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Alzheimer's-Causing Amyloid And Bacteria Trigger Same Immune Response In The Brain
In a new study published today in the July issue of the journal Cell Host & Microbe, UC Davis researchers report that both amyloid plaques found in the brains of Alzheimer"s patients and structures made by some gut bacteria likely elicit the same response by human immune cells.
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Developed Countries Must Address Global Warming To Prevent Disease, Hunger In Developing World
Pollution from the world"s wealthiest countries is spreading disease and hunger in developing countries, according to a new Oxfam International report, which calls on developed countries to address global warming when G8 leaders meet in Italy, the Globe and Mail reports. The report, titled "Suffering the Science: Climate Change, People and Poverty," says, "It is in the tropics where the bulk of humanity lives - many of them in poverty - that climate change is hitting now and hitting hardest" (Bailey, 7/6).
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Former Ghanaian President Named World Food Programme Ambassador
John Kofi Agyekum Kufuor, a former president of Ghana, has been named a global ambassador against hunger for the U.N."s World Food Programme (WFP), Xinhua reports. According to the news service, Kufuor will "help to underline the importance of fighting hunger on several fronts - by investing in long-term agricultural development, but also by funding WFP"s work in tackling urgent hunger needs and helping the hungry poor to access affordable and nutritious food" (Ooko, 7/20).
Endocrinology

House Seeks To Pay For Reform With New Tax On Wealthy

House Democrats are expected to begin marking up a health reform bill this week that members of the Ways and Means committee said "would cost less than $1 trillion over 10 years, [and would be] paid for chiefly by a combination of spending reductions in the health care system and a surtax on wealthy taxpayers," CQ Politics reports. "The surtax would be levied beginning in 2011. ò€¦ [T]here would be three income brackets - $350,000, $500,000 and $1 million for couples filing jointly, and $280,000, $400,000 and $800,000 for individuals - with a different rate at each level: "One, two, three [percent] - something like that,"" the committee"s chairman, Charles Rangel, D-N.Y., said (Wayne, 7/13). "The Obama administration is open to the idea of taxing the wealthiest Americans to pay for healthcare reform, health secretary Kathleen Sebelius suggested yesterday as the House of Representatives prepares to incorporate such a plan in its draft healthcare bill," the Financial Times reports. Though the plan"s drawn fire from Republicans, the administration views it as one possibility for paying for reform, which officials hope Congress will address before its August recess (O"Connor, 7/12). Meanwhile, Senate leaders, including some Democrats, played down the tax idea on Sunday"s talk shows, Congress Daily reports. Senate Majority Whip Richard Durbin, D-Ill., said, "I think we"re going to have a different approach, while Sen. Kent Conrad, D-N.D., said "I don"t think the House proposal as I"ve heard it will be what"s part of the final package." Durbin"s Republican counterpart, Jon Kyl, R-Ariz., said the plan "would be exactly the wrong thing to do any time, but especially when we"re in the middle of a recession" (Hunt and Dick, 7/12). However, senators continue to consider other options for raising taxes elsewhere, Bloomberg reports. Durbin also said in his Sunday talk show appearance, that the bill must "combine cuts in actual spending on health care, savings from hospitals, from doctors, from health insurance companies, along with some new revenue" (Del Giudice, 7/12). As the public watches the debate take shape in Congress, polls show that Americans are anxious about the high costs of medical bills and premiums, even as Congress focuses on finding ways to pay for expanding access, the Los Angeles Times reports. "[T]he debate in Washington has been dominated by how to raise hundreds of billions of dollars -- by tax increases, if necessary -- to ensure that almost everyone has medical insurance. That emphasis is stoking fears that a historic opportunity to reform the system may be missed" (Levey, 7/13). 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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