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The Hidden Global Trade In Patient Medical Data – Analysis

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The goal to global trade in health data is new treatments, but government regulations do not keep pace.

By Adam Tanner*

In 1956, the head of one of Madison Avenue’s leading medical advertising agencies dispatched a copywriter to West Germany to set up a new company for producing surveys of the pharmaceutical market. The young executive had never been abroad and spoke no German.

The firm, initially called Institut für Medizinische Statistik, quickly won clients by providing insights on which drugs sold well in which markets. Drug companies eagerly bought these reports, and IMS expanded to other European countries, North and South America, and Asia.

Today, the US-based data-mining firm, recently renamed QuintilesIMS, operates in more than 100 countries and is at the heart of a for-profit global trade in anonymized patient data. The $20 billion company assembles dossiers on more than half a billion patients worldwide from physician records, prescriptions, insurance claims, lab tests and more.

US competitors include IBM Watson Health, GE Healthcare, LexisNexis and firms linked to insurers such as UnitedHealth’s Optum Anthem’s HealthCore and Blue Cross Blue Shield’s Blue Health Intelligence. Rivals exist in other countries as well.

Privacy can be at risk. Patient dossiers omit obvious identifiers such as names and national ID numbers, but have become more vulnerable to re-identification as computing power advances and a constant influx of data provide ever more clues into who is who and where patients live and work. Another complicating issue is the growing availability of insights from DNA testing, identifying by its very nature.

The growing possibility of re-identification from such dossiers poses risks of discrimination against people with mental health issues or any array of medical complications. In some cases, such action would be legal, such as in denying life insurance, and in others not, such as in hiring and promotion decisions. Medical information could be used to blackmail and embarrass anyone from common citizen or national leader.

Data miner dossiers are legal under US rules and serve mostly to help pharmaceutical firms market and advertise their drugs. Data miners also highlight the promise of big data leading to new discoveries and cures. “The future of medicine rests on data: the evidence that is the basis for the discovery, development and dispensing of prescription products and all other healthcare decisions,” noted QuintilesIMS in an October report. “Mastering the collection and interpretation of data is therefore vital for the vitality and continued global contributions of the biopharmaceutical industry.”

So far, industry executives admit to garnering interesting insights rather than stunning breakthroughs.

The ability of commercial firms to assemble dossiers on individuals comes at a time that few Americans have access to complete records for their own health care. The fractured nature of US medicine complicates this issue compared to countries with national systems.

Officials in many countries suggest that they enjoy stronger privacy protections than the United States, either through law or tradition. Yet increasingly, American-style accumulation of sensitive medical data on millions of patients is becoming commonplace.

For example, many Japanese officials contend that the aggregating and selling anonymized patient files does not occur in Japan as it would violate Japanese sensibilities. “The difference between IMS in Japan and in the United States, in Japan they treat data and privacy in a more sensitive way,” said Yoshitake Yokokura, president of the influential Japan Medical Association. “Medicine should be for the public benefit, not for business.”

For-profit ventures are expected to secure patient consent.

Yet IMS advertises the sale of Japanese longitudinal data, including “actual prescription data from pharmacy records for individual patients.” Japan’s guidelines on selling anonymized patient data are blurred because the nation lacks US-style privacy rules, including the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act. Officials often speak of a gray zone of practices neither explicitly allowed nor forbidden.

Data miners typically do not seek patient consent and maintain that properly anonymized information does not belong to an individual. A group of patients and doctors in South Korea disagreed and launched a legal case against IMS in 2014. After a whistleblower released anonymized records from some of these data-miner transactions, it turned out that a simple code could unlock the patients’ national ID numbers.

Sung Bae Kim, among the South Korean physicians who brought the lawsuit, described his shock: “If it’s syphilis or hypertension or diabetes, if you have information about me without my understanding. If they do not get consent, they have no right. It is very unethical.”

QuintilesIMS is fighting the lawsuit and defends its practices, arguing that only anonymous healthcare data is mined. “IMS Health then takes further steps to ensure the information remains anonymous, such as additional cryptographic coding,” said spokesman Tor Constantino.

