বৃহস্পতিবার, ৩১ জানুয়ারী, ২০১৩

How Soon is Phil Mickelson Moving to Florida???

Phil Mickelson?s California Home

Likely Sales Price

His asking price, $7.1m, should really be reduced to $6.9m as buyers search in rhythms of ? millions, and will most likely sell for the $5.9m he paid for it in 2001, as most real estate today is selling at the same prices as 1999 to 2001.While Mickelson has incredible views, a wonderful, sparkling blue pool with waterfall, separate spas, tennis courts, guest houses and a cul-de-sac locale, architecture has changed dramatically since his home was built. Buyers today, when looking for Trophy Properties, prefer to be on the water. Next, they want the latest in architectural trends, which happens to be cleaner lines and a softer palette. Out is ornate Mediterranean; in is a transitional contemporary look. The buyer will most probably not buy his furniture and antiques, which probably cost a small fortune, as the buyer will change the overall look of the interior.


Michael Jordan?s Massive Modern Contemporary Mansion

Tiger Woods? Jupiter Island Swedish Ikea Modern Spread

Rory McIlroy?s Ultra-Modern Home


13.3% California Income Tax

California?s 13.3% onerous income tax and nearly 10% sales tax continues to impact high wage earners, except perhaps in Silicon Valley, and the exodus out of California, New York and other high income tax states continues. California was at one time the fastest-growing state in the nation and now it is losing more residents annually than any other state. In the past 10 years, nearly 2.5m residents have exited California.Phil speculated that his tax rate is 62-63%, meaning that the first 230 days of the year he works exclusively for both the United States and California governments. That means that around August 20, 2013 he can begin taking home his earnings.A typical Mickelson day requires 10-12 straight hours of planned, concentrated practice, day in, day out. Being a top-ranked player not only means you are great, but requires an unusual dedication honing your game into shape. It stresses the body, mind & soul.With the level of competition so keen today, the days of the old-timers staying out late, drinking and womanizing are long gone. That even caught up with Tiger last year!The demands of sponsors, grueling travel schedules, advertising photo shoots, charity work, autograph signing and dedication to family leaves the pro golfer with very few precious days off.


Michael Jordan?s House | Tiger?s Sports Complex | Venus Williams? Mansion | Celine Dion?s House | Donald Trump?s Private Club | Burt Reynolds & Friends | Elin Nordegren?s Home | Rory McIlroy?s House | Rush Limbaugh?s Palm Beach Home


Is California the next Greece?

California has long been the leader in deficit spending and unfortunately that has now caught up with it. Just as residents in the Northeast are leaving in droves for Florida, which negates any possible revenue increase for the state despite increases in the income tax rates, so too are California residents.

Passive Income v Earned Income

Mickelson is different from the hedge fund guy who is taxed at 15%, the oil companies with their depletion allowances, General Electric with its off-shore subsidiaries, etc. So Phil is on solid ground if he wants to move to Florida which dozens of high profile, high wage earners call home.

Phil saves $7.3m

Speculation has Phil earning $55m per year, so over a 10-year period, based on the 13.3% tax rate, Phil would save $7.3m by moving to Florida, more than the asking price of his current California house.

Phil Mickelson?s California Home

Phil Mickelson?s California Home

Where in Florida will Phil buy?

Where will Phil buy if he moves to Florida? Most probably the Jupiter Island area or a gated community like Admirals Cove, The Bear?s Club, or Old Palm. Each of those will offer him the privacy and water features so desirable today.


Michael Jordan?s House | Tiger?s Sports Complex | Venus Williams? Mansion | Celine Dion?s House | Donald Trump?s Private Club | Burt Reynolds & Friends | Elin Nordegren?s Home | Rory McIlroy?s House | Rush Limbaugh?s Palm Beach Home


Source: http://www.jeffrealty.com/blog/2013/01/how-soon-is-phil-mickelson-moving-to-florida/

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Real Madrid, Barcelona Copa Del Rey Semifinal: 1st Leg Draw With Fabregas, Varane Goals (VIDEO)

By Charlie Scott, Goal.com

The shares were spoiled in a pulsating Clasico at the Santiago Bernabeu, as a thumping late header from Raphael Varane earned?Real Madrid a 1-1 draw in the first leg of its Copa del Rey semifinal against Barcelona.

The Catalan side looked to have put one foot in the final as it led late on after Cesc Fabregas had put the club up 1-0 with a well-taken goal shortly after the break, only for Madrid's young defender Varane to secure the home team a draw in the 81st minute.

Madrid was without five first-team players for its fourth Clasico of the season, as Iker Casillas and Pepe missed out because of injury, while the likes of Sergio Ramos, Fabio Coentrao and Angel Di Maria were all absent through suspension. Barcelona, meanwhile, named a full-strength starting lineup.

For all their missing men it was los Blancos that made the brighter start of the two sides. Within a minute of kickoff Ronaldo was charging at the heart of the Barcelona defense, and his driving run towards goal was only stopped by a cynical challenge from Gerard Pique. The Portuguese attacker took the set piece himself and proceeded to force Pinto into making a fine diving stop.

In the 12th minute a moment of mastery from Andres Iniesta created a chance for the overlapping Jordi Alba, but the Barcelona left back could only volley wide of Diego Lopez's goal after bursting through the Madrid defense and connecting with Iniesta's effortless chipped pass.

Moments after being booked for a mistimed challenge on Cesc Fabregas, Ricardo Carvalho bundled into Iniesta 25 yards from goal, and from the resulting free kick Xavi came within inches of giving Barcelona the lead, as his devilish curling effort rattled the crossbar with Lopez beaten.

Carvalho then nearly supplied an assist for Barcelona when his tame back-pass allowed Messi to steal the ball and tee up Xavi inside the Madrid box. The Barcelona midfielder arrowed a shot towards the bottom left corner but Madrid's young center back Varane was there on the line to brilliantly hack Xavi's goal-bound strike away from danger.

On the half-hour mark, Karim Benzema nearly scored for the home side when he found space in behind the Barcelona backline to meet Jose Callejon's superb pass and send a volley crashing into the side-netting from a tight angle.

Somehow, a frantic opening first half ended 0-0 despite an avalanche of chances being created by two teams putting clear emphasis on attack rather than defense.

Madrid mimicked its strong start to the first half after the break and fashioned a chance after just 40 seconds of the second period - Benzema hammering a shot over 18 yards from goal.

Despite its pressure, Madrid found itself a goal behind in the 50th minute when Fabregas clinically side-footed the ball past Lopez after being played in by Messi. Just a single touch was needed by Messi to both dispossess Xabi Alonso and play a weighted through ball into the path of Fabregas, with the former Arsenal captain producing a cool finish to give the Catalan side a 1-0 lead.

Then, if not for a sumptuously timed challenge from Varane, Fabregas could well have given Barcelona a two-goal lead. The Frenchman's tackle on his opponent brought Jose Mourinho to his feet, and prompted the coach to make an immediate change with his team on the back foot - introducing Luka Modric for Callejon.

