ICES) has found Ontario"s chronically sick and poor are the least likely to benefit from the investments. In response to a serious doctor shortage, Ontario has undertaken major investments in new models of care provided by family doctors and other health workers. The first two models that were widely available to Ontario"s doctors, the Family Health Network (FHN) and the Family Health Group (FHG) both have after-hours care requirements and incentives for a host of services including prevention, mental health care, smoking cessation and enhanced management of chronic diseases. The major difference between these models is that FHN doctors are paid mostly through an annual payment per registered patient, based on a person"s age and sex, called a capitation payment. Under this system, the doctor gets paid regardless of how many visits the patient makes. FHG doctors continue to be paid mostly through enhanced fee-for-service, a system that pays only when patients make a visit to a doctor. Compared with doctors who are paid per visit, doctors who are paid standard annual fees (FHN or the capitation group) had: * Enrolled healthier patients * Enrolled 30 per cent fewer new patients who didn"t previously have family doctors * Provided 32 per cent less after-hours care In addition, their patients had a 20 per cent higher rate of emergency department visits. "As far as we could tell, this situation was present before the doctors joined their groups and didn"t change as a result of capitation. This means that the capitation model attracted doctors with these kinds of practices. Both of the new models enrolled patients who were wealthier than average in their communities. While the capitation model provides an alternative to fee-for-service practice, its incentives may need to be altered so that its benefits can be made available to all Ontarians," says Dr. Rick Glazier, ICES Scientist and lead researcher. The study looked at 4,060 doctors with nearly 3 million patients between September, 2005 and August, 2006. Author affiliations: ICES (Glazier, Klein-Geltink, Kopp, Sibley); St. Michael"s Hospital Centre for Research on Inner City Health and Department of Family and Community Medicine (Glazier), the University of Toronto Department of Family and Community Medicine (Glazier) and Dalla Lana School of Public Health (Glazier), Ontario. The study "A population-based evaluation of large-scale primary care reform models" is in the May 25, 2009 issue of CMAJ. More detailed study findings on the ICES website:http:// www.ices.on.ca Deborah Creatura Institute for Clinical Evaluative Sciences


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