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For People With Overactive Bladders Botox Injections Can Significantly Improve Quality Of Life
Botox is well known for its cosmetic uses, but researchers have now found that it can also significantly improve people"s quality of life if they suffer from another problem that increases with age, an overactive bladder (OAB).
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First-of-Kind TearLab Product, Developed By Invetech, Wins MDEA Award
Invetech, specialists in product development and custom automation for the medical, industrial and consumer markets, announced that TearLab Corporation"s revolutionary TearLab Osmolarity System has been recognised for its innovative design with a prestigious Medical Design Excellence Award (MDEA). TearLab Corporation retained Invetech to assist with the development and industrial design of its instrumentation. The TearLab Osmolarity system is the first technology that can quantitatively and objectively measure Dry Eye Disease in a doctor"s office in seconds. Dry Eye Disease is a chronic and progressive condition that if left untreated can lead to serious eye damage.
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Critical Medicare Benefit In Jeopardy
Please help us protect people with neuromuscular diseases from the potentially harmful impact of the recently released House Tri-Committee healthcare reform proposal. The package eliminates the first month purchase option for all power wheelchairs.
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Physician-Owned Hospitals Under Fire In Reform Bills, While One M.D. Moves Into Franchising

The mood in Washington to compromise with hospitals, pharmaceutical makers and physician groups is not extending to physician-owned specialty hospitals, Time reports. "Any health-reform package passed by Congress will likely deal a major blow to an upstart competitor of many hospitals. Buried in the 850-page House health-reform draft is a provision that could in effect ban further construction of doctor-owned, for-profit specialty hospitals and prohibit existing ones from expanding. ò€¦ Senators Charles Grassley and Max Baucus, who lead the body"s powerful Finance Committee, have been vocal critics of the doctor-owned specialty-hospital model and the industry expects similar language to be included in any upcoming Senate health-reform bill as well." Congress is targeting hospitals that focus on high-price procedures in areas such as orthopedics and cardiology, and lure patients with the offer of such added amenities as wine and gourmet meals, Time reports. However, despite the add-ons, many such hospitals don"t have adequate emergency facilities, and may not have an on-site physician at all times, a shortcoming that regulators say have contributed to recent deaths. There are 220 such hospitals currently operating, with another 80 under development, mainly in the South and Midwest (Pickert and Stier, 7/13). Meanwhile, Dr. Scott Burger, the proprietor of Doctors Express, an urgent care center in Towson, Md., wants to do "for urgent health care what, say, Papa John"s did for pizza - making sure the public can find it anywhere and always knows what it"s going to get," USA Today reports. His model would put a Doctors Express "in every community, at least one," and sell franchises - perhaps as many as 3,000, with $500,000 in start-up costs each - to corporate managers around the country. The franchisers needn"t be medical professionals, Burger says, although he promises a physician on duty at all times. The first franchise based on the Towson center will be in Texas (Jones, 7/13). 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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