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11.19.2009 9:01 pm

Following the evidence on cancer screenings

Women worried about breast cancer have just one concern: What can they do to reduce the risk of dying from the disease?
One answer is to get regular mammograms. Over the past 15 years, that advice has saved thousands of lives.…

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11.17.2009 9:01 pm

Hunger, a Third World problem, affects a sixth of the U.S.

A volunteer at a St. Charles County food pantry looks over empty shelves.

A volunteer at a St. Charles County food pantry looks over empty shelves.

The number of Americans without enough to eat has reached the highest level since the federal government began keeping track 14 years ago.
About 49 million people — including…

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11.16.2009 9:00 pm

Reversing the silent epidemic of premature births

A baby in St. Louis Children's Hospital Neonatal Intensive Care Unit.

A baby in St. Louis Childrens Hospital Neonatal Intensive Care Unit.

The little girl lay silent and asleep.
She wore a white stocking cap. A pair of plastic tubes sprouted from her chest, deep crimson from the blood that filled them.
They led…

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11.15.2009 9:00 pm

New survey shows weaknesses in U.S. primary care

Post-Dispatch file photo.

Post-Dispatch file photo.

If you’re planning to get sick outside of regular business hours, you’d be well advised to do it in the Netherlands.
Almost every Dutch primary care doctor — 97 percent, to be precise — has a nurse or physician…

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11.09.2009 9:01 pm

Understanding reform doesn’t come from handicapping it

Horse race or health reform?

Here’s something you won’t learn from reading headlines or obsessively watching text crawl across the bottom of the TV screen: Health care reform isn’t a horse race.
It doesn’t turn on what the latest key member of Congress said this morning…

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11.06.2009 9:03 pm

Costly new drugs: A crisis for one family, a quandry for U.S.

Dan Callahan

Dan Callahan

It began with a little black spot on Dan Callahan’s lower lip. He didn’t think it was anything to worry about. His doctor thought it was cancer.
The doctor was right.
It was neurotropic melanoma, a very rare — and very…

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11.04.2009 9:01 pm

History holds lessons for public health insurance option

Protesters demand health reform at a rally outside Blue Cross headquarters in Los Angles

Protesters demand health reform at a rally outside Blue Cross headquarters in Los Angles last month.

Nothing about health care reform has inspired more overheated rhetoric than the so-called public option.
Opponents say it would unleash a government juggernaut against which no…

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11.02.2009 9:01 pm

Seeking a less catastrophic way to cool global warming

Phorusrhacos longissimus roamed part of what is now Argentina during the Middle Miocene.

Who wants a drumstick? The six-foot-tall phorusrhacos longissimus roamed what is now Argentina during the Middle Miocene.

People often talk as if warming temperatures are the only evidence of human-induced global climate change. But the amount of carbon dioxide in the…

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11.02.2009 10:19 am

Health Care: The German Perspective

Not a socialist.

Otto von Bismarck: Not socialist.

Forget all this nonsense about socialized health care. The first head of state to propose a national health system was at the other end of the political spectrum. His name: Otto von Bismarck.

The system established by…

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11.01.2009 9:00 pm

Sharing responsibility for health care costs

House Democrats unveiled a sweeping health care reform bill last Thursday built on shared responsibility.
Individuals would have to buy health insurance for themselves and their families.
Taxpayers would subsidize coverage for those unable to afford it on their own.
Employers would have…

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10.21.2009 9:00 pm

Borrowing tactics from both sides on health reform

House Minority Leader John Boehner, R-Ohio.

House Minority Leader John Boehner, R-Ohio.

Sen. Bob Corker, a Republican from Tennessee, was in a fine fury Tuesday morning. Speaking on the Senate floor, he blasted Democratic lawmakers for a plan to permanently adjust the Medicare formula used to set payment…

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10.20.2009 9:01 pm

Improving health systems means better care for less money

If there were a way to save $207.4 million, avoid 30,000 unnecessary hospitalizations and more than 2,000 premature deaths, we’d jump at it, right?
That’s what Missouri would gain if its health system performed as well as the systems in Vermont,…

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10.16.2009 9:01 pm

Markets, competition and health reform

Flanked by doctors, President Barack Obama speaks after last week's historic Senate health reform vote.

President Barack Obama speaks after last week's historic Senate health reform vote.

Forget all the angry shouting about socialized medicine and government take-overs. Health care reform is really all about markets, competition and choice.
That’s probably not what you’ve heard. But as…

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10.15.2009 6:33 pm

Taking a closer look at the ‘real uninsured.’

To hear some people tell it, the number of people without health insurance in the United States is vastly overstated.
There are the illegal immigrants, the argument goes, and then there are those who can afford to buy insurance but don’t…

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10.12.2009 9:00 pm

Premiums headed up, with or without health reform

Robin Beaton's breast cancer surgery was cancelled when her insurance company claimed she failed to report being treated for acne.

Robin Beaton's insurance company cancelled her breast cancer surgery because she didn't disclose she'd been treated for acne.

Health insurance companies launched an 11th-hour assault Monday on a compromise health care reform bill in the Senate. In a new report and a…

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10.11.2009 9:01 pm

Opting not to vaccinate, gambling with children’s health

Suppose you were asked for a list of the game-changers in modern medicine — treatments that saved the most lives and had the greatest health impact.
You might name organ transplants or drugs to fight cancer and AIDS. Maybe if you…

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10.09.2009 9:01 pm

Time for Gov. Nixon to lead on health care

For a guy who focused so relentlessly on health care as a candidate, Missouri Gov. Jay Nixon has been remarkably quiet of late.
At a time when health care dominates the national debate, Mr. Nixon is one of just six Democratic…

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10.08.2009 12:07 pm

Facts? They don’t need no stinkin’ facts!

"Badges? We don't need no stinkin' badges."

"Badges? We don't need no stinkin' badges."

Here’s how much the Congressional Budget Office says a new health reform bill in the Senate would cost: $829 billion over 10 years.

The New York Times, the Los Angeles Times, the Washington Post , Associated…

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10.07.2009 9:00 pm

Seeking an Olympian achievement on climate change

A home destroyed by beach erosion in the Alaskan village of Shishmaref, on an island inhabited for 4000 years. It's facing evacuation because of global warming.

A home destroyed by beach erosion in the Alaskan village of Shishmaref. It was evacuated because of global warming.

When President Barack Obama was in Copenhagen on Oct. 2, he was trying to attract an Olympic Games for Chicago.
Next time, he…

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10.02.2009 9:00 pm

A ‘winner’s curse’ in the healthcare game

Mom always said to be careful what we wished for, lest we actually get it. The warning is apt now that the health care reform debate in Congress seems headed into the home stretch, or maybe just the back stretch.

Several big…

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