Europe boasts of stronger personal data protections than the United States. Yet data miners advertise anonymized patient dossiers from a number of European Union countries. For example, in Germany QuintilesIMS sells details from electronic health records, prescriptions, hospital discharges and patient registries.

Some European countries such as the Nordics maintain national health databases with information on patients suffering from heart disease, cancer and HIV among other ailments. Such efforts, led by the state, are not aimed at making a commercial profit.

Some IMS veterans who worked at the company during the era when focus was limited to broader pharmaceutical market surveys are uneasy about the commercialization of anonymized patient data that have become more commonplace over the past two decades.

Former IMS Japan CEO Shunsuke Keimatsu questions the value of such anonymized individual data for IMS clients and how clients use the data. He also wonders whether anonymous data may violate privacy laws. “To be blunt, I feel that they went too far unless there are legitimate answers to the above two questions,” he said.

Sabrina Chan, executive director of the Hong Kong Association of the Pharmaceutical Industry, expresses a similar sentiment: “No matter that it is anonymous, the consent from the data owner is the most important. My principle is without the patient’s consent, actually it is unethical to disclose their data to anyone.”

The trade in patient data is so opaque that many even in health care and government do not know about it. A top Japanese government official who did not want to be named insisted initially that trade in anonymized patient data did not occur in his country. He then expressed surprise as a researcher detailed how such a trade has emerged in Japan.

Part of the problem is that data miners are reluctant to talk publicly about how the process works.

“The entire US health care system, as well as the entire political system, has devolved into this shadow game,” said Joel Kallich, the founder of Big Health Data who used to work at Amgen and has consulted for IMS. He adds that anyone privy to the data can lie, scheme, manipulate or steal data from the people to whom it belongs.

The example of Japan and many other countries shows that in the absence of specific guidance or government restrictions, market forces will continue to expand personal data collection quietly, even in a traditionally cautious business climate.

There is hope that the commercial circulation of anonymized patient data contributes to science and treatments. Yet given the growing privacy risks, countries should encourage an open, informed public debate for shaping regulations on anonymized patient data in what is increasingly a big and globalized health data bazaar.

** Adam Tanner *is the author of the new book Our Bodies, Our Data: How Companies Make Billions Selling Our Medical Records and writer in residence at Harvard University’s Institute for Quantitative Social Science. Reported by Eurasia Review 19 hours ago.

What D.C.-area businesses could expect from a potential ACA repeal

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It's not clear exactly how President Donald Trump plans to change health care after his executive order to start turning back Obamacare. But many D.C.-area health insurance experts know at least one thing: That change won't happen anytime soon. Experts are already fielding plenty of calls from businesses around the region about whether they can stop complying with health reform rules or stop sending those requisite forms for reporting health coverage to the IRS for the upcoming tax season. "The… Reported by bizjournals 15 hours ago.

Insurers wary about Cuomo's new contraception mandates

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Health insurers say a new plan by Gov. Andrew Cuomo to preserve contraception and reproductive rights in New York could increase costs and should be a legislative issue. Cuomo this weekend announced he would initiate regulatory action through the State Department of Financial Services to ensure contraceptive drugs and devices would be covered by commercial health insurance policies without co-pays, coinsurance or deductibles regardless of the future of the Affordable Care Act. The actions would… Reported by bizjournals 12 hours ago.

Philippines and Vietnam to drive health insurance growth

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FTCR survey finds increasing dissatisfaction with rising insurance premiums Reported by FT.com 11 hours ago.

Trump Health Pick Favors Insurance For People With Prior Illness

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President Donald Trump’s nominee to run the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services told a U.S. panel on Tuesday that he wants to ensure people with pre-existing conditions have access to health insurance, though he did not specify how.

Speaking before the Senate Committee on Finance, one of two committees that oversee the health department, Representative Tom Price, a Georgia orthopedic surgeon said “nobody ought to be priced out of the market for having a bad diagnosis.”

“I commit that we will not abandon individuals with preexisting illness or disease,” he said.