Ronaldo then missed a glorious opportunity to head Madrid level from close range, but he could not test Pinto after connecting with Essien's teasing cross from the right.

Pique, perhaps not to be outshone by Varane up the other end, then produced an equally brilliant tackle on Ronaldo as the Portugal international shaped to send a shot goalwards inside the Barcelona penalty area.

With Barcelona seemingly set to hold out for the win, up popped Varane in the 81st minute to rise highest and send an emphatic header past Pinto from Mesut Ozil's free kick to make it 1-1 and set up an enticing second leg at Camp Nou on Feb. 26.

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/01/30/real-madrid-barcelona-copa-del-rey-semi_n_2586954.html

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Community-Based Oncology Practice Redesigns Processes Based ...

Snapshot

Summary

A community-based oncology practice (Consultants in Medical Oncology and Hematology, PC) reengineered its care delivery processes using evidence-based frameworks, including the National Committee for Quality Assurance's patient-centered medical home model. Known as the Oncology Patient-Centered Medical Home? and supported by oncology-specific information technology, the redesigned process features practice accountability for all cancer-related care, standardized patient evaluations at each visit, multidisciplinary care plans, patient navigators who arrange and track externally provided care, a telephone advice and triage line, various activities to educate and engage patients, and ongoing performance monitoring and improvement. The program has led to strong or improved performance on multiple measures of access, quality, and efficiency, including patients' ability to come in for unscheduled visits (a measure of access), clinician adherence to chemotherapy guidelines, complication-related symptoms, survival rates, end-of-life care, emergency department and inpatient use, and costs of care. In 2010, the practice achieved recognition as a patient-centered medical home from the National Committee for Quality Assurance.

Evidence Rating (What is this?)

Moderate: The evidence consists of pre- and post-implementation comparisons of unscheduled patient visits, complication-related symptoms, end-of-life care, emergency department visits, and inpatient admissions, along with post-implementation data on adherence to chemotherapy guidelines, survival rates, and estimated cost savings generated by the program.
begin doxml

Developing Organizations

Consultants in Medical Oncology and Hematology, PC
Drexel Hill, PAend do

Date First Implemented

2010
The practice became a medical home in April 2010.

Problem Addressed

The delivery of medical care, including cancer care, is often fragmented, with deficiencies in communication, care coordination, and accountability.1 The patient-centered medical home (PCMH) model has been shown to address these problems in primary care, yet to date few specialty practices (including oncology practices) have adopted this approach.
  • Fragmented care: The delivery of medical care, including cancer care, is highly fragmented,? characterized by poor communication across providers, duplication of services, low adherence to clinical guidelines and other standardized care processes, lack of teamwork, unnecessary delays, inadequate patient education (leading to patient confusion about treatment plans), incomplete medical records, and unclear accountability among providers.1 Care fragmentation is particularly problematic in oncology, as cancer patients tend to be older and chronically ill and often have multiple co-occurring conditions and unique psychosocial needs that make them a particularly vulnerable population.1
  • Significant benefits of PCMH in primary care settings: Results from demonstration projects conducted in primary care settings suggest that the PCMH model can have a positive impact on quality, costs, and patient and provider satisfaction.2 For example, a study of almost 4,000 patients with various chronic conditions found that those treated according to PCMH principles fared better than those receiving usual care.2 Patient-centered medical homes have also been shown to reduce costs; for example, a PCMH initiative in North Carolina saved $244 million.2
  • Failure to apply to oncology care, despite likely benefits: The PCMH model can likely be effective in specialty settings, particularly in medical oncology practices that are increasingly responsible for coordinating complex treatment plans, providing case management, educating patients, communicating with other physicians, managing palliative and end-of-life care, and tracking care electronically.1 Few if any oncology practices have adopted the model or are in the process of doing so, however.

Description of the Innovative Activity

Consultants in Medical Oncology and Hematology, PC, reengineered its care delivery processes using evidence-based frameworks, including the National Committee for Quality Assurance's (NCQA's) PCMH model. Known as the Oncology Patient-Centered Medical Home? and supported by oncology-specific information technology (IT), the redesigned process features practice accountability for all cancer-related care, standardized patient evaluations at each visit, multidisciplinary care plans, patient navigators who arrange and track externally provided care, a telephone advice and triage line, various activities to educate and engage patients, and ongoing performance monitoring and improvement. Key program elements are outlined below:
  • Oncology-specific IT to facilitate standardized care: The practice uses oncology-specific IT to facilitate the provision and documentation of standardized care, enhance communication among providers and between providers and patients, and monitor and improve quality.
    • Oncology-specific electronic medical record (EMR): An externally developed, oncology-specific EMR allows clinicians to document and track patient care. Embedded within the EMR are treatment plans based on clinical recommendations from the National Comprehensive Cancer Network and the American Society of Clinical Oncology, thus ensuring that physicians recommend chemotherapy regimens and other treatments supported by clinical evidence. The EMR is fully integrated with the laboratory, radiology, pathology, and medical record departments within the practice?s affiliated hospitals, allowing physicians immediate access to up-to-date information on inpatient care received by the patient.
    • Associated documentation tool: An internally developed tool (called Iris) pulls critical summary information from the EMR and presents it on a one-page scrollable document that forms the physician?s progress note. By highlighting acute clinical issues and gaps in care, the tool facilitates the provision of standardized care during visits. The tool also allows real-time documentation via speech recognition technology and permits auto-fax or auto?e-mail dissemination of documentation to the patient?s primary care physician and other specialists. Patients can access their Iris progress notes via a password-protected patient portal.
  • Accountability for all cancer-related care: Once a patient joins the practice, the practice assumes primary responsibility for coordinating all cancer-related diagnostic testing and treatment services and activities for that patient until he or she reaches the survivorship phase of care or requires end-of-life care. The patient's primary care physician is a valuable and involved member of the care team who receives frequent communications from the practice and referrals for management of comorbid conditions.
  • Standardized patient evaluation: A standardized evaluation occurs at each visit. This process involves the patient completing an assessment form, nurses evaluating the patient's health status, and physician's evaluating and managing all active clinical issues, as outlined below:
    • Patient assessment: At the start of each visit, a patient reviews a form that lists information pulled from the EMR, including demographic, insurance, and pharmacy data; emergency contacts; date of last hospitalization and emergency department (ED) visit; and date of last mammogram, colonoscopy, and other age- and gender-appropriate cancer screenings. The patient makes any necessary corrections and notes whether he or she had been admitted to a nursing home or transitional care facility and/or treated by any specialists since the last visit. Last, the patient rates the severity of any symptoms (e.g., nausea, vomiting, pain, night sweats, insomnia, weakness) on a scale of 1 to 10.
    • Nurse-led evaluation: The nurse reviews the form and discusses any changes with the patient. The nurse assesses vital signs, symptoms, performance status (measured by the Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group [ECOG] performance status score,3 which ranges from 1 [fully active] to 5 [death] and is used to evaluate patient health and ability, inform treatment decisions, and prompt end-of-life care discussions), and medication reconciliation results and documents all information in the oncology EMR, which is exported to the Iris progress note.
    • Physician evaluation: The physician uses Iris during the evaluation of the patient. The physician reviews prepopulated data (e.g., patient assessment, performance status, diagnostic test results). The screen highlights any out-of-range values, due or overdue immunizations, and significant changes from the previous visit to ensure that the physician addresses all active clinical issues.
  • Multidisciplinary care plan: During each visit, the physician and patient discuss potential treatment options and/or adjustments and, as appropriate, goals of therapy and end-of-life wishes. The physician generates or updates a multidisciplinary care plan based on changes in the patient's health status and performance status, the agreed-upon treatment approach, required referrals, patient goals for therapy, and preferences related to palliative and end-of-life care. Internal team members who may be involved in executing the plan include physicians, oncology nurse practitioners, physician assistants, chemotherapy nurses, patient navigators (see bullet below), a therapist who treats lymphedema (localized fluid retention and tissue swelling), psychologists, and a yoga instructor. The system automatically generates referrals to internal colleagues and faxes or e-mails reports to external referring and consulting physicians. External physicians with access to the system receive e-mail notification that a patient report has been generated, allowing them to view the report via an external physician portal.
  • Patient navigators who arrange external care: Patient navigators coordinate all aspects of external cancer care specified by the plan. Navigator tasks include gathering all clinical data from external sources, scheduling diagnostic testing ordered by the oncologist, and arranging necessary appointments with the patient?s primary care physician and other specialists (e.g., surgeon, radiation oncologist, mental health provider, physical therapist). The EMR alerts the navigator when diagnostic test results have not been received within the expected time frame, allowing them to contact the testing center and the patient. Navigators also connect patients to needed support services and other community-based resources.
  • Advice and triage line: Patients have access to the practice?s clinicians via a telephone triage line, and team members actively encourage them to call the line with questions and concerns as they arise. Patients can call between 8:00 am and 6:00 pm Monday through Friday to discuss symptoms and concerns with a nurse, and can reach an on-call physician at all other times. Triage nurses access the patient?s EMR during the call and use standardized symptom management algorithms to assess clinical issues. Depending on the specific circumstances, nurses provide advice over the telephone to help patients manage their symptoms at home, advise them to come in for an office visit, or recommend a trip to the ED. To date, more than 75 percent of calls have resulted in home-based management of symptoms.
  • Patient education and engagement: To encourage patient self-management, physicians and nurses provide personalized education during visits, including information about the disease, treatment options (e.g., risks, benefits, and likely outcomes), and the importance of adherence to the treatment regimen. Patients also receive packets of written educational materials specific to their disease and treatment options. To promote patient engagement, team members encourage patients to prepare questions for the doctor before the visit, ask as many questions as needed during the visit, and call the triage line to report symptoms and concerns promptly. As stated earlier, patients also have access to the physician?s progress notes and treatment plan via a patient portal, thus further encouraging engagement.
  • Ongoing performance monitoring and improvement: The Iris system automatically generates data on performance over time for a set of indicators, including but not limited to hospitalizations, ED visits, success of symptom palliation, and disposition of triage calls. During monthly meetings, physicians review performance on these indicators and share best practices. Trends in performance inform the development of quality/process improvement initiatives.

