|
|
|
|
|
April 16, 2013, 2:16 pm
By
Megan R. Wilson
Particles that were in the air after the September 11th terrorist attacks in New York City could cause breast cancer, according to new research from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)
Read more...
Archived under:
Other, Healthcare
|
April 16, 2013, 8:30 am
By
Elise Viebeck
After explosions, Boston hospitals treat wounded [free registration required]
Fight over abortion rules could reverberate widely
World experts to help China with bird flu investigation
Read more...
Archived under:
Other
|
April 11, 2013, 6:11 pm
By
Megan R. Wilson
Lawmakers on the House oversight committee are looking into the ability of federal drug regulators to oversee compounding pharmacies.
Read more...
Archived under:
Medical Devices and Prescription Drug Policy, Other, Healthcare
|
April 10, 2013, 5:19 pm
By
Julian Hattem
To pay for food safety measures in its $4.7 billion budget, the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) is proposing new fees to make up the gap.
The budget request released by the agency on Wednesday called for industry fees to make up 94 percent of the budget's nearly $500 million increase from the previous year, and nearly half the agency's budget in 2014.
Read more...
Archived under:
Other, Administration
|
April 10, 2013, 11:57 am
By
Pete Kasperowicz
Rep. Ted Poe (R-Texas) on Wednesday mocked a medical coding system that will soon require doctors to use a giant codebook that includes more than 140,000 kinds of injuries and illnesses, including nine separate ways to be injured by a turkey and three ways to be injured by a lamppost.
"It's red tape, it's bureaucracy, and this is what happens when clueless big government here in Washington starts telling people out in the workplace, doctors and patients, what they must do and when government intrudes into our lives with more regulations," Poe said on the House floor.
Read more...
Archived under:
Other, House, Healthcare
|
April 10, 2013, 11:16 am
By
Elise Viebeck
A coalition of Nobel laureates pushed Congress on Wednesday to protect federal funds for scientific research as the Washington budget battles begin anew.
The group of more than 50 Nobel prize winners — all scientists — urged lawmakers to see the federal research budget as an investment in U.S. competitiveness and the health of the economy.
"There is a bipartisan agreement on the importance of federal funding of long-term scientific research … The agreement exists because of the recognition that this sort of research fuels the innovation engine that is essential to the economy," the group wrote.
Read more...
Archived under:
Other
|
April 9, 2013, 3:37 pm
By
Elise Viebeck
A House Oversight subcommittee will debate possible changes to federal employee health benefits in a hearing Thursday, two months after Congress approved a pay freeze for federal workers.
The upcoming event will review the administration of the Federal Employee Health Benefits Program (FEHBP) by the Office of Personnel Management (OPM) and include testimony from Jonathan Foley, OPM's director of planning and policy analysis.
In an announcement, the Oversight Committee said the hearing would look at proposed changes to the FEHBP expected from President Obama's budget, like allowing plan administrators to contract directly with drug makers.
Read more...
Archived under:
Other
|
April 8, 2013, 3:05 pm
By
Elise Viebeck
Thousands of advocates gathered in Washington, D.C., Monday to call on Congress to increase funding for medical research, which saw cuts from sequestration.
Nearly 200 organizations and a handful of lawmakers participated in the event, held in downtown Washington, where speakers lamented a decade of cuts to federal investments in disease research.
"We need to make it clear to my colleagues exactly what these cuts mean for the health of America's families," Rep. Rosa DeLauro (D-Conn.), a cancer survivor, told the crowd.
Read more...
Archived under:
Other
|
April 8, 2013, 9:41 am
By
Elise Viebeck
A majority of older voters oppose cost-of-living cuts for Social Security and would object to their member of Congress supporting the policy, according to a new poll.
The national survey from AARP found that 66 percent of voters over 50 would be "considerably less favorable" to lawmakers that back slower cost-of-living increases in Social Security.
President Obama's new budget is expected to include a so-called chained consumer price index (CPI) proposal as an olive branch to Republicans, and the left has signaled strong opposition to the policy ahead of the budget's rollout Wednesday.
Read more...
Archived under:
Budget, Other
|
April 8, 2013, 8:30 am
By
Elise Viebeck
Risk for Obama in pursuing legal appeals of morning-after pill decision
Healthcare law could backfire for thousands on Medicaid
Worries mount about enrolling consumers in ObamaCare insurance exchanges
Read more...
Archived under:
Other
|