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Obama Says Health Reform Must Be Done This Year
The opportunity to enact health care reform legislation could be missed unless Congress passes it this year, President Obama on Thursday said to thousands of supporters in a phone call made from Air Force One, the AP/USA Today reports. In a call to members of his political organization, Organizing for America, Obama said, "If we don"t get it done this year, we"re not going to get it done," adding, "I think the status quo is unacceptable and that we"ve got to get it done this year." Obama also said that any action on overhaul legislation could be delayed unless volunteers pressure lawmakers to support the administration"s goals for health care reform (AP/USA Today, 5/28). Obama said, "Some of you are in states and districts where politicians are resistant to bringing about change, so we need you to get involved" (Zeleny, "The Caucus," New York Times, 5/28). Obama told volunteers that it was time to "remobilize" after their successful campaign to get him elected, adding that "we have gotten a lot of things done during our first four months. But health care, that"s a big push" (AP/USA Today, 5/28).David Plouffe, Obama"s presidential campaign manager and head of Organizing for America, during the call said, "If the country stands with the president and if the country is demanding health care reform, [then] we"ll get it done," adding, "Washington will not have any option but to follow us." He added, "You need to take ownership of this" ("The Caucus," New York Times, 5/28). Organizing for America Campaign
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Supreme Court Nominees Should Disclose Views On Constitutional Issues, USA Today Opinion Piece States
One thing that "has been conspicuously absent" from the confirmation hearings for Supreme Court nominee Sonia Sotomayor is "substance," Jonathan Turley, the Shapiro Professor of Public Interest Law at George Washington University, writes in a USA Today opinion piece. According to Turley, "The vast majority of questions and answers remained on a shallow and predictable level where Sotomayor did little more than describe current doctrines and case law -- avoiding disclosures of her own views." He continues, "What is most striking is how Sotomayor"s statements were virtually identical to both her conservative and liberal predecessors," including her comments that Roe v. Wade and Planned Parenthood v. Casey are "the precedent of the court."Turley writes, "The content-light character in these hearings is largely the product of the "Ginsburg rule" -- named after Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, who refused to answer questions in her 1993 confirmation hearing about any case or matter upon which she might later vote." According to Turley, "Later nominees for both parties have relied on the Ginsburg rule to turn the hearings into prolonged photo-ops for senators, who largely ask wafer-thin questions to solicit largely scripted answers." The rule "allows nominees to get by with meaningless sound bites that promise to respect precedent, the Framers [of the Constitution] and collegiality in general," he adds. Furthermore, it "tells the public nothing about a nominee"s philosophy or purpose before giving her life tenure on the world"s most powerful court," Turley writes.According to Turley, there is a "simple solution to returning substance to the confirmation process: End the Ginsburg rule by insisting that nominees answer questions about their specific views on constitutional rights." Although "the current system works well for presidents, nominees and senators," it "does little for the public or the system of justice," he writes (Turley, USA Today, 7/16).
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Changes In Brain Architecture May Be Driven By Different Cognitive Challenges
Scientists trying to understand how the brains of animals evolve have found that evolutionary changes in brain structure reflect the types of social interactions and environmental stimuli different species face.
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UC Irvine To Fire Nurse Who Questioned Unsafe Patient Care Practices

Registered nurses and hospital employees will hold a patient care vigil Tuesday night, at UC Irvine Medical Center (UCIMC), to protest the administration"s retaliatory actions against Ethel Mark, an RN who has worked in the hospital"s cardiac care unit for the last seven years as a model patient advocate. Ms. Mark was informed that she could expect to be terminated by the beginning of July. "Patient advocacy means speaking out on behalf of your patients, and being willing to expose and challenge management decisions that negatively impact patient care," said Jill Furillo, RN, Southern California Director of the California Nurses Association (CNA) which represents UC RNs. "Ethel Mark, RN had a legal and ethical obligation under the state"s Nursing Practice Act to challenge unsafe practices and she acted accordingly." Patient Advocacy Vigil When: Tuesday, June 30, 6:30pm-8:30pm Where: UC Irvine Medical Center (by shuttle stop) 101 The City Drive South - Orange, CA 92868 Ethel Mark and CNA"s Professional Practice Committee at UCI have been working to compel management to correct the following unsafe patient care practices. 1. Unsafe "floating": Ms. Mark has actively opposed UCI management"s decision to require nurses to work in the heart monitor unit (telemetry) who do not have the clinical expertise and orientation to work in the specialty unit as required by law. Despite ongoing concerns, UCI continues these unsafe staffing practices. 2. Lack of adequate break relief staffing. Patients have a right to safe and adequate staffing at all times under state law, including when their nurse is on break. Many RNs including Ms. Mark have consistently pushed for adequate break relief coverage, but UCI still refuses to provide it. RNs work 12-hour shifts and are entitled to 75 minutes of meal and break periods. 3. Malfunctioning narcotics pumps. Earlier this year Ms. Mark alerted management of several instances of faulty narcotics pumps. In fact, six months earlier UCIMC pulled one third of all of these pumps because they failed mechanical tests. As of now, the remaining malfunctioning pumps still have not been replaced or fixed. Following the Tuesday night vigil, CNA along with RNs from throughout the hospital, will represent Ethel Mark at her pre-termination (Skelly) hearing on Wednesday morning, July 1, to quash the retaliatory termination. California Nurses Association


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