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Attorney General Martha Coakley's Office Reaches $22 Million Medicaid Fraud Settelement From Eli Lilly
Massachusetts Attorney General Martha Coakley"s Office has reached an agreement with pharmaceutical manufacturer Eli Lilly & Co. ("Lilly"), resolving allegations that the company engaged in the improper marketing of its atypical antipsychotic drug, Zyprexa. Under the terms of the settlement, Lilly has paid $22,499,433.04 to the Massachusetts Medicaid Program, which provides funds for health care products and services to eligible low-income individuals, including people with disabilities, children and elder citizens.
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New Risk Factors For Teen Self Harm
A lack of emotional intelligence leads to poor coping strategies and seriously increases the likelihood of self-harm in teenagers, claims a study published yesterday, in the British Journal of Clinical Psychology.
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Immigration Changes Will Deprive UK Of Doctors, Says BMA Leader
Dr Hamish Meldrum, Chairman of BMA Council, has written to the Secretary of State for Health, Alan Johnson, to request that he intervenes to ensure that the UK does not lose further doctors as a result of recent changes to the immigration system. The changes restrict international medical students, who are studying in the UK, from continuing with their medical training beyond the two-year postgraduate Foundation Programme.
Health Insurance

Alzheimer's Patients Fight For Quicker Medicare Coverage

NPR reports on the struggle of Alzheimer"s patients who don"t have health insurance trying to find ways to pay for their care and lobby for greater protections for themselves. "Alzheimer"s is thought of as a disease of the elderly. But there are also people - maybe a couple hundred thousand or more - who have Alzheimer"s in their 40s and 50s. People like Teresa Lambert, who is 54. Lambert has come to Washington to tell members of Congress how hard it is for people with early onset Alzheimer"s to get health insurance; one-third of them have no health insurance at all." Lambert previously managed a chain of jewelry stores, but then "she started having trouble making sense of the revenue spreadsheets. She was in her late 40s - she can"t remember the exact year - when she had to quit her job." Lambert is among those who are ill and too young to qualify for Medicare but who are asking to be covered by the program right away to help defray expenses and cover themselves: "Medicare was created for the elderly. Then Congress opened it up to younger people who are disabled or sick - that includes people with early onset Alzheimer"s, in addition to people with multiple sclerosis, Parkinson"s disease, severe heart conditions, psychiatric illnesses and other health problems. But younger people have to wait two years or more to get Medicare coverage. ò€¦ Congress created the two-year waiting period to make sure only people who are really sick and really can"t work get coverage. Right now, only those with Lou Gehrig"s disease and end-stage renal disease - both which kill quickly - are allowed onto Medicare right away." "With Washington focused on changing the health care system, this might seem like a moment to address the waiting list. There are nearly 2 million people on the list, but with Medicare"s costs already soaring, most current proposals to fix health care only partially address people on the waiting list. It"s expensive to get them off - about $8 billion." In the meantime, 2 million people wait on the Medicare waiting list (Shapiro, 7/6). 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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