References/Related Articles

The Advisory Board Company. Inside the first NCQA-designated medical oncology medical home. August 11, 2010. Available at:
http://www.advisory.com/Research/Health-Care-Advisory-Board/Blogs/The-Blueprint/2010/08/Inside-the-first-NCQA-designated-medical-oncology-medical-home.

Sprandio JD. Oncology patient-centered medical home and accountable cancer care. Community Oncology. 2010;7(12):565-72. Available at:
http://www.communityoncology.org/UserFiles/pdfs/co-js-medical-home.pdf (If you don't have the software to open this PDF, download free Adobe Acrobat Reader? software?External Web Site Policy.).

Sprandio JD. Oncology Patient Centered Medical Home: Transforming the Landscape of Oncology Care. Powerpoint presentation. Available at:
http://www.oncologycongress.com/RNA/RNA_OncologyCongress_v2/documents/2011/session_presentations/Oncology_Patient_Centered_Medical_Home-Sprandio.pdf.

George J. Oncologist bringing medical home model to cancer docs. Philadelphia Business Journal. June 15, 2012. Available at:
http://www.bizjournals.com/philadelphia/print-edition/2012/06/15/oncologist-bringing-medical-home-model.html?page=all.

Contact the Innovator

John Sprandio, MD
Principal
Oncology Management Services
Consultants in Medical Oncology and Hematology, PC
2100 Keystone Avenue, Suite 502
Drexel Hill, PA 19026
E-mail: jsprandio@cmoh.org

Susan Tofani
Director, Payer and Network Relations
Oncology Management Services
Consultants in Medical Oncology and Hematology, PC
2100 Keystone Avenue, Suite 502
Drexel Hill, PA 19026
(215) 817-7957
E-mail: stofani@oms-support.com

Innovator Disclosures

Dr. Sprandio is the principal of Oncology Management Services, and thus has a financial interest in the company. Ms. Tofani is a consultant to Oncology Management Services and her compensation is tied to company performance.

Results

The PCMH model has led to strong or improved performance on multiple measures of access, quality, and efficiency, including patients' ability to come in for unscheduled visits, clinician adherence to chemotherapy guidelines, complication-related symptoms, survival rates, end-of-life care, ED and inpatient use, and costs.
  • More unscheduled visits, suggesting better access to care: Indicative of improvements in access to care (reflecting the number of patients who are seen promptly by the practice, despite the absence of a scheduled appointment), the number of unscheduled patient visits occurring within 24 hours of a telephone triage line call increased from 197 in 2007 to 352 in 2011.
  • Strong adherence to chemotherapy guidelines: Adherence to guideline-based care plans for chemotherapy reached 96 percent in 2011.
  • Fewer complication-related symptoms: Since implementation of the program, complication-related symptoms have declined, including the incidence of Clostridium difficile enteritis (as evidenced by a 50-percent decline in admissions for treatment of this condition) and delayed posttreatment- and chemotherapy-induced nausea. The latter improvement was evident in declines in the use of oral 5-hydroxytryptamine 3 inhibitors; the annual number of new prescriptions fell from 112 to 20 and refills fell from 86 to 6 between 2005 and 2010.
  • High survival rates: The practice has 1-, 2-, 3-, 4-, and 5-year survival rates (all-cause mortality rates) that are within the national average for patients with Stage III colorectal, breast, and lung cancer.
  • Better end-of-life care: Several measures suggest improvements in end-of-life care, including increases in the average length of hospice stays (from 26 days in 2009 to 35 days in 2011), declines in the proportion of patients visiting an ED (from 23.9 percent in 2010 to 20.1 percent in 2011) or admitted to the hospital (from 39.3 percent in 2010 to 36.4 percent in 2011) in the last 30 days of life, and an increase in the proportion of patients dying at home (from 70 percent in 2010 to 74 percent in 2011).
  • Fewer ED visits and hospitalizations: The number of ED visits per chemotherapy patient per year for a patient on active treatment fell from 2.6 in 2004 to just over 0.8 in 2011. The percentage of calls to the triage line that resulted in an ED referral fell by more than 50 percent between 2005 and 2009, from 11.85 to 5.06 percent, even as patient volume grew by 30 percent. Between 2005 and 2009, the annual number of inpatient admissions for practice patients fell by 16 percent (from 435 to 340), with an additional 9.7-percent decline in 2010. Average admissions per chemotherapy patient per year fell by more than 50 percent between 2007 and 2011, from 1.080 to 0.528.
  • Significant cost savings: A 2010 analysis estimates that the PCMH model has generated more than $9 million in savings to payers per year, including $8.9 million from reduced hospital admissions and $607,000 from reduced ED use. This figure translates into $12,000 in savings for each chemotherapy patient. Overall cancer care costs are estimated to have decreased by 6.6 to 12.7 percent as a result of the program.

