Popular Articles

CQ Examines House Foreign Affairs Committee Outline To Overhaul U.S. Foreign Aid
Congressional Quarterly examines a "three-page concept paper" issued by the House Foreign Affairs Committee that lays out a plan to overhaul U.S. foreign aid. The committee suggests "giving the administration greater flexibility to control aid in exchange for greater public oversight and a performance- and need-driven allocation system," the news service writes. "The plan would reorganize aid programs around seven purposes, including "reducing poverty and alleviating human suffering," "supporting human rights and democracy," and "expanding prosperity through trade and investment,"" according to CQ. The House committee wants to enhance USAID"s role, "giving the agency a seat on the National Security Council and putting it in charge of the U.S. global AIDS plan and the Millennium Challenge Corporation," the news service writes.

Obama Considers Taxing Health Benefits To Pay For Reform
As President Obama looks for a way to pay for health care reform in the United States, key Democrats advocate taxing employer-provided health benefits, The Washington Post reports.
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Smoking, High Blood Pressure And Diabetes In Mid-life Can Lead To Dementia
Middle aged people who smoke, have high blood pressure or diabetes are far more likely to develop dementia in later life, suggests research published ahead of print in the Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery and Psychiatry.
Diagnostics

More Than Half Of Primary Care Doctor Grads Are Immigrants

"Nationally, about a quarter of all residency graduates began their medical training abroad. And in primary care - where there is a national shortage of physicians - more than half of all graduates are immigrants," The Concord Monitor reports. "New Hampshire"s primary care doctors are aging, and as they retire, recruiters said they will increasingly be replaced by physicians who began their training outside the country." "In order to be licensed in the U.S., foreign-trained doctors must pass the same medical boards as U.S. medical school graduates. Then, they must attend the same residency training programs, where they are taught on the job. When they apply for slots at places like Dartmouth-Hitchcock Clinic or Concord Hospital, they send the same test scores and supervisor references as domestic grads. Dr. Ted Epperly, the president of the American Academy of Family Physicians and a residency director in Boise, Idaho, said he expects to see a continuing rise in the number of international pediatricians, internal medicine doctors and family physicians unless health care reform radically changes incentives for U.S.-trained doctors to enter those specialties. For many American graduates, primary care work is unappealing because it pays significantly less than other fields." Dr. Omotayo Akinmade, who is from Nigeria, says many patients choose to see him, but "he still sees patients who see his dark skin and his accent and worry about his qualifications. "Many of them actually don"t want to see me, but I try to calm their fears," he said" (Sanger-Katz, 7/22). This information was reprinted from kaiserhealthnews.org with kind permission from the Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation. You can view the entire Kaiser Daily Health Policy Report, search the archives and sign up for email delivery at kaiserhealthnews.org. © Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation. All rights reserved.


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