Thursday, April 11, 2013

Health budget spends on mental health; cuts Medicare

By Toni Clarke

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - President Barack Obama's proposed 2014 budget includes an increase of $3.9 billion to the health department as it prepares to implement the administration's healthcare overhaul, setting money aside for mental health, but cutting medicare.

The budget asks for $1.5 billion in increased funding to help set up healthcare exchanges and educate consumers on the enrollment process, which is scheduled to begin on October 1. The exchanges are to begin providing coverage on January 1.

The increase would contribute to a budget of $80.1 billion for the Department of Health and Human Services, up nearly $4 billion over 2012. The 2013 budget is still being finalized.

"Even as it invests in areas that we know are critical for our future prosperity, the budget also contributes to the president's goal of cutting the deficit in a balanced way," health secretary Kathleen Sebelius said at a news briefing in Washington on Wednesday.

"That means safeguarding every dollar, cutting waste and duplication, seeking out savings wherever we can and making some very difficult choices we wouldn't have made at other times."

The budget calls for cuts to Medicare as part of a broad plan to reduce the program's costs by roughly $400 billion over the next decade. At the same time, it proposes $130 million in funding for mental health services and additional funding for research into gun violence following the Newtown, Connecticut, school shooting in December.

"While we know the vast number of Americans who struggle with mental illness are not violent, recent tragedies have reminded us of the staggering toll that untreated mental illness takes on our society," Sebelius said.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention will receive more than $30 million to support a nationwide violent death surveillance system and conduct research on the causes and prevention of gun violence.

The budget increases funding for the Food and Drug Administration by $821 million and provides $31 billion to the National Institutes of Health to, among other things, fulfill the government's commitment to enhance research into Alzheimer's disease.

Of the FDA's proposed total budget of $4.7 billion, $295.8 million would be earmarked for food safety, including the implementation of the new Food Safety Modernization Act.

The food safety funding would consist of $43.4 million in taxpayer money and the rest in industry fees, including $58.9 million from food facilities for registration and inspection and $165.7 million from food importers.

Under the new safety law, the FDA for the first time will be allowed to penalize U.S. companies that fail to monitor produce they import from abroad. The Act was signed into law in January 2011 and represents the most sweeping reform of food safety laws in more than 70 years.

"The budget proposal is a significant investment in food safety," said Sandra Eskin, project director of the Food Safety Campaign at The Pew Charitable Trusts.

The FDA's commissioner, Dr. Margaret Hamburg, who appeared with Sebelius at the news briefing along with an array of other government health officials, described the agency's budget as "austere." She said 94 percent of the budget would come from user fees paid by industry.

The health department's budget assumes a permanent change to the way Medicare pays physicians. The current formula, known as the "sustainable growth rate" has called for reductions in physician payment rates since 2002, but each year Congress has blocked the reduction.

The government said it supports a period of payment stability lasting "several years" to allow time to develop new payment models that would reward healthcare practitioners who provide high-quality efficient care.

The budget also reduces the federal subsidy of Medicare costs for wealthier people and lists savings from reducing the length of time given to biologic drugs to 7 years from 12 years, allowing generic drugs to enter the market sooner.

Savings are also expected from a proposal that would allow the Federal Trade Commission to prevent branded pharmaceutical companies from paying generic drugmakers to delay the launch of generic rivals, known as "pay for delay" deals.

"This was in Obama's proposal in 2011, so this is not new," said Mark Schoenebaum, an analyst at ISI Group. "What is new is that the savings have increased from $3 billion to $11 billion, so still relatively small."

(Reporting By Toni Clarke in Washington; Editing by Steve Orlofsky and Andre Grenon)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/u-health-budget-raises-spending-reform-mental-health-152758744.html

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Honeywell Wi-Fi Smart Thermostat learns habits, matches your neon decor (video)

Honeywell WiFi Smart Thermostat

Honeywell has had WiFi-capable thermostats on the market for some time, but few of them would be a great match for home interiors that have escaped 1980s beige chic. The company's new Wi-Fi Smart Thermostat is going a long way toward bringing that design fully into the present century. Owners can color match the touchscreen interface with the paint on their walls, down to very exact shades. Of course, the thermostat wouldn't be much of a competitor in the Nest era if it didn't have some of that namesake intelligence underneath. As with its main rival, the Honeywell system has (already existing) Android and iOS apps, and can tell how long it takes to change the temperature; it's also aware of when filters need a change based on furnace behavior. If you're on the cusp of a home renovation and don't want anything so gauche as a differently-colored screen, home improvement shops should have the Wi-Fi Smart Thermostat this May for $249.

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Source: Honeywell

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/04/10/honeywell-wi-fi-smart-thermostat/

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Wednesday, April 10, 2013

Permit lets Hopi take 40 golden eaglets

FLAGSTAFF, Ariz. (AP) ? The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service has authorized the Hopi Tribe to collect 40 nesting golden eagles this year for religious use, but the number that can be taken from the neighboring Navajo Nation will be limited for the first time under the federal permit.

Hopi religious practitioners have been gathering the eagles for centuries each spring and raising them in villages that rise above the surrounding desert. Once they've matured, the eagles are offered as a sacrifice and the birds' feathers are given to certain tribal members to be used in other ceremonies and rituals.

The golden eagle also plays a role in the religion of the Navajo, who use the birds' feathers to protect themselves from harm and as sacred adornments. But the Navajo don't agree with the Hopi practice of killing eagles.

