WASHINGTON, June 5,2008

$300M To Target Health Care Imbalances

Grants Aim To Help Communities Improve Care And Serve As Models For National Reform

  •  (AP)

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(AP)  In Memphis, black Medicare beneficiaries are nearly six times as likely as whites to have a leg amputated, a complication stemming from vascular disease and diabetes.

In Mississippi, 57 percent of women aged 65-69 got mammograms in a two-year period versus 74 percent in Maine.

And, in Alaska, 71 percent of Medicare patients with diabetes got an important annual test for blood sugar compared with 91 percent in Vermont.

Reducing such racial and regional disparities, detailed by researchers at Dartmouth Medical School, will be a major focus of a $300 million initiative to be announced Thursday by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. The program, targeting 14 communities and regions around the country, seeks to improve the quality of health care and to eventually provide models for national health reform.

Dartmouth researchers say that one goal of the project is to cut down on hospital admissions for certain medical conditions. Discretionary stays in the hospital pose a risk to patients and a substantial cost to society.

States with particularly high rates of hospitalization for conditions such as poorly controlled diabetes or worsening heart failure include West Virginia, Kentucky, Louisiana and Mississippi. All had rates of more than 100 discharges per 1,000 Medicare beneficiaries. States with particularly low rates included Washington, Utah and Hawaii.

The United States spends more than $2 trillion annually on health care. While overall life expectancy has improved, many patients fail to get the most appropriate treatment. Some get too much care. Others get too little.

"Despite having the most expensive health care system in the world, patients are subject to too many mistakes, too much miscommunication and too much inequity," said Dr. Risa Lavizzo-Mourey, president and CEO of the foundation.

She said the money would allow communities to bring together doctors, employers, patients and others to determine which chronic illnesses would be targeted. The foundation will provide resources and technical expertise. Doctors will learn about changes they can make to improve care. Patients will learn how to better manage their conditions, said Lavizzo-Mourey.

Cities participating in the grant program are Cincinnati, Cleveland, Detroit, Memphis, Seattle and Kansas City, Mo. Three states are also participants: Maine, Minnesota and Wisconsin. Regions getting grant money include Humboldt County, Calif., South Central Pennsylvania, Western Michigan, Western New York and Willamette Valley, Ore.

© MMVIII The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
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by bluestardad June 6, 2008 11:51 AM EDT
HEALTH INDUSTRY

CURE SOMETHING ANYTHING!

QUIT MAKING MONEY OFF TREATING ILLNESS AND CURE IT!

PROVE TO AMERICA YOU ARE WORTH THE BILLIONS SPENT ON YOU EACH YEAR!

AMERICA STAND UP OR SHUT UP!
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by doggiemom1 June 6, 2008 10:23 AM EDT
Has anyone listened to the side effects of some of the medicines out there, some cause cancer, viral infections, death, stroke, etc. Doctors, hospitals and drug companies do not make money when people are healthy. The system is designed to keep people sick so more test are run, more drugs are prescribed and you need to see the doctor more so they all stay wealthy and you are not healthy.
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by June 6, 2008 12:53 AM EDT
We paid the most for health care and get the least in return. The system is broke, would they please try to cure anything instead of control the symptoms with synthetic drugs. I do applause their trauma work.
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by jsaarikko June 5, 2008 11:44 PM EDT
This is just another finger poked into a hole in the **** that will eventually fail. When will Americans wake up and smell the coffee?
You can''t have investment banks (also known as insurance companies) use healthcare as a vehicle to accumulate profts for their shareholders. Go see this for a full explanation - in their own words. Click on the NCL tab.
http://www.universalhealthcareinfousa.com
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by dzapple June 5, 2008 7:45 PM EDT
"The United States spends more than $2 trillion annually on health care"

AND IT STILL SUCKS
Reply to this comment
by harrydoghiny June 5, 2008 5:12 PM EDT
Wow, 300 mill, that''ll solve EVERYTHING!
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