(Reporting by Toni Clarke in Washington)

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website. Reported by Huffington Post 7 hours ago.

Rand Paul just introduced his 'Obamacare Replacement Act'

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Rand Paul just introduced his 'Obamacare Replacement Act' **

· *Sen. Rand Paul introduced "The Obamacare Replacement Act" on Wednesday.*
· *The bill would remove parts of the Affordable Care Act including the individual mandate and minimum standards for care. It would also provide a two-year window for people with pre-existing conditions to sign up for care.*
· *It also includes new provisions such as an expanded ability for insurers to sell plans in multiple states and a $5,000 tax credit that people can put towards a Health Savings Account.*

Sen. Rand Paul, the libertarian-leaning Republican and one-time presidential candidate, introduced his own version of a replacement for the Affordable Care Act (ACA), better known as Obamacare.

The bill, named "The Obamacare Replacement Act," would eliminate a number of provisions from Obamacare including the individual mandate and minimums on coverage standards. The fact sheet of the bill makes no mention of a provision to allow parents to keep a child on their insurance until they turn 26.

Interestingly, Paul's plan would provide a two-year window for people with pre-existing conditions to sign up for care, then revert back to pre-ACA rules in which people with pre-existing conditions could still get coverage in the group market. It is unclear what would happen to those in the individual market with pre-existing conditions after the two-year open enrollment period.

Additionally, the bill would provide every American with a tax credit worth up to $5,000 for contributions to a health savings account (HSA) to put towards health insurance and other healthcare costs.

"Getting government out of the American people’s way and putting them back in charge of their own health care decisions will deliver a strong, efficient system that doesn’t force them to empty out their pockets to cover their medical bills," said Paul, an ophthalmologist, in a press release announcing the bill.

Paul, however, also said that the repeal of the ACA should not move forward without a replacement ready to go.

"There is no excuse for waiting to craft an alternative until after we repeal Obamacare, and the Obamacare Replacement Act charts a new path forward that will insure the most people possible at the lowest price," said the release.

Paul was the only Senate Republican to vote against a resolution that kicked off the Obamacare repeal process, citing concerns that a repeal without replacement would increase the federal budget deficit.

According to a fact sheet provided by Paul there would be a number of other changes to the healthcare market. Here are the highlights:

· *Allow insurance companies to sell plans "across state lines":* This is a popular Republican idea, but was also included in a more limited form in the ACA. While each insurance company currently has to comply with state insurance regulators, Paul's plan would eliminate this need for compliance. Health policy analysts have said there is little evidence that insurers would take advantage of this provision or that it would drive down costs.
· *Allow HSAs to be used without a high deductible plan:* Currently, HSAs are only used in conjunction with high deductible plans. Paul's bill would eliminate the link between the two. Additionally, it would allow HSA money to be spent on insurance premiums and prescription drugs.
· *Allow individuals and small businesses to pool together to get insurance: *While the ACA allows for small businesses to pool together to get more favorable care, this has not been used much. In addition, Paul's plan would allow individuals to pool together to access care, another long-time Republican idea.

This is the second replacement bill to be advanced in the past week by Republicans after a bill from Sen. Bill Cassidy and Susan Collins. Paul's bill, however, eliminates many more of the ACA's programs and protections than the Cassidy-Collins bill.

*SEE ALSO: 'Did he lie?': Democratic senator grills Trump health pick about whether he is developing Obamacare replacement*

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: Watch Former CIA director James Woolsey explain why he won’t advise the Trump transition team anymore Reported by Business Insider 7 hours ago.

What Maryland, D.C. businesses could expect from a potential ACA repeal

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As the Affordable Care Act hangs in the balance, state governments have projected massive costs and funding losses, even as health insurance experts say one thing is clear: Nothing is changing anytime soon. Experts are already fielding plenty of calls from businesses around the region about whether they can stop complying with health reform rules or stop sending those requisite forms for reporting health coverage to the IRS for the upcoming tax season. "The answer, at the moment, is no," said Zack… Reported by bizjournals 6 hours ago.