Evidence Rating (What is this?)

Moderate: The evidence consists of pre- and post-implementation comparisons of unscheduled patient visits, complication-related symptoms, end-of-life care, emergency department visits, and inpatient admissions, along with post-implementation data on adherence to chemotherapy guidelines, survival rates, and estimated cost savings generated by the program.

Context of the Innovation

Consultants in Medical Oncology and Hematology, PC, provides hematology and oncology care to patients in southeastern Pennsylvania. The practice, which includes 4 offices that are affiliated with 2 hospital systems (Crozer-Keystone and Main Line Health Systems), treats approximately 6,000 patients each year. Roughly one-half of patients have commercial insurance/managed care, 40 percent are on Medicare, and 10 percent receive medical assistance (i.e., Medicaid) from the state.

The roots of the practice?s quest for performance measurement and improvement date back to the late 1990s, when the push for integration and consolidation in the Philadelphia area health care market created a focus on the ability to share data across sites. Dr. John Sprandio, the practice?s president, began considering how to improve data sharing within the practice. In 2003, the practice adopted an EMR, after which practice leaders began looking for ways to maximize the ability of the EMR to promote quality and efficiency. It became clear that achieving these goals required a thorough review and redesign of the practice's care processes. Leaders decided to embark on a major reengineering effort, with the goal of streamlining and standardizing care; maintaining a patient-centered approach; minimizing clinically irrelevant physician activity; and improving communication, coordination, access, and patient engagement. By 2008, the practice?s physicians realized that the process enhancements that had been made over time reflected the elements of a medical home, and hence they decided to apply for recognition as a PCMH from NCQA. The practice received this designation in April 2010.

Planning and Development Process

Selected steps included the following:
  • Purchasing EMR and interfacing with affiliated hospitals: The practice purchased an oncology-specific EMR in 2003. By January 2005, all four practice sites had become paperless, with the EMR able to interface with IT systems at affiliated hospitals.
  • Selecting indicators to track: The lead physicians and practice administrator reviewed clinical guidelines to identify best practices, define quality parameters, and select clinical and financial metrics to monitor on an ongoing basis.
  • Selecting care processes to standardize: The physicians reviewed care processes and considered which ones to standardize so as to improve quality and reliability.
  • Developing Iris: In 2004, the practice?s IT staff developed Iris as an ?overlay? that could pull relevant information from the EMR to enhance ease of use and the ability to improve quality and efficiency.
  • Pursuing medical home designation: In 2008, Dr. Sprandio learned from a colleague that the practice?s services and approach dovetailed nicely with the components of an NCQA PCMH. Practice leaders reviewed NCQA's PCMH criteria to determine what components might be missing. The practice developed these components and applied to NCQA for medical home recognition.
  • Negotiating better rate with payers: The practice monitored reductions in utilization as a result of the program and associated cost savings for payers, and contacted its large commercial payers to advance this model as a new value proposition in negotiations.
  • Retraining administrative staff for navigator role: In 2009, the practice determined that patient navigators were a necessary element for achieving medical home designation. The practice added the position in 2009, along with an automated voice recognition system that reduced the need for transcription. As a result, administrative assistants could be retrained to become patient navigators.

Resources Used and Skills Needed

  • Staffing: The new care process required no new staff, as existing staff incorporate it into their daily routines. In fact, the PCMH model and associated streamlining of care has allowed the practice to reduce staffing by between 10 and 11 full-time equivalent (FTE) positions through attrition. The practice now has 9 physicians and more than 75 full- and part-time staff (equivalent to approximately 50 FTEs), including oncology nurse practitioners, physician assistants, nurse managers, chemotherapy nurses, patient navigators, and others.
  • Costs: Information on the costs of developing this program is not available. As noted, the program has generated cost savings on an ongoing basis.
begin fs

Funding Sources

Consultants in Medical Oncology and Hematology, PC
end fs

Tools and Other Resources

Two organizations are facilitating the dissemination and spread of the oncology-specific PCMH model.
  • Founded by John Sprandio, MD, president of Consultants in Medical Oncology and Hematology, PC, Oncology Management Services, Ltd. (http://www.oms-support.com) helps community-based oncology practices adopt the model. Interested practices may contact info@opcmh.com to obtain information regarding its comprehensive toolkit and technical support.
  • The Community Oncology Alliance, a Washington, DC?based advocacy group, is using the model as a template to help other community-based practices shift to a medical home model. More information is available at: http://www.communityoncology.org/site/medical-home-aco.htm.?
Information about becoming recognized as a PCMH by NCQA is available at: http://www.ncqa.org/Programs/Recognition/PatientCenteredMedicalHomePCMH.aspx.

Oncology clinical guidelines are available from the following:

Getting Started with This Innovation

  • Secure physician support: The lead physicians at the practice secured their colleagues? ?buy-in? for standardized care processes by emphasizing the positive impact the program would have on quality, physician efficiency, and practice sustainability.
  • Emphasize structured fields in IT tools: Data entered into structured fields (rather than as free text) can be easily searched and used to monitor performance on various indicators on an ongoing basis, thus facilitating quality improvement.
  • Standardize based on evidence: Base all practice standards on clinical evidence related to best practices. Design written policies and procedures that reflect these standardized processes.

Sustaining This Innovation

  • Negotiate with payers to share in savings: Practices adopting this model may develop new programs (such as a telephone triage line) that improve quality but do not qualify for reimbursement on their own and?that may reduce the need for reimbursable services such as office visits. As a result, practices adopting this model may suffer financially unless payment models are revamped. To that end, would-be adopters should contact payers to discuss development of shared-savings programs, pay for performance/value, or other payment methodologies that reward practices financially for improving quality and reducing costs and utilization.
  • Monitor performance to facilitate continuous improvement: Practices should continually monitor performance on key indicators, using the information to inform improvement efforts. For example, tracking the content of patient calls to the triage line may reveal symptoms that could be better managed on a population basis. Consultants in Medical Oncology and Hematology, PC, enhanced its services (e.g., by adding certain medications to treatment protocols) based on information about the frequency of patient symptoms.

Use By Other Organizations

Oncology Management Services, Ltd. is currently working with six practices interested in becoming oncology medical homes.

