Sunday, May 19, 2013

Tom Cruise and Katie Holmes “incredibly happy” after divorce


Tom Cruise and Katie Holmes are apparently “incredibly happy” now they’ve divorced.

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New public database shows hospital billing charges all over the map

Patrick J. Skerrett
Posted May 10, 2013, 8:27 am Team of surgeons

Most reputable companies that provide services tell you what you’ll get for your money. Hospitals are an exception. They haven’t traditionally made public the cost of operations and other procedures. This secrecy has let hospitals set widely different prices for the same procedure. It’s also made it impossible to do any comparison shopping.

Yesterday’s release to the public of a once very private database shows just how big the differences can be from hospital to hospital.

On the South Side of Chicago, where I grew up, one hospital’s charge for implanting a pacemaker to keep the heart beating at a steady rhythm was $49,601, while another hospital charged $63,979 to do it. In Boston, a hospital not far from where I work charged $76,121 to implant a pacemaker while another hospital less than three miles away charged $55,687.

According to The New York Times, the Keck Hospital of the University of Southern California charged an average of $123,885 for a major artificial joint replacement (six times the average amount that Medicare reimbursed for the procedure) while Centinela Hospital Medical Center, also in Los Angeles, charged $220,881 for the same type of joint replacement surgery.

The database, released by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, details what 3,300 hospitals charged for the 100 most common treatments and procedures in 2011.

The data reinforce the big differences in charges from one part of the U.S. to another. What’s new and surprising are the huge differences sometimes seen between hospitals in the same city, or even the same neighborhood.

Keep in mind that these “charges” aren’t hard and fast. Medicare doesn’t pay the full charge. Insurers don’t either, as many of them negotiate lower charges. As NPR’s Robert Siegel said about the database, “it sounds like what you’ve got is a survey of the sticker prices in car lots all around America, but every deal is a special deal.”

At least for now, the database isn’t especially easy to use. It’s just an Excel spreadsheet listing the hospitals by state along their charges for the 100 procedures. The Washington Post created a nifty interactive tool that you can use to look at charges in your state for 10 conditions. Choose your state and the tool shows how its hospitals stack up against the national average, as well as the highest and lowest charges for these ten procedures. Expect other creative apps incorporating this information to be coming along soon.

If you decide to dive into the data, be aware—especially if you have private insurance (not Medicare)—that appearances can be deceiving. It may look like Hospital A charges more than Hospital B, but that may not be so. Your insurer and Hospital may have actually agreed on a lower payment. So the data don’t necessarily say what your insurance company is actually going to pay.

A few weeks ago, I finally finished reading “Bitter Pill,” Steven Brill’s extraordinary Time magazine article on the crazy cost of healthcare in America. I say “crazy” because, according to Brill, how hospitals set their prices has little rhyme or reason. The database from the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services reinforces that notion.

Publishing this information is one small step toward making the cost of healthcare more transparent. While it will be a long time before most of us will be able to figure out how much an operation or a hospital stay costs, the database could nudge hospitals with exorbitant charges to bring them in line.

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Candice Swanepoel V Michelle Dockery


who wore it best? Latest celebrity style brought to you by Glamour.com. Visit Glamour.com for the latest celebrity styles, fashion and gossip.

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Tai chi improves balance and motor control in Parkinson’s disease

Peter Wayne
Posted May 03, 2013, 8:30 am Senior woman doing Tai Chi Yoga exercise

It isn’t every day that an effective new treatment for some Parkinson’s disease symptoms comes along. Especially one that is safe, causes no adverse side effects, and may also benefit the rest of the body and the mind. That’s why I read with excitement and interest a report in the New England Journal of Medicine showing that tai chi may improve balance and prevent falls among people with Parkinson’s disease.

This degenerative condition can cause many vexing problems. These range from tremors and stiffness to a slowing or freezing of movement, sleep problems, anxiety, and more. Parkinson’s disease may also disrupt balance, which can lead to frightening and damaging falls.

A team from the Oregon Research Institute recruited 195 men and women with mild to moderate Parkinson’s disease. They were randomly assigned to twice-weekly sessions of either tai chi, strength-building exercises, or stretching. After six months, those who did tai chi were stronger and had much better balance than those in the other two groups. In fact, their balance was about two times better than those in the resistance-training group and four times better than those in the stretching group. The tai chi group also had significantly fewer falls, and slower rates of decline in overall motor control. In addition, tai chi was safe, with little risk of Parkinson’s disease patients coming to harm.