The Fish and Wildlife Service has taken note of the conflicting beliefs and for the first time conducted an environmental assessment before approving the Hopi's permit for this year. The assessment that also studied data on eagle populations found that the population overall is sustainable and that the impacts to Navajo culture and religion would not be significant.

A separate compact between the Hopi and Navajo tribes in 2006 allowed the Hopis to collect 18 eaglets from Navajo land and have access to sacred sites. But the permit from the Fish and Wildlife Service, announced Tuesday, allows the Hopi Tribe to take no more than five eaglets from the Navajo reservation.

"It's a balancing act between the two cultures and the two interests in terms of each of their homelands and as to their ability to manage for a healthy, sustainable population of wildlife as well as practice their religious beliefs," Greg Hughes, chief of the migratory birds office for the agency's Southwest region, said Wednesday.

Hopi chief of staff Micah Loma'omvaya said the tribe is analyzing the decision to see what it means for religious practitioners and how it impacts collections. The Fish and Wildlife Service said some clans could be denied the opportunity to gather eaglets from certain sites.

The Hopi Tribe is one of few American Indian tribes authorized to take live eagles for religious use. Typically, enrolled tribal members who want eagle feathers or other parts of the bird to practice their religion obtain them from the National Eagle Repository, operated by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.

The number of birds that Hopis have captured has ranged from two to 38 per year under previous permits. The Fish and Wildlife Service allowed the Hopi Tribe to take an unlimited number of birds between 1994 and 1996 but has capped the number at 40 each year since 1997.

The tribe's Cultural Preservation Office administers the permits on behalf of 20 to 25 clans who go on eagle pilgrimages on the Hopi reservation and the western portion of the Navajo Nation. Eagles also have been gathered from state land and a national monument and a national park. The tribe has said the vast majority of practitioners comply with tribal protocols and federal requirements for gathering the eaglets.

The federal government has prosecuted Hopi tribal members for illegally taking golden eagles, including at least eight tribal members in 2010 whose sentences ranged from probation to jail time and who were required to pay restitution.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/permit-lets-hopi-40-golden-eaglets-2013-001849514.html

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Source: http://barcamppune.org/?p=5365

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Bean leaves can trap bedbugs, researchers find

Apr. 9, 2013 ? Inspired by a traditional Balkan bedbug remedy, researchers have documented how microscopic hairs on kidney bean leaves effectively stab and trap the biting insects, according to findings published online today in the Journal of the Royal Society Interface. Scientists at UC Irvine and the University of Kentucky are now developing materials that mimic the geometry of the leaves.

Bedbugs have made a dramatic comeback in the U.S. in recent years, infesting everything from homes and hotels to schools, movie theaters and hospitals. Although not known to transmit disease, their bites can cause burning, itching, swelling and psychological distress. It helps to catch infestations early, but the nocturnal parasites' ability to hide almost anywhere, breed rapidly and "hitchhike" from place to place makes detection difficult. They can survive as long as a year without a blood meal.

Current commercial prevention methods, including freezing, extreme heating, vacuuming and pesticides, can be costly and unreliable. Many sufferers resort to ineffective, potentially dangerous measures, such as spraying nonapproved insecticides themselves rather than hiring a professional.

Doctoral student Megan Szyndler, entomologist Catherine Loudon and chemist Robert Corn of UC Irvine and entomologists Kenneth Haynes and Michael Potter of the University of Kentucky collaborated on the new study.

Their work was motivated by a centuries-old remedy for bedbugs used in Bulgaria, Serbia and other southeast European countries. Kidney bean leaves were strewn on the floor next to beds and seemed to ensnare the blood-seeking parasites on their nightly forays. The bug-encrusted greenery was burned the next morning to exterminate the insects.

Through painstaking detective work, the scientists discovered that the creatures are trapped within seconds of stepping on a leaf, their legs impaled by microscopic hooked hairs known botanically as trichomes.

Using the bean leaves as templates, the researchers have microfabricated materials that closely resemble them geometrically. The synthetic surfaces snag the bedbugs temporarily but do not yet stop them as effectively as real leaves, Loudon said, suggesting that crucial mechanics of the trichomes still need to be determined.

Theoretically, bean leaves could be used for pest control, but they dry out and don't last very long. They also can't easily be applied to locations other than a floor. Synthetic materials could provide a nontoxic alternative.

"Plants exhibit extraordinary abilities to entrap insects," said Loudon, lead author of the paper. "Modern scientific techniques let us fabricate materials at a microscopic level, with the potential to 'not let the bedbugs bite' without pesticides."

"Nature is a hard act to follow, but the benefits could be enormous," Potter said. "Imagine if every bedbug inadvertently brought into a dwelling was captured before it had a chance to bite and multiply."

Funding for the study was provided by the National Science Foundation.

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by University of California - Irvine.

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Disclaimer: This article is not intended to provide medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. Views expressed here do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/~3/mAV3oC0lVMQ/130409211932.htm

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Tuesday, April 9, 2013

What Would Happen If the World Lost Oxygen for 5 Seconds?

Sure, our supervillains are more of the geopolitical type, but it's inevitable that some day a mad scientist will come along with an oxygen-stealing ray. And when he does, as this Buzzfeed video—based on an imaginative Quora thread—points out, we're all in a whole lotta trouble. More »


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/gxuRichW6TQ/what-would-happen-if-the-world-lost-oxygen-for-5-seconds

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