Archive for the “health3” Category

health3

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Call for Funding: President Obama called for spending an extra $50 million on U.S. HIV/AIDS programs, including $15 million for HIV clinics and $35 million for state drug-assistance programs, the WSJ reports. He also called for putting about 2.1 million more people globally on antiretroviral drugs by the end of fiscal 2013, through the U.S. program known as Pepfar. He spoke at a World AIDS Day event in Washington, D.C.

Development Guidelines: The FDA issued guidelines for companies and researchers working to develop an artificial pancreas to treat type 1 diabetes, Reuters reports. Advocates are generally optimistic that the guidelines will encourage innovation, Reuters says.

Doesn’t Reproduce: The results of most medical studies, even those that appear in well-respected, peer-reviewed journals, can’t be reproduced by other scientists, the WSJ reports. The current issue of the journal Science is focusing on the problem, which may spring in part from the increased complexity of today’s experiments and variations in equipment or materials researchers use.

Calls for Recusal: Conservatives are calling for Justice Elena Kagan to recuse herself in the upcoming Supreme Court case on the constitutionality of the health-care overhaul law because she used to be President Obama’s solicitor general, while those on the left want Justice Clarence Thomas to sit out the case because of his wife’s ties to groups that have advocated against the law, the Los Angeles Times reports. But the paper notes that Supreme Court justices “pride themselves on their impartiality and rarely recuse themselves unless they have a direct financial stake in the outcome of a case.”

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Want to take Lipitor but lack health insurance? There is help available.

Even though Lipitor starts facing generic competition today, Pfizer will still be providing help to patients who can’t afford the cholesterol-fighter, a company spokesman says.

Pfizer will be providing Lipitor free of charge or at a savings through one of its patient assistance programs. Eligibility and level of savings depend on things like employment status and income.

To find out more, or sign up, patients can go to pfizerhelpfulanswers.com or call 1-866-706-2400. (If you’re insured by a private plan, you may be eligible for reduced co-pays, as we wrote yesterday.)

The price of the generic version isn’t yet clear, but usually drugs cost about 10% less than the brand-name version during the first 180 days after going generic.

By the way, there’s no word yet from the government on what Medicare beneficiaries can expect with regard to their Lipitor prescriptions, but we have a query into the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services and will tell you if we hear back.

Image: Bloomberg News

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This summer, the New England Journal of Medicine published the results of a government-funded trial that found screening current and former heavy smokers with low-dose CT scans was tied to a 20% reduction in lung-cancer deaths.

Now, the study is starting to have a concrete impact: insurer WellPoint, with around 34 million members, says it will start covering the tests based on its findings. It?s the latest twist in a long debate about using the scans to detect lung cancer, an idea that has been the subject of clashing research findings over the years.

Under WellPoint?s new policy, CT scans for lung-cancer screening will be covered for people who match the characteristics of those involved in the National Lung Screening Trial.

To have screening covered, beneficiaries must have smoked at least the equivalent of a pack a day for 30 years and be between the ages of 55 and 74, among other traits. The study found that among participants who were given three annual CT scans, there were 247 deaths from lung cancer per 100,000 person-years, while among the group who got X-rays instead, there were 309.

“This was the first time a really well-done study showed you could save lives by screening with this technique,” John Whitney, a WellPoint medical director, tells the Health Blog. But, he says, “based on the potential downsides, we think the evidence only supports screening for the population they studied and showed a benefit in.” He points to the radiation involved in CT scans, as well as the risk of false positives, but said the cost of the scans wasn?t a factor in WellPoint’s decision.

The new WellPoint policy promises coverage of annual scans for three years, which is what was provided in the study. Whitney says the policy is expected to evolve as further evidence emerges on what?s the best regimen of screening scans.

The American Society of Clinical Oncology, the American Thoracic Society and the American College of Chest Physicians are developing a clinical practice guideline for lung-cancer screening, which ASCO says will come out early next year.

So far, it?s not clear how many other insurers are ready yet to back CT screening for lung cancer.

Cigna said it considers the scans for lung-cancer screening experimental and unproven “based on the scientific data available” and believes “the impact on mortality is unknown.” Aetna said it also views this use of the scans as experimental, and it is considering the new study as well as any new guidelines that will emerge from federal health agencies including the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force, which currently says there’s not enough evidence to recommend for or against screening asymptomatic people using low-dose CT or any other method. (The group’s recommendations were last updated in 2004.)

UnitedHealth Group said it follows guidelines from the National Cancer Institute and the preventive services task force, and thus doesn?t currently cover CT for lung-cancer screening, but “we continually monitor clinical research” related to the topic.

Image: Getty Images

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