U.S. Health Care by the Numbers

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As Congress looks to shake up the U.S. health-insurance system, it’s worth taking a look at what lawmakers are up against: an expensive health-care network that doesn’t deliver the best results. Reported by Wall Street Journal 6 hours ago.

Massachusetts Governor to Pitch Health-Insurance Penalty for Employers

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The first state in the nation to require residents to carry health insurance is grappling with escalating Medicaid rolls, but a fix floated by Massachusetts’ Republican governor is drawing pushback from employers. Reported by Wall Street Journal 3 hours ago.

N.J. assemblyman: Repeal and replace Obamacare? Consumers beware | Opinion

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Allowing out-of-state health insurers to sell policies in NJ is the wrong prescription to fix the problem of providing affordable health insurance in our state. Reported by NJ.com 4 hours ago.

These dogs will have better insurance than 18 million Americans if Obamacare is repealed

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In their very first month in office, Congressional Republicans have been busy chipping away at the law that gave 20 million Americans health insurance, then replacing it with their brand-new vision: [blank].

Sure, there are a few wonky replacement plans floating around, but nearly all put the most vulnerable Americans at risk. By choosing to repeal the Affordable Care Act and come up with a replacement plan later, Republicans risk losing anxious insurers from the market, effectively killing the exchange. The Congressional Budget Office recently estimated that 18.2 million Americans would lose their insurance if the Republicans didn't come up with a comprehensive replacement plan, leaving millions sick, bankrupt or worse. Read more...

More about Paul Ryan, Dogs, Affordable Care Act, Watercooler, and Politics Reported by Mashable 1 hour ago.

Massachusetts Governor Pitches Health-Insurance Penalty for Employers

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The first state in the nation to require residents to carry health insurance is grappling with escalating Medicaid rolls, but a fix floated by Massachusetts’ Republican governor is drawing pushback from employers. Reported by Wall Street Journal 5 minutes ago.

Buy health insurance early in life to save on treatment costs

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With the cost of healthcare including invasive treatment going up, young Indians would do well to buy insurance when they are still young - for the benefits outweigh the risks Reported by DNA 18 hours ago.

The Issue With Nixing The Affordable Care Act That No One Is Talking About

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Never mind his crowd-favorite pledge to build the Great Wall of Mexico with a "big, fat door," President Donald Trump's cornucopia of campaign promises included many a forgettable vow. But you had to be whale-spotting from a lily pad on Loon Lake to miss the president's pledge to repeal the Affordable Care Act (ACA).

What may not be as obvious is the effect that such a move could have on crime -- specifically medical identity theft.

Promises are often downgraded to "ideas" post-victory, but now that Candidate Trump is leader of the free world, it's time to revisit this major pledge. One of the first things our new president did Friday was sign an executive order urging his administration to fight the ACA.

The executive order has no teeth. It simply states the Trump administration's position, and, sure, that carries with it all the heft brought to bear by the Oval Office. But what is worrisome for proponents of the ACA is that the executive order follows current legislative efforts in Congress to obliterate the centerpiece of President Barack Obama's legacy. With a newly installed majority, Republicans are poised to dismantle the historic law that helped 20 million uninsured Americans get affordable healthcare. Most recently, in a 227 to 198 vote, members of the House approved a budget that would kill major provisions of the ACA.

"This is a critical first step toward delivering relief to Americans who are struggling under this law," House Speaker Paul Ryan said last week.

It's hard to say exactly how many Americans would lose their health insurance should Obamacare go away, since Republicans have yet to outline a plan to replace it. However, a recent study from the non-partisan Congressional Budget Office (CBO) found a straight-up repeal would leave about 18 million people uninsured the following year.

It goes without saying the majority of those affected will not resort to a life of crime in order to acquire healthcare. In fact, it is unlikely, but should Congress, in concert with the Trump administration, repeal the ACA without providing a viable alternative, the sheer number of uninsured people will create a moral hazard -- crimes will become a possibility where they would not have been -- and this can only result in an uptick in the medical identity theft numbers.