?

2 Patient-Centered Primary Care Collaborative. Evidence of quality: evidence on the effectiveness of the patient-centered medical home on quality and cost. Available at: www.pcpcc.net/content/evidence-quality.
Service Delivery Innovation Profile Classification

Original publication: January 30, 2013.
Original publication indicates the date the profile was first posted to the Innovations Exchange.

Last updated: January 30, 2013.
Last updated indicates the date the most recent changes to the profile were posted to the Innovations Exchange.

Source: http://www.innovations.ahrq.gov/content.aspx?id=3763

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Hagel supports nuclear arms cuts, then elimination

FILE - In this Jan. 7, 2013 file photo, President Barack Obama, left, shakes hands with his choice for Defense Secretary, former Nebraska Sen. Chuck Hagel, after announcing Hagel's nomination in the East Room of the White House in Washington. (AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais, File)

FILE - In this Jan. 7, 2013 file photo, President Barack Obama, left, shakes hands with his choice for Defense Secretary, former Nebraska Sen. Chuck Hagel, after announcing Hagel's nomination in the East Room of the White House in Washington. (AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais, File)

(AP) ? Chuck Hagel, the likely next secretary of defense, would be the first to enter the Pentagon as a public advocate for sharply reducing the number of U.S. nuclear weapons, possibly without equivalent cuts by Russia. He supports an international movement called Global Zero that favors eliminating all nuclear weapons.

That puts him outside the orthodoxy embraced by many of his fellow Republicans but inside a widening circle of national security thinkers ? including President Barack Obama ? who believe nuclear weapons are becoming more a liability than an asset, less relevant to 21st century security threats like terrorism.

"Sen. Hagel certainly would bring to office a more ambitious view on nuclear reductions than his predecessors," said Steven Pifer, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution. "While he would likely take a less dramatic position in office, it might not be a bad thing to have a secretary of defense question what nuclear deterrence requires today."

The customary stance of defense secretaries in the nuclear age has been that the weapons are a necessary evil, a required ingredient in American defense strategy that can be discarded only at the nation's peril.

Hagel, 66, takes a subtly different view -- one shared by Obama but opposed by those in Congress who believe disarmament is weakness and that an outsized American nuclear arsenal must be maintained indefinitely as a counterweight to the nuclear ambitions of anti-Western countries like North Korea and Iran.

Hagel argues for doing away with nuclear weapons entirely, but not immediately and not unilaterally.

In a letter to Obama two months after his former Senate colleague entered the White House in 2009, Hagel wrote that Global Zero was developing a step-by-step plan for achieving "the total elimination of all nuclear weapons," but with a "clear, realistic and pragmatic appreciation" for the difficulty of realizing that goal.

Dozens of prominent politicians, diplomats and retired military leaders signed the letter. One month later Obama spoke in Prague of "a world without nuclear weapons," while saying it might not happen in his lifetime. Obama declared that "as the only nuclear power to have used a nuclear weapon, the United States has a moral responsibility to act. We cannot succeed in this endeavor alone, but we can lead it, we can start it."

Hagel, a Republican from Nebraska whose nomination has drawn heated criticism for his past statements on Israel, Iran and gays, is likely to also face questions on nuclear issues at his Senate confirmation hearing scheduled for Thursday. A Vietnam war veteran, he served in the Senate from 1997 to 2009.

The questions actually began last week at the confirmation hearing for John Kerry, Obama's nominee for secretary of state. Sen. Bob Corker, R-Tenn., said he found Hagel's affiliation with Global Zero "very concerning," and he worried that Hagel's views appeared to make him "very different than previous defense leaders."

Kerry said he believes Hagel is a realist on the topic of nuclear arms reductions. But he also acknowledged that when he first heard about Global Zero's central vision ? the elimination of all nuclear weapons ? "I sort of scratched my head and I said, 'What? You know, how's that going to work?'" But then he came to see this as nothing more than a long-range goal ? "it's not something that could happen in today's world."

Hagel, indeed, is thinking long term.

"Getting to global zero will take years," Hagel wrote in the March 2009 letter to Obama on behalf of Global Zero. "So it is important that we set our course toward a world without nuclear weapons now to ensure that our children do not live under the nuclear shadow of the last century."

Hagel stands out in this regard in part because history -- first the demise of the Soviet Union, then the rise of terrorism as a global threat -- has changed how many people think about the deterrent value of nuclear weapons. For decades after the birth of the atomic age in the 1940s the chief concern was controlling the growth, and later managing the shrinkage, of nuclear arsenals without upsetting the balance of power.

Today the thinking by many national security experts has shifted as the threat of all-out nuclear war has faded and terrorist organizations with potentially global reach, like al-Qaida, are trying to get their hands on a nuclear device.

"Hagel's views reflect the growing bipartisan consensus in the U.S. security establishment that whatever benefits nuclear weapons may have had during the Cold War are now outweighed by the threat they present," said Joe Cirincione, president of the Ploughshares Fund, which supports efforts to eliminate nuclear weapons.

Hagel was co-author of a Global Zero report last May that proposed, as an interim step, reducing the U.S. arsenal to 900 weapons within a decade, with half deployed and the other half in reserve. That compares with a current U.S. stockpile of 5,000, of which 1,700 are deployed and capable of striking targets around the globe.

The report said these cuts could be taken unilaterally if not negotiated with the Russians or carried out through reciprocal U.S. and Russian presidential directives. It called the unilateral approach "less good" but feasible. At a later stage China and other nuclear weapons countries would be brought to the table for negotiations on further cuts on the path to global zero, it said.

The White House last year weighed options for substantial new cuts in the number of deployed weapons, possibly to about 1,000 or 1,100 and probably as part of a negotiation with Moscow. But a decision, following a lengthy review of U.S. nuclear targeting requirements, was put off prior to the November election. Officials and private experts close to the administration believe Obama will soon embrace those cuts.

Previous secretaries of defense have supported reducing the U.S. nuclear stockpile under certain circumstances and have paid lip service to the United States' commitment under the 1970 nuclear Non-proliferation Treaty to eventually eliminate its nuclear arms. But none has pushed these ideas like Hagel has.

"It's historic," said Bruce Blair, a co-founder of Global Zero and a former Air Force nuclear missile launch control officer.

"We will have, if he's confirmed, a secretary of defense who's committed to the sharp reduction of nuclear weapons, leading down a path toward their elimination," Blair said in an interview last week. "I don't think any sitting secretary of defense has ever come anywhere close to Hagel's advocacy for this cause."

Leon Panetta, the current defense secretary, has not taken a public stance on future nuclear reductions.

Some Pentagon chiefs, like William Perry, became public advocates for eliminating nuclear weapons after leaving office.

At least one apparently harbored doubts about the conventional wisdom while still serving.

In his 1995 memoir, Robert McNamara, who served as President John F. Kennedy's defense secretary, wrote that by the time he entered the Pentagon in 1961 he had privately concluded that nuclear arms served no useful purpose. But he could not say that publicly, he wrote, because it contradicted established U.S. policy.

