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Small Business: The Hunt For Affordable Health Insurance
"For entrepreneurs trying to start or run a business, the obstacles are huge. But few loom as large as one: health care," the Wall Street Journal reports. "At some businesses, in fact, health care is the highest expense after salaries - with devastating consequences. Owners must skimp on vital investments like marketing and research. Some can"t hire the people they want because top candidates demand premium coverage. Or they end up understaffed because of the high cost of insurance - and lose potential clients as a result. At the same time, to keep costs in check, countless companies are slashing coverage or dropping it entirely. Some are turning to freelancers or offshore workers instead of hiring full-timers and locals. And some would-be entrepreneurs find insurance so onerous that they"re not even starting a business in the first place."
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Osteotech Completes Enrollment For DuraTech(TM) BioRegeneration Matrix Clinical Trial
Osteotech, Inc. (Nasdaq: OSTE), a leader in the emerging field of biologic products for regenerative healing, announced that it has completed enrollment for the clinical trial of its DuraTech(TM) BioRegeneration Matrix. Based upon Osteotech"s proprietary HCT(TM) (human collagen technology) platform, DuraTech is used to repair dura mater (the tough, outermost membrane surrounding the brain and spinal cord) during cranial surgical procedures.
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General Practices Should Carry Out Majority Of Swine Flu Vaccinations
Australia"s general practices stand ready to work with Government to begin vaccinating vulnerable Australians against HINI (Swine Flu) as soon as a vaccine becomes available, the AMA said today.
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Underweight And Very Severely Obese Patients At Risk Following Liver Transplantation

A recent study by doctors at the University of Washington explained that patients who are significantly underweight or very severely obese prior to liver transplantation are at increased risk of death following transplantation surgery. These findings, from the largest known observation of liver transplantation at the extremes of BMI, are published in the August issue of Liver Transplantation, a journal published by John Wiley & Sons on behalf of the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases. The research team led by AndrÓ© A. S. Dick, M.D., Department of Surgery, Division of Transplantation, University of Washington investigated the impact of pre-transplantation Body Mass Index (BMI) on post-liver transplantation patient survival. The doctors hypothesized that individuals at the extremes of BMI were at increased risk of death following liver transplantation. In this study, patients with BMI 40 kg/m2. Previous studies show that diabetic patients are at increased risk of infectious complications after surgical procedures, and supplemental immunosuppressive medication may further exacerbate this process. "An appropriate weight-based immunosuppressive regimen, careful management of severely obese patients" co-morbidities (diabetes, hypertension) and aggressive facilitation of weight reduction can optimize the health of these patients and potentially improve patient outcomes," suggest the researchers. For patients who are severely obese, past protocol was to resolve their co-morbidities and help them achieve weight loss prior to transplantation. "A better approach might be to transplant these patients sooner by not requiring weight loss or working with the United Network for Organ Sharing (UNOS) for a policy change to assign additional Model for End-Stage Liver Disease (MELD) points for severe obesity, as is done for patients with hepatocellular carcinoma," concluded the authors. "Aggressive management of the patients" co-morbid factors and posttransplantation weight loss is a must." The researchers also recommend a posttransplantation immunosuppressive regimen favoring less immunosuppressive medications without steroids and low dose tacrolimus based on the ideal body weight. In patients who are underweight the authors recommend "close follow-up with a nutritionist. If the patients are unable to meet their caloric intake prior to transplantation, they should then be admitted to the hospital for aggressive nutritional supplementation such as tube feedings. This aggressive regimen is continued after transplantation." The doctors also suggest a more aggressive immunosuppressive regimen with higher doses of tacrolimus and mycophenolate mofetil. "Liver Transplantation at the Extremes of Body Mass Index," AndrÓ© Dick, Austin Spitzer, Catherine Seifert, Alysun Deckert, R.L. Carithers, Jorge Reyes, James Perkins, Liver Transplantation, August 2009. Dawn Peters Wiley-Blackwell


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