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Rush University Medical Center Hosts Conference Examining Chicago Breastfeeding Rates And Ways To Reduce The Disparities
Over 100 certified breastfeeding peer counselors, lactation consultants, nurses, physicians, dietitians and community health workers are expected to gather at Rush University Medical Center on Thursday, August 6 from 8 a.m. until 1 p.m. in Room 500 at 1725 W. Harrison Street, Chicago, to attend the Griffin Inaugural Conference on Breastfeeding: The Primary Foundation for Health.

Plans To Control Doctors' Pay Big Issue In Massachusetts
Massachusetts officials are proud of their low rate of uninsured people, but the state also hosts the highest health care costs in the country, a problem that jeopardizes their achievement in expanding coverage, NPR"s Morning Edition reports. A commission charged with overseeing the insurance plan for 310,000 government workers recently voted - unanimously - that doing away with the current, fee-for-service model for paying doctors was the first step to controlling those costs. "Massachusetts policymakers want to replace fee-for-service with "global payment" - paying groups of health providers a flat yearly fee for each patient they cover," NPR reports (Knox, 8/5).
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As The Market Potential Grows, Developers Press For Keys To Delivering Systemic Drugs Via Inhalation
At a time when the drug industry is striving for patient-friendly delivery methods for new and existing drugs, the growing availability of innovative inhaler device designs is driving interest in pulmonary drug delivery technology and devices as an alternative to oral and parenteral routes of administration. While well-established for treating upper respiratory diseases such as asthma and COPD, companies competing in the inhaled drug delivery sector - major players such as GlaxoSmithKline, AstraZeneca and Boehringer Ingelheim as well as pure-play start-ups - continue to view delivery of systemic drugs via inhalation as a major opportunity.
Mental Health

Fresenius Endorses PEAK Campaign Efforts To Reduce Dialysis Patient Mortality

Fresenius Medical Care, which operates the nation"s leading network of dialysis clinics, today endorsed the Performance Excellence and Accountability in Kidney Care (PEAK) campaign recently launched by Kidney Care Partners (KCP) - a coalition of patient advocates, dialysis professionals, care providers and manufacturers working together to improve quality of care for individuals with chronic kidney disease (CKD). The PEAK initiative is designed to significantly reduce the mortality rate for patients in their first year of dialysis. "The PEAK initiative is consistent with our ongoing commitment to improving the quality of care," said Dr. J. Michael Lazarus, Fresenius Medical Care"s chief medical officer. "Fresenius Medical Care has always emphasized quality of care in our facilities, and one area of concern has been the increased risk of death in the first year after starting dialysis treatment. Through our RightStart™ program, we were able to demonstrate that a structured program of prompt medical and educational strategies focused on patients in their first three months on dialysis does improve morbidity and mortality rates. So while we know that high mortality rates are a significant problem, we also know that if the entire kidney care community works together toward a common goal, we can make progress in this critical area." Many factors contribute to first-year mortality among dialysis patients. Individuals starting dialysis face complex challenges, such as control of anemia, dietary changes, and vascular access management. They must also adjust to a demanding regular treatment schedule. During this transition period, patients are most susceptible to complications. PEAK is a quality improvement campaign that seeks to mitigate these challenges, pledging to extend, even save, as many as 10,000 lives and reduce mortality among first-year dialysis patients by 20 percent by the end of 2012. "Improvements in quality of care have been at the top of the kidney care community"s agenda over the past 15 years. Significant progress has been made, but the PEAK initiative raises the bar for the next 10 years," said Lazarus. "It says to patients, their families, and everyone concerned with kidney disease that there is a concrete effort in place to address real problems with actual solutions, using recommendations from leading researchers and experts. At a critical time in their lives, when the risks are greatest, dialysis patients and their families can be confident that the PEAK initiative is contributing to improving the chances for survival and a better life for all dialysis patients." Fresenius Medical Care North America


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