*What Is Medical Identity Theft?*

As I explain in my book, Swiped: How to Protect Yourself in a World Full of Scammers, Phishers and Identity Thieves, medical identity theft is widespread, and potentially deadly.

While there is a long and sordid history of organized crime running healthcare-related scams whereby crooked doctors and garden-variety crooks team up to defraud insurers or get prescriptions for controlled substances that are then sold for recreational use, the theft of one person's healthcare by another is a very real thing, and it can be life threatening.

Your medical records provide information that can be used in a variety of ways. For instance, once a criminal has your personal information and insurance details, he or she can use it, or enable another person to use it to gain access to the healthcare system in your name, and the result could be the contamination of your medical records with his or her co-mingled information.

Nothing is more dangerous than going to a hospital and having "your" medical records, as used by an identity thief or his/her "customer," reflect an inaccurate blood type, medical history, or the existence or absence of certain allergies when you are receiving medical care, particularly in an emergency situation.

Another result of medical identity theft can be denial of service. If an impostor uses your insurance to gain access to healthcare, it can affect your own ability to access care: Many insurance plans have annual caps on certain types of procedures and treatments -- and obviously no insurance company is going to pay for one person to have an appendectomy twice. An identity thief with access to your insurance could drain your coverage before you even know it's happened and leave you in the lurch when you need it.

*How to Prevent Medical Identity Theft*

There are ways to defend against medical identity theft. Most involve proactive monitoring of your medical files. Many larger medical providers permit you to review your medical records by way of a secure website. If your doctor doesn't offer such a service, you should sit with him, her or their staff at least once per year and review your files to confirm their accuracy. In addition, you should intently review any correspondence you receive from your health insurer, particularly Explanation of Benefit Notices, which will be the most immediate way to discover theft of services.

You should also review your credit reports at least once a year at AnnualCreditReport.com to make sure that all information is accurate. If you notice anything involving medical debt or a collection relating to a medical bill that is news to you, confirm its accuracy and that it's not an indication you are a victim of medical identity theft.

You might also wish to keep track of your credit scores. Any sudden, unexplained drop could indicate a problem, and that issue might stem from medical identity theft.

As for threats to the ACA, nothing has happened ... yet. Lawmakers are still trying to figure out how to approach their stated goal of repealing Obamacare, and it won't be easy. If you have concerns, you can call Speaker Ryan and other lawmakers who have vowed to do away with the ACA. As for the stated goal of repealing the ACA: An ounce of caution may be worth a pound of cure.

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website. Reported by Huffington Post 6 hours ago.

Keep healthcare out of GST purview: Assocham

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Healthcare sector should be kept outside the purview of Goods and Services Tax (GST) as it is likely to make medical care expensive and unaffordable for the common people, industry body Assocham said today.

Healthcare is currently exempted from service tax and a similar dispensation should continue even after the implementation of the GST regime at least for 10 years.

According to Assocham-TechSci Research paper, the sector caters to the unmet health needs of the society and should be kept out of the purview of the GST or else medical care would become expensive and unaffordable for the common people.

"A large number of items like food and other essentials for a common household are being kept outside the purview of the GST. The healthcare is equally important and essential, important only next to food. So, there is a strong case for the sector to be spared the GST," Assocham Secretary General D S Rawat said.

Government proposes to roll out new indirect tax regime GST from July 1. The GST would subsume excise, service tax, VAT and other local levies and make India a single, uniform market for seamless transfer of goods and services.

The industry chamber also demanded that Finance Minister Arun Jaitley in the forthcoming Union Budget 2017-18 should raise tax exemption on preventive health check-up and announce a healthcare infrastructure medical innovation fund.

It also pressed for raising the tax exemption on preventive health check-up under section 80D of the Income Tax Act, 1961, to Rs 20,000, from current value of Rs 5,000, in order to achieve the aim of universal healthcare coverage.

Additionally, the GST exemption should cover the health insurance premium, as it is exempted from the service tax at present.

The other pre-Budget demand with regard to the healthcare sector includes increasing the depreciation rate on medical devices, equipment from 15% to 30%.