___

Follow Robert Burns on Twitter at http://www.twitter.com/robertburnsAP

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/89ae8247abe8493fae24405546e9a1aa/Article_2013-01-29-Hagel-Nuclear%20Zero/id-b219bd68f3f64863b6c3df82788d62b3

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Virginia football hires Steve Fairchild as offensive coordinator

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Apple boosts fourth-generation iPad to 128GB for $799 (update: carrier support)

iPad review

Apple's iPad line has topped out at 64GB since it was born. That perennial ceiling has been smashed: the company is hiking the capacity of the fourth-generation iPad to a whopping (and only recently rumored) 128GB. The hardware hasn't otherwise changed and preserves both the performance and dimensions that we already know. The WiFi and cellular versions get equal treatment, although we'll pay dearly for the increase at $799 for the base WiFi version and $929 for the cellular edition. Both of the extra-capacious tablets will be available February 5th.

Update: Not that there was much doubt, but Sprint has confirmed that it will be stocking 128GB cellular iPads. AT&T and Verizon haven't chimed in, although it's safe to presume they won't let Sprint have the new storage option all to itself.

Show full PR text

Apple Increases iPad with Retina Display to 128GB

Offers Twice the Storage Capacity to Create & Enjoy Even More Incredible Content

CUPERTINO, Calif., Jan 29, 2013 (BUSINESS WIRE) -- Apple(R) today announced a 128GB* version of the fourth generation iPad(R) with Retina(R) display. The 128GB iPad with Wi-Fi and iPad with Wi-Fi + Cellular models provide twice the storage capacity of the 64GB models to hold even more valuable content including photos, documents, projects, presentations, books, movies, TV shows, music and apps.

"With more than 120 million iPads sold, it's clear that customers around the world love their iPads, and everyday they are finding more great reasons to work, learn and play on their iPads rather than their old PCs," said Philip Schiller, Apple's senior vice president of Worldwide Marketing. "With twice the storage capacity and an unparalleled selection of over 300,000 native iPad apps, enterprises, educators and artists have even more reasons to use iPad for all their business and personal needs."

iPad continues to have a significant impact on business with virtually all of the Fortune 500 and over 85 percent of the Global 500 currently deploying or testing iPad. Companies regularly utilizing large amounts of data such as 3D CAD files, X-rays, film edits, music tracks, project blueprints, training videos and service manuals all benefit from having a greater choice of storage options for iPad. The over 10 million iWork(R) users, and customers who rely on other incredible apps like Global Apptitude for analyzing team film and creating digital playbooks, Auria for an incredible 48 track recording system, or AutoCAD for drafting architectural and engineering drawings, also benefit greatly from having the choice of an iPad with more storage capacity.

"Our AutoCAD WS app for iOS was designed to give customers seamless access to their designs anywhere, anytime," said Amy Bunszel, vice president of AutoCAD products for Autodesk. "These files are often large and highly detailed so having the thin and light iPad with its Multitouch display, integrated camera and all-day battery life, is a real advantage for iPad users to view, edit and share their AutoCAD data."

"The features and capabilities of iPad give us the ability to set a new standard for multitrack recording and editing on a mobile device," said Rim Buntinas, WaveMachine Labs' CEO. "Users of the Auria app can play 48 mono or stereo 24bit/96 kHz tracks simultaneously, record up to 24 of those tracks simultaneously, and also edit and mix with familiar tools. With its portability and all-day battery life, iPad has revolutionized recording for audio professionals allowing artists to record anywhere."

"The bottom line for our customers is winning football games, and iPad running our GamePlan solution unquestionably helps players be as prepared as possible," said Randall Fusee, Global Apptitude Co-Founder. "The iPad's unbeatable combination of security, being thin and light, having an incredible Retina display and also being powerful enough to handle large amounts of data enables us to deliver a product that takes film study to a new level and ultimately gives our users the best opportunity to prepare, execute and win."

The fourth generation iPad features a gorgeous 9.7-inch Retina display, Apple-designed A6X chip, FaceTime(R) HD camera, iOS 6.1 and ultrafast wireless performance**. iOS 6.1 includes support for additional LTE networks around the world***, and iTunes Match(SM) subscribers can download individual songs to their iOS devices from iCloud(R).

iPad runs over 800,000 apps available on the App Store(SM), including more than 300,000 apps designed specifically for iPad, from a wide range of categories including books, games, business, news, sports, health, reference and travel. iPad also supports the more than 5,000 newspapers and magazines offered in Newsstand, and the more than 1.5 million books available on the iBookstore(SM).

Pricing & Availability

The new 128GB versions of the fourth generation iPad will be available starting Tuesday, February 5, in black or white, for a suggested retail price of $799 (US) for the iPad with Wi-Fi model and $929 (US) for the iPad with Wi-Fi + Cellular model. All versions of the 128GB iPad will be sold through the Apple Online Store ( www.apple.com ), Apple retail stores and select Apple Authorized Resellers.

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Comments

Source: Apple

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/01/29/apple-boosts-fourth-generation-ipad-to-128gb-for-799/

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Lindy Resident Recognized by Catholic Health Services ...

Sarah Schafer, of Our Lady of Consolation Nursing and Rehabilitative Care Center in West Islip, was presented with the Catholic Health Services Living the Mission Award in October.

Schafer, a Lindenhurst resident who's worked at OLC as a physical therapy assistant since 1998, was nominated for the award by her colleagues because she exemplifies the Catholic Health Services mission values of respect, justice, integrity and excellence.

?Sarah is a therapist that never gives up. With her love and compassion she gets results in their favor,? a resident said of Schafer.

?

Facebook?| Twitter?| Newsletters | Blogging | Posting Photos | Announcements | Events

Source: http://lindenhurst.patch.com/articles/lindy-resident-recognized-by-catholic-health-services

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Lucasfilm Kills 3D Star Wars Re-Releases After Realizing It's Horrible and Everyone Hates It

What's worse than the Star Wars prequels? The Star Wars prequels ramrodded in your face with an extra dimension. Lucasfilm was planning on subjecting idiots with loose wallets to re-released 3D Young Anakin, but Disney says no more bullshit. More »


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Egypt could 'collapse,' army chief warns

A state of emergency is imposed on three cities in Egypt as a top military official warns the country is on the brink of collapse following days of anti-government protests. NBCNews.com's Dara Brown reports.

By Tom Perry, Yasmine Saleh and Yusri Mohamed, Reuters

The struggle between political forces in Egypt could ?lead to the collapse of the state,? the country?s army chief said Tuesday.

In a posting to the army?s Facebook page, General Abdel Fattah al-Sisi said political and economic issues now represented a ?real threat? to security.

"The continuation of the struggle of the different political forces ... over the management of state affairs could lead to the collapse of the state," General Abdel Fattah al-Sisi said.

He added that the army would remain "the solid and the cohesive block" on which "the foundation of the state rests."

Al-Sisi, who is also defense minister, also said that the army had been deployed in cities along the Suez Canal primarily to protect the key global trade link.

Islamist President Mohammed Morsi has imposed emergency rule in an attempt to end days of clashes that have left at least 52 people dead.