Other smaller studies have reported that tai chi can improve quality of life for both people with Parkinson’s disease and their support partners.

These studies are significant because they suggest that tai chi can be used as an add-on to current physical therapies and medications to ease some of the key problems faced by people with Parkinson’s disease.

Parkinson’s disease affects more than one million Americans. This brain disorder interferes with muscle control, leading to trembling; stiffness and inflexibility of the arms, legs, neck, and trunk; loss of facial expression; trouble swallowing; and a variety of other symptoms, include changes in memory and thinking skills. These changes can greatly reduce the ability to carry out everyday activities and reduce quality of life. Medications can help, but they sometimes have unwanted side effects.

Since the appearance of the New England Journal of Medicine study, tai chi classes specifically for Parkinson’s disease patients have sprung up across the country, and the benefits of tai chi for Parkinson’s disease have been endorsed by the National Parkinson’s Foundation. (You can see a video of a tai chi class at Brigham and Women’s Hospital for people with Parkinson’s disease at the bottom of this post.)

Several colleagues and I have developed a tai chi program for people with Parkinson’s disease. It brings together Harvard Medical School doctors and other clinicians with tai chi experts. The 12-week program uses the traditional tai chi principles that I describe in my newly released book, The Harvard Medical School Guide to Tai Chi: 12 Weeks to a Healthy Body, Strong Heart & Sharp Mind. This program is jointly sponsored by the Parkinson’s Disease and Movement Disorders Center at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center and the Osher Center for Integrative Medicine at Brigham and Women’s Hospital and Harvard Medical School. So far, about 50 people have completed the program.

We have also begun a small, preliminary study across multiple Harvard Medical School hospitals focused on understanding the interactions between cognitive function, mobility, and motor function in early stage Parkinson’s disease. The idea is to examine how the mind-body connection of tai chi slows the loss of mobility and cognitive function in individuals recently diagnosed with Parkinson’s disease. The results of this pilot study will be used to guide randomized trials to further test the impact of tai chi.

I foresee a growing number of hospitals in the country developing similar tai chi programs for individuals with Parkinson’s disease. In addition to easing balance problems, and possibly other symptoms, tai chi can help ease stress and anxiety and strengthen all parts of the body, with few if any harmful side effects. I look forward to the day when evidence-based tai chi programs become widely available and used by individuals with Parkinson’s disease world-wide.

Peter Wayne, PhD, is an Assistant Professor of Medicine at Harvard Medical School and the Director of Research for the Osher Center for Integrative Medicine, jointly based at Harvard Medical School and Brigham and Women’s Hospital. He is also the author of The Harvard Medical School Guide to Tai Chi: 12 Weeks to a Healthy Body, Strong Heart & Sharp Mind.

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Pippa Middleton on the street In London


Pippa Middleton wears a beige wool cape on the street In London - vote on celebrity fashion, style and red carpet looks in GLAMOUR.COM’s Dos and Don’ts

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Jared Leto at the South By Southwest Festival in Texas


Browse through Glamour's extensive daily celebrity photo gallery online today. Check out what your favourite celebrity has been up to!

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Victoria Pendleton on Fitness, Fashion and What's Next


Champion cyclist, Strictly contestant, front row regular, bride-to-be and now…keen ski-er? We sat down with the unstoppable former cyclist (and incredibly chatty) Victoria Pendleton for advice on getting fit and healthy for bikini season, what she’s planning for her wedding, life in the fashion industry and what she plans to do next.

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Taylor Swift’s unopened fan mail found in bin


A huge pile of unopened fan mail sent to Taylor Swift has been discovered in a dumpster in Swift’s hometown of Nashville, Tennessee.

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Jessica Ennis at the 2013 Laureus World Sports Awards in Brazil


Browse through Glamour's extensive daily celebrity photo gallery online today. Check out what your favourite celebrity has been up to!

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Matt Smith at The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time press night


Someone was feeling the cold last night as they headed into the press night of The Curious Dog In The Night-Time

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