The Wild West of Managed Health Care

Sep 29, 2008 No Comments

One of the key indicators of a highly competitive marketplace is when clients are being offered one-sided contracts in trade for signing long term agreements. And it is this very situation that is occuring in the managed health care industry right now. Companies are constantly looking to cutback on unnecessary expenditures and being able to lock in medical costs can be seen as an efficient method of maintaining cost control.

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Medical Tourism

Sep 19, 2008 No Comments

Medical tourism, where individuals go overseas for medical treatment, health checks, dental and cosmetic surgery, and spa/ wellness relaxation, is catching on worldwide. Over 100 countries offer, or want to offer medical tourism. There are global opportunities for hospitals, surgeries, property investors, travel agents, hotels and other services. But many are confused by the hype from the pro-medical tourism lobby and the dire warnings of doom and gloom from those who often have a vested interest in maintaining the status quo.

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Stopping Diabetes BEFORE it Starts

Sep 17, 2008 No Comments

More than 54 million American adults have prediabetes, but many of those people may never have to live with diabetes and all of its health complications thanks to a new prediabetes lifestyle management course created by Kronos Optimal Health Company. It is estimated that 60 percent of prediabetics can avoid diabetes altogether with manageable lifestyle choices.

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Stanford Finds Key Enzyme for Regulating Heart Attack Damage

Sep 15, 2008 No Comments

Marauding molecules cause the tissue damage that underlies heart attacks, sunburn, Alzheimer’s and hangovers. But scientists at the Stanford University School of Medicine say they may have found ways to combat the carnage after discovering an important cog in the body’s molecular detoxification machinery.

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Health Costs and Insurance Claims Less for Morbidly Obese after Bariatric Surgery

Sep 12, 2008 No Comments

Insurers recover their costs for bariatric surgery in two to four years depending on the type of surgery that is performed, according to a new study published today in The American Journal of Managed Care (AJMC), a peer-reviewed journal on health outcomes research.

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Study Says: Better Care of Sickest Patients Can Actually Save Hospitals Money

Sep 10, 2008 No Comments

There is a school of thought in the health care community that believes that the the sickest patients are also result in the highest cost; however a new study finds hospitals can save more than $300 a day per seriously ill patient while giving them even better care. In their September 8 issue, The Archives of Internal Medicine, are going to publish the study by the Center to Advance Palliative Care and National Palliative Care Research Center which discusses the above scenario.

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