But Egyptian protesters defied an overnight curfew in restive towns along the Suez Canal, attacking police stations.

/

On the second anniversary of the uprising that toppled Hosni Mubarak, huge crowds take to the streets in five cities.

At least two men died Monday night or early Tuesday in fighting in the canal city of Port Said, the latest unrest in a wave of violence unleashed last week on the eve of the anniversary of the 2011 revolt that brought down autocrat Hosni Mubarak.

Cairo sky lit by flames
Political opponents spurned a call by Morsi for talks on Monday to try to end the violence. Instead, huge crowds of protesters took to the streets in Cairo and Alexandria, and in the three Suez Canal cities - Port Said, Ismailia and Suez - where Morsi imposed emergency rule and a curfew on Sunday.

"Down, down with Mohammed Morsi! Down, down with the state of emergency!" crowds shouted in Ismailia. In Cairo, flames lit up the night sky as protesters set vehicles ablaze.

The demonstrators accuse Mubarak's successor Morsi of betraying the two-year-old revolution. Morsi and his supporters accuse the protesters of seeking to overthrow Egypt's first ever democratically elected leader by undemocratic means.

Debris from days of unrest was strewn on the streets around Cairo's Tahrir Square, cauldron of the anti-Mubarak uprising.

Youths clambered over a burned-out police van. But unlike on previous mornings in the past few days, there was no early sign of renewed clashes with police.

In Port Said, men attacked police stations after dark. A security source said some police and troops were injured. A medical source said two men were killed and 12 injured in the clashes, including 10 with gunshot wounds.

"The people want to bring down the regime," crowds chanted in Alexandria. "Leave means go, and don't say no!"

Voters backed Islamists
Since Mubarak was toppled, Islamists have won two referendums, two parliamentary elections and a presidential vote.

But that legitimacy has been challenged by an opposition that accuses Morsi of imposing a new form of authoritarianism, and punctuated by repeated waves of unrest that have prevented a return to stability in the most populous Arab state.

Ed Giles / Getty Images

Protesters stand by a vehicle of the Central Security Forces that had been stolen then set alight during clashes near Tahrir Square in Cairo on Monday.

The political unrest in the Suez Canal cities has been exacerbated by street violence linked to death penalties imposed on soccer supporters convicted of involvement in stadium rioting in Port Said a year ago, which lead to the deaths of 74 people.

The president announced the emergency measures on television on Sunday. "The protection of the nation is the responsibility of everyone. We will confront any threat to its security with force and firmness within the remit of the law," Morsi said.

His demeanor infuriated his opponents, not least when he wagged a finger at the camera.

Some activists said Morsi's measures to try to impose control on the turbulent streets could backfire.

"Martial law, state of emergency and army arrests of civilians are not a solution to the crisis," said Ahmed Maher of the April 6 movement that helped galvanize the 2011 uprising. "All this will do is further provoke the youth. The solution has to be a political one that addresses the roots of the problem."

Related:

?Thousands attend funerals in Port Said as Egypt's stability teeters

Analysis: Egyptians fear decades of Brotherhood rule

PhotoBlog:?Baton-wielding police threaten protesters as Egypt's stability teeters?

Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

Source: http://worldnews.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/01/29/16749232-egypt-could-collapse-army-chief-warns-as-violence-continues?lite

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Frugal Tips: Heading Toward Financial Disaster? | Prudent Living ...

There is a very slim line between financial solvency and financial distress. You might not realize you are on the wrong side until it is too late! It is often easier to not think about you financial picture and just live day to day.

However the sooner you realize you are in trouble the better chance you?ll have of getting out of that situation. Here are some questions to ask yourself.

Are you constantly paying late fees or juggling your monthly bills by paying just enough to keep things going but never paying your balances on time and in full?? Perhaps you are basing your plans for a secure future financially by counting on a future windfall, such as a large inheritance, a winning lottery ticket or a large tax refund. If you are thinking this way you are heading for a fall!

How many credit cards do you have in your wallet? Credit cards are a convenient way to make purchases without having to carry cash. It is possible to be a savvy consumer and use credit cards to your advantage, earning reward points for purchases you make. If your credit card debt is constantly rising you should make it a priority to pay off your cards and get rid of them! Carry only one, which you only use for emergencies.

Do you find yourself fighting with your spouse over your finances? If this is a constant practice you need to take a look at your income, perhaps there is just not enough disposable income to finance the family?s spending. If you can?t sleep at night perhaps it is time to seek a free, nonprofit credit counseling service.

Overdraft fees are similar to late charges. If you are constantly incurring fees for overdrawing your checking account this is another red flag that you may be heading toward financial disaster!

How is your savings rate? Think of your saving account as an expense and should be budgeted for just like any other household expense. It may be hard to save but not saving can put you at risk for financial hardship. You need to set aside money for unexpected emergencies and for your future retirement

If you do have a retirement fund are you covering your expenses with your retirement savings? This is not only a warning sign that you are living beyond your means but it could have severe consequences for your retirement.

Don?t use your home equity like a piggy bank! It used to be that you could count on your home gaining in value every year. This is no longer the case and your goal should be to pay off your mortgage, not to take on a home equity loan.

If any of these signs are speaking to you take a hard look at your finances and see where you can cut back so that you are living within your means. There are many free, nonprofit credit counseling services out there to help you. You can search for a free or low-cost counseling provider in your area by visiting the National Foundation for Credit Counselingwebsite or by calling (800) 338-2227.

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Source: http://homefront.prudentliving.com/frugal-tips-are-you-heading-toward-financial-disaster/

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Nooly: Get the Most Accurate Forecast Possible

There are few things more annoying than bringing an umbrella with you when you don't need it. Never make that mistake again—Nooly will give you accurate, super-local forecasts for your exact neighborhood. More »


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Academies recommend new measures in antibiotic research

Academies recommend new measures in antibiotic research [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 28-Jan-2013
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Caroline Wichmann
presse@leopoldina.org
0049-034-547-239-800
Leopoldina

A growing number of infections worldwide are caused by bacteria resistant to antibiotics and ever fewer effective antibiotics are available. As a result, it is becoming increasingly difficult to treat infected patients successfully. In the statement, "Antibiotic Research: Problems and Perspectives", which was published today, the Academy of Sciences and Humanities in Hamburg and the German National Academy of Sciences Leopoldina list eight recommendations that show ways to prevent the further spread of antibiotic resistance and to develop urgently needed antibiotics.

"This development is a cause for grave concern. Our statement focuses on the contribution by research and on the necessary parameters in society," said Prof. Ansgar W. Lohse, spokesperson for the Working Group on Infection Research and Society at the Academy of Sciences and Humanities in Hamburg. "We need genuine incentives for new and more intensive antibiotic research so we can develop medications more quickly," he added.

"This field is a task for society as a whole," said Prof. Jrg Hacker, President of the German National Academy of Sciences Leopoldina. "Society does not only need greater research efforts and a faster translation of the findings into applications, but also dialogue on how antibiotics can be used responsibly and on how resistance can be prevented. We are setting up a round table on this topic and will invite all the relevant partners to join it."