The Indian pharma industry, with an estimated turnover of USD 36.7 billion in 2015, is among the largest producers of pharma products in the world, Assocham said.

ReportMoneyPTI

· Assocham
· GST
· GST Council
· Health Care
· Pharmaceutical Sector
· Arun Jaitley
· Service Tax
· Income Tax
· Health Insurance Premium

Thu, 26 Jan 2017-11:38am
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From Print Edition:  Reported by DNA 13 hours ago.

Trump Breaks Some Immigration Promises, Makes Partial Progress On Others – OpEd

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By Mitchell Blatt*

It’s Trump’s first week in office, and already he has broken some promises and made progress on others. Throughout Trump’s tenure, Bombs + Dollars will track Trump’s promises and offer updates at intervals.

Trump has already taken bold actions with a number of executive orders on immigration, abortion, and Obamacare. Republicans in Congress, as well, are trying their best to repeal Obamacare, although it’s unclear what kind of a replacement they will try to push through.

Among Trump’s major executive orders was one to keep the Guantanamo Bay military prison open and in use, which fulfills his pledge to keep Gitmo open.

An executive order to expend funds to build a barrier on the border leaves open the question of whether the barrier would be a wall or a fence, a distinction Trump made on the campaign trail. The executive order also spends American money, not Mexican money, which would violate Trump’s pledge to have Mexico pay for the wall. Trump claims he will eventually get Mexico to reimburse America.

Trump also is reportedly planning on signing an executive order to ban new refugees for a number of months and to ban anyone from a number of countries, including Iraq, Iran, Libya, Somalia, Sudan, Syria and Yemen. That would result in more than 180 million Muslims being banned (Iran: 74.8 million Muslims; Sudan: 39.0 million; Iraq: 31.1 million; Yemen: 24.0 million; Syria: 20.8 million). However, there are 1,703 million Muslims in the entire world, including 257 million in South-East Asia alone, 204 million in Indonesia, 178 million in Pakistan, and 172 million in India. If this is the full extent of Trump’s “Muslim ban,” he would have failed massively to implement his plan for a “total and complete shutdown of Muslims entering the United States until our country’s representatives can figure out what is going on.” This policy, however, can credibly be argued to fulfill his promise to “suspend immigration from areas of the world where there is a proven history of terrorism against the United States, Europe or our allies, until we fully understand how to end these threats.”

Trump broke his promise to have call on Congress to pass “Kate’s Law” on his first day in office. To date, he has still not called on Congress to do so.

Presented below are some of the updates to the chart:

**On banning Muslims**



Trump is reportedly planning on signing an executive order that would ban all immigrants or visitors from Iraq, Iran, Libya, Somalia, Sudan, Syria and Yemen, Muslim majority countries. However, such an order would also ban non-Muslims from those countries, and it would also allow hundreds of millions of Muslims from other countries not covered by the ban to apply for visas to visit or immigrate to the U.S.



**On banning immigration from “terrorist countries”**



The executive order mentioned above that would ban everyone from Iraq, Iran, Libya, Somalia, Sudan, Syria and Yemen from entering the U.S. applies to unstable countries which have problems with terrorism. If Trump follows through on this proposed executive order, he can credibly say he upheld his campaign promise.



**On building a wall**



Trump signed an executive order directing funds to build a barrier. Congress hasn’t passed a law to build a wall. Some administration officials, however, have argued that a 2006 law authorizing a fence is legal justification for Trump to build a barrier, but the 2006 law called for a fence, and much, but not all of the border, is already covered by fencing built after the law was passed.



*On having Mexico pay for the wall*



Trump signed an executive order directing funds to pay for the barrier. The funds would come from American taxpayers.

Trump argues, however, that eventually Mexico will reimburse America. Trump supporter Rep. Chris Collins (R-NY) argued that the U.S. could force Mexico to pay by exerting economic pressure.



*On passing “Kate’s Law”, a bill that would establish mandatory minimum sentences for illegal immigrants convicted of certain crimes*



On his first day in office, Trump did not ask Congress to pass “Kate’s Law.” In fact, after four days in office, he still hasn’t. Trump has thus broken this promise.



