Month: February 2014
Exercise caution ahead of poll campaign, advise cops
Mom of Sick Teen ‘Collapses’ After Judge Sends Kid to Foster Care
Mass. Judge Sends ‘Sick’ Conn. Teen to Live in Foster Care
Toledo Graduate Dies in Training Exercise; Wife Recalls Life of Fallen Soldier
Rick Warren acts on mental health in son’s suicide
Danica Patrick's 2014 Speedweeks an exercise in frustration
Judge orders Obamacare insurers in Louisiana to accept HIV funds
By Julie Steenhuysen CHICAGO (Reuters) – A U.S. district court judge in Louisiana has temporarily barred Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Louisiana and two smaller insurers from rejecting payments from a federal program intended to help low-income HIV patients buy health insurance. The insurers named in the case are Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Louisiana, Vantage Health Plan and Louisiana Health Cooperative. They are among a small handful of insurance companies in Louisiana that sell healthcare policies under President Barack Obama’s healthcare law. Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Louisiana, the state’s largest insurer, said late last year that it would no longer accept federal Ryan White payments on behalf of individuals with human immunodeficiency virus, which causes Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome.
Healthy eating is more important than exercise : The Daily Collegian
Watch: Dad Delivers His Daughter at Florida Hospital
U.S. insurers say proposed Medicare cuts less than feared
U.S. health insurers including Humana Inc said on Monday that the government's proposed cuts to privately run Medicare programs appear to represent a funding decline of around 4 percent, less than the possible cuts of 7 percent or deeper that analysts had been expecting. Shares of most insurers rose on Monday, with Humana leading the pack, up 9.2 percent at $112.29 on the New York Stock Exchange in early afternoon. Shares of UnitedHealth Group Inc were up 2.8 percent at $75.91 and Aetna Inc was up 2.6 percent at $72.24. The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services late on Friday released its proposal for 2015 Medicare Advantage funding.
Skepticism grows as Vivus mum on plans to boost diet drug sales
(Reuters) – Vivus Inc’s silence on its strategy to boost sales of obesity drug Qsymia has increased doubts about whether the pill will reach its full commercial potential. Qsymia was the first diet pill to launch in the United States in more than a decade. But both doctors and patients have shown reluctance to embrace it and other diet pills, including Arena Pharmaceuticals Inc’s Belviq, because of the long history of safety concerns surrounding diet treatments. Analysts said on Tuesday that Vivus, with its limited sales force, needed a partner to ensure the drug’s success.