According to the WHO, the global occurrence of antibiotic resistance poses one of the greatest threats to human health. It is estimated that around 25,000 patients die each year in the EU alone from an infection with bacteria that are resistant to antibiotics.

###

The statement containing a summary and the recommendations can be downloaded at http://www.leopoldina.org/en/publications/detailview/?publication[publication]=475&cHash=1883f73140e3cc069425f3e234281083

The full text is freely accessible as an eBook at: http://www.degruyter.com/isbn/9783110306675

The statement is available in a booklet called "Antibiotika-Forschung: Probleme und Perspektiven" ("Antibiotic Research: Problems and Perspectives"). Statement by the Academy of Sciences and Humanities in Hamburg and the German National Academy of Sciences Leopoldina, Berlin (De Gruyter) 2013, (Papers by the Akademie der Wissenschaften in Hamburg 2), 77 pages, 29.95, ISBN 978-3-11-030667-5. Please note that the booklet is currently only available in German, but will shortly be translated into English.

Members of the working group will present the statement to the public at 7 p.m. this evening, 28 January 2013, in Hamburg. The panel members are Prof. Jrg Hacker, President of the German National Academy of Sciences Leopoldina; Prof. Ansgar W. Lohse, spokesperson for the Working Group on Infection Research and Society, Academy of Sciences and Humanities in Hamburg; Prof. Stefan Schwarz, Friedrich-Loeffler-Institut Neustadt-Mariensee; and Prof. Werner Solbach, Director of the Institute of Medical Microbiology and Hygiene, University Medical Center Schleswig-Holstein. The discussion will be chaired by Vera Cordes (NDR). Venue: Baseler Hof Sle, Esplanade 15, 20354 Hamburg.

For press enquiries, please contact:
Dr Elke Senne
Academy of Sciences and Humanities in Hamburg
Press and Public Relations
Tel: + 49 (0) 40 42 94 86 69 20, e-mail: elke.senne@awhamburg.de

Caroline Wichmann
German National Academy of Sciences Leopoldina
Head of Press and Public Relations
Tel: +49 (0) 345 472 39 800, e-mail: presse@leopoldina.org

Members of the Academy of Science and Humanities in Hamburg are scholars of all academic disciplines from northern Germany. As a working academy, it aims to intensify interdisciplinary research and collaboration between universities and other scientific institutions and to stimulate dialogue between scholars and the public. www.awhamburg.de

The German National Academy of Sciences Leopoldina brings together the expertise of some 1,500 distinguished scientists to bear on questions of social and political relevance, publishing unbiased and timely scientific opinions. The Leopoldina represents the German scientific community in international committees and pursues the advancement of science for the benefit of humankind and for a better future. www.leopoldina.org

Joint press release by the Academy of Sciences and Humanities in Hamburg and the German National Academy of Sciences Leopoldina



[ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

?


AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


Academies recommend new measures in antibiotic research [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 28-Jan-2013
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Caroline Wichmann
presse@leopoldina.org
0049-034-547-239-800
Leopoldina

A growing number of infections worldwide are caused by bacteria resistant to antibiotics and ever fewer effective antibiotics are available. As a result, it is becoming increasingly difficult to treat infected patients successfully. In the statement, "Antibiotic Research: Problems and Perspectives", which was published today, the Academy of Sciences and Humanities in Hamburg and the German National Academy of Sciences Leopoldina list eight recommendations that show ways to prevent the further spread of antibiotic resistance and to develop urgently needed antibiotics.

"This development is a cause for grave concern. Our statement focuses on the contribution by research and on the necessary parameters in society," said Prof. Ansgar W. Lohse, spokesperson for the Working Group on Infection Research and Society at the Academy of Sciences and Humanities in Hamburg. "We need genuine incentives for new and more intensive antibiotic research so we can develop medications more quickly," he added.

"This field is a task for society as a whole," said Prof. Jrg Hacker, President of the German National Academy of Sciences Leopoldina. "Society does not only need greater research efforts and a faster translation of the findings into applications, but also dialogue on how antibiotics can be used responsibly and on how resistance can be prevented. We are setting up a round table on this topic and will invite all the relevant partners to join it."

According to the WHO, the global occurrence of antibiotic resistance poses one of the greatest threats to human health. It is estimated that around 25,000 patients die each year in the EU alone from an infection with bacteria that are resistant to antibiotics.

###

The statement containing a summary and the recommendations can be downloaded at http://www.leopoldina.org/en/publications/detailview/?publication[publication]=475&cHash=1883f73140e3cc069425f3e234281083

The full text is freely accessible as an eBook at: http://www.degruyter.com/isbn/9783110306675

The statement is available in a booklet called "Antibiotika-Forschung: Probleme und Perspektiven" ("Antibiotic Research: Problems and Perspectives"). Statement by the Academy of Sciences and Humanities in Hamburg and the German National Academy of Sciences Leopoldina, Berlin (De Gruyter) 2013, (Papers by the Akademie der Wissenschaften in Hamburg 2), 77 pages, 29.95, ISBN 978-3-11-030667-5. Please note that the booklet is currently only available in German, but will shortly be translated into English.

Members of the working group will present the statement to the public at 7 p.m. this evening, 28 January 2013, in Hamburg. The panel members are Prof. Jrg Hacker, President of the German National Academy of Sciences Leopoldina; Prof. Ansgar W. Lohse, spokesperson for the Working Group on Infection Research and Society, Academy of Sciences and Humanities in Hamburg; Prof. Stefan Schwarz, Friedrich-Loeffler-Institut Neustadt-Mariensee; and Prof. Werner Solbach, Director of the Institute of Medical Microbiology and Hygiene, University Medical Center Schleswig-Holstein. The discussion will be chaired by Vera Cordes (NDR). Venue: Baseler Hof Sle, Esplanade 15, 20354 Hamburg.

For press enquiries, please contact:
Dr Elke Senne
Academy of Sciences and Humanities in Hamburg
Press and Public Relations
Tel: + 49 (0) 40 42 94 86 69 20, e-mail: elke.senne@awhamburg.de

Caroline Wichmann
German National Academy of Sciences Leopoldina
Head of Press and Public Relations
Tel: +49 (0) 345 472 39 800, e-mail: presse@leopoldina.org

Members of the Academy of Science and Humanities in Hamburg are scholars of all academic disciplines from northern Germany. As a working academy, it aims to intensify interdisciplinary research and collaboration between universities and other scientific institutions and to stimulate dialogue between scholars and the public. www.awhamburg.de

The German National Academy of Sciences Leopoldina brings together the expertise of some 1,500 distinguished scientists to bear on questions of social and political relevance, publishing unbiased and timely scientific opinions. The Leopoldina represents the German scientific community in international committees and pursues the advancement of science for the benefit of humankind and for a better future. www.leopoldina.org

Joint press release by the Academy of Sciences and Humanities in Hamburg and the German National Academy of Sciences Leopoldina



[ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

?


AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2013-01/l-arn012813.php

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