*On tripling the size of Immigrations and Customs*



Trump has signed an executive order to increase ICE’s staff by 5,000. As of 2014, ICE had 19,300 staff. In order to triple ICE’s staff, Trump would have to increase its staff by 38,600.



**On “immediately” rescinding Obama’s executive order allowing “Dreamers” to stay in the country with temporary legal status**



Trump spokesman Sean Spicer said that Trump would prioritize other things besides rescinding Obama’s executive orders on “Dreamers.” So far Trump has taken no action on Dreamers. Having not done so, and having had the administration spokesman not say there is any action forthcoming, Trump has violated his pledge to “immediately terminate President Obama’s two illegal executive amnesties.”



**On repealing Obamacare**



Republicans in House and Senate have voted to repeal aspects of Obamacare that they can repeal through reconciliation in the budget process. Senators Bill Cassidy and Susan Collins have presented a draft bill that would repeal the individual and employee mandates while keeping the mandates on insurance companies to provide certain coverage. It would also allow individual states to opt-out of the Obamacare insurance markets or to stay in the markets. As The Atlantic headlined their article, this “doesn’t repeal Obamacare.” Not fully. Requiring insurance companies to cover pre-existing conditions while not mandating people purchase health insurance could crash the markets by incentivizing healthy people not to purchase health insurance until they become sick. At any rate, this bill would have to pass both House and Senate, where the Republicans lack the 60 votes needed to break a filibuster, to become law.

In the meantime, Trump has signed an executive order instructing government agencies “to waive, defer, grant exemptions from, or delay the implementation of.”



View all here: Tracking Trump’s Promises

*About the author:
***Mitchell Blatt* moved to China in 2012, and since then he has traveled and written about politics and culture throughout Asia. A writer and journalist, based in China, he is the lead author of Panda Guides Hong Kong guidebook and a contributor to outlets including The Federalist, China.org.cn, The Daily Caller, and Vagabond Journey. Fluent in Chinese, he has lived and traveled in Asia for three years, blogging about his travels at ChinaTravelWriter.com. You can follow him on Twitter at @MitchBlatt. Reported by Eurasia Review 14 hours ago.

Salivary Diagnostics from Salimetrics Support daacro, a German Contract Research Organization, in neuropattern™ Customization

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daacro received further EU-funding to participate in the Eurostars-project named “ActiveNutraLife – A new complementary medicine approach for the management of chemotherapy side effects,” from November 2016 until October 2019. This project aims at designing and testing in clinical studies a new complementary medicine approach to speed up the recovery of haematological cancer patients in a post-chemotherapy phase.

(PRWEB) January 26, 2017

daacro’s Saliva Lab Trier, where new promising biomarkers will be searched and analyzed, will do a major part of the work for this project. daacro’s Saliva Lab is a Salimetrics Center of Excellence Laboratory and closely cooperates with Salimetrics, who is widely regarded as a global leader in developing assays for salivary bioscience.

The ActiveNutraLife approach combines a nutraceutical supplementation, a remotely accessible adapted physical activity program and a personalized stress and fatigue diagnostic tool, allowing acceleration and monitoring of the individual recovery. An “ActiveNutraLife” kit containing these services will be offered by means of the web and is of interest to health insurance providers.

To achieve this aim, daacro partners with two French companies – Bionov, responsible for the nutraceutical supplementation (a unique melon extract) and V@si, responsible for the adapted physical activity program.

daacro’s responsibility in this project is the development of the diagnostic tool which will be an offspring of daacro’s neuropattern™. neuropattern™ is an individualized diagnostic tool for stress related disorders, which allows differentiation between 13 stress-related endophenotypes called “neuropattern”. The adapted version “HEMO-neuropattern” will concentrate on fatigue-related endophenotypes.

