Popular Articles

UPMC Senior Community, Heritage Place, Wins National Activity Services Award
Heritage Place, a UPMC Senior Community, has been awarded Activity Department of the Year for 2009 by the National Certification Council for Activity Professionals.

Landmark Five-Year African Study Indicates That HIV Therapy May Be Given Safely In Re-Limited Settings Without Routine Laboratory Monitoring
Gilead Sciences, Inc. (Nasdaq:GILD) highlighted results from a study known as DART (Development of Anti-Retroviral Treatment in Africa), which evaluated the need for routine laboratory monitoring in adults taking antiretroviral therapy in Africa. The DART trial was an open-label, randomized study comparing clinical and laboratory monitoring to clinical monitoring alone for efficacy and toxicity. In this study, 74 percent of patients were on a treatment regimen containing Viread® (tenofovir disoproxil fumarate). At baseline, more than 50 percent of patients had reduced renal function. The results indicated that Viread was well tolerated and that the incidence of renal adverse events was low. DART researchers concluded that renal function test results were similar in both arms of the trial for up to five years, suggesting that routine monitoring of Viread may not be necessary in re-limited settings when using the product as part of a first-line HIV treatment regimen. The results of the study were presented today at the 5th International AIDS Society Conference on HIV Pathogenesis, Treatment and Prevention (IAS 2009) in Cape Town, South Africa.
News of the day
University Of Hawaii At Manoa Professor Co-Authors Article About Weight And Relationships
Dr. Janet D. Latner, an Associate Professor of Psychology at the University of Hawai"i at Manoa, has co-authored an article in the July 2009 edition of the Journal of Sex & Marital Therapy on "Weight Stigma in Existing Relationships."
Endocrinology

Mental Health America Commends Inclusion Of Mental Health, Substance Use Coverage In Health Reform Legislation

Mental Health America today commended Senate and House health reform legislation for including mental health and substance use coverage in a benefit package. Both the health reform package introduced on Tuesday by House leaders and a bill approved yesterday by the Senate Education Labor and Pensions (HELP) Committee would ensure that mental health and substance use services are considered essential benefits and would be available to all individuals covered through the new federal program for the uninsured. "Recent studies have confirmed that a large proportion of low-income, uninsured individuals have poor mental health," said David L. Shern, Ph.D., president and CEO of Mental Health America. "We are pleased that both health reform proposals take the important step of including mental health and substance use coverage as essential benefits." Dr. Shern testified before a House subcommittee last month on the need to include mental health as part of health reform. (The prepared testimony can be found here.) Mental Health America also expressed appreciation that both the Senate and House bills include mental health and addiction treatment parity provisions in the programs that would be established to cover the uninsured, including individuals applying for coverage independently. Mental health and addiction treatment have historically been subject to blatantly discriminatory limits on coverage through private insurance plans that block access to effective and critically needed therapies. "We want to ensure that all health care plans offered through this new federal program comply with the principle of nondiscrimination and parity for behavioral health services," Dr. Shern said. Legislation enacted last year, the Paul Wellstone and Pete Domenici Mental Health Parity and Addiction Equity Act, prohibits unequal treatment limits and financial requirements for mental health and substance use treatment in group health plans for more than 50 workers. But that bill does not cover all health insurance plans. Mental Health America also commended the legislation for establishing key market reforms including prohibiting preexisting condition exclusions. Dr. Shern said both bills would help improve chronic care management and lower health costs by promoting development of medical homes and other care coordination models. "It is critical that behavioral health specialists are included in the treatment teams established through these care models and also that mental health or addiction treatment facilities be allowed to serve as medical homes, said Dr. Shern. "Mental health disorders are the leading cause of disability in the United States based on burden of disease and these conditions often accompany and greatly increase the cost of treating other chronic illnesses, including diabetes, asthma, cancer and heart disease." Mental Health America has placed a high priority on improving access to preventive services and mental health promotion as a key component of health care reform and is pleased that both the HELP and House bills include a number of provisions to improve coverage of health risk assessments and screening services as well as support for community-based prevention programs. Mental Health America


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