In a first step, daacro will work on adapting and further developing the existing neuropattern™ diagnostic and on finding new biomarkers to better identify subgroups of haematological cancer patients (“HEMO-neuropattern”). Next, in a clinical trial performed by Hospital CHU Montpellier and further sites in South France, “HEMO-neuropattern” will be tested on efficacy of its personalized recommendations for better management of chemotherapy-induced side effects.

About Salimetrics:

Salimetrics’ assay kits and CLIA-certified testing services are used to measure salivary analytes related to stress, behavior and development, inflammation, sleep, reproduction, health and immune function. Founded in 1998 by Douglas A. Granger, Ph.D., Salimetrics, LLC supports CROs, pharmaceuticals, academic researchers and the immunodiagnostic industry around the world with innovative immunoassay products, non-invasive saliva collection methods, and laboratory testing services.

About neuropattern™

neuropattern™ is a diagnostic test that was developed in Trier, Germany. It provides a comprehensive assessment of neuroendocrine, psychosocial, and physical health interactions that emanate from the brain and body under stress. neuropattern™ is used to differentiate endophenotypes in patients with similar symptomatology and thus, this the procedure is particularly suited for individualized diagnostics and pharmacogenetic studies. Reported by PRWeb 13 hours ago.

Raising a Child with Hemophilia: Fifth Edition Now Available

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LA Kelley Communications' groundbreaking book Raising a Child with Hemophilia celebrates its 25th anniversary with a newly revised fifth edition. The first guidebook about hemophilia written by a parent of a child with hemophilia, it covers how blood clots, treatment for bleeds, insurance, complications and what it's like to raise a child in every developmental stage.

Georgetown, MA (PRWEB) January 26, 2017

LA Kelley Communications, Inc. announced today that it has published the fifth edition of its groundbreaking book Raising a Child with Hemophilia: A Practical Guide for Parents.

Parenting a child with hemophilia is difficult in any circumstance, but less so with access to a comprehensive guide that carefully walks parents through each stage of their child’s development. Raising a Child with Hemophilia, written by Laureen A. Kelley, shares practical information on child rearing, medical treatment, hospitals, insurance, complications, family relationships, and consumerism. It was the first book about hemophilia written by a parent, and the first to ever discuss pricing of, selection of and access to different therapies.

First published in 1991, Raising a Child with Hemophilia was an instant success and quickly became what many parents called the “bible” of hemophilia. It has been updated through the years to reflect changes in treatment and health insurance, and the advent of social media. The book details medical and scientific matters in simple language to allow parents to grasp complex concepts of manufacturing medicine and how blood clots. The book strongly encourages parents to become proactive advocates for their child with hemophilia through knowledge of bleeding disorders and cooperation with their healthcare team.

The book’s authority comes from the collected wisdom of over 160 hemophilia families, garnered through interviews. The book is also meticulously researched and documented by Paul Clement, a former high school science teacher and father of a child with hemophilia.

Raising a Child with Hemophilia was published with a grant from CSL Behring, a worldwide provider of plasma therapies. CEO and Managing Director Paul Perreault writes, “In this fifth edition, Raising a Child with Hemophilia has never been more relevant, especially in today’s complex healthcare environment. Through her writing, Laurie has initiated a new genre: parents of children with hemophilia now have a voice, they are empowered, and they are actively engaged on important topics with caregivers, policymakers, and other stakeholders. Her book continues to serve as a unique, stellar reference for hemophilia patients and their families.”

This fifth edition marks the 25th anniversary of this unique resource. Funding from CSL Behring allows the book to be offered free of charge to families with hemophilia.

About LA Kelley Communications, Inc.

Founded in 1990, LA Kelley Communications has been a world leader of groundbreaking patient educational materials and programs on hemophilia and related bleeding disorders. With more than a dozen books, numerous publications, and the oldest hemophilia newsletter in America, LA Kelley Communications remains a trusted source of practical parenting and consumer information about bleeding disorders. The company also donates millions of dollars worth of blood-clotting medicine to patients and clinics in developing countries as part of its humanitarian program, Project SHARE. For more information, please visit http://www.kelleycom.com.

About CSL Behring

CSL Behring is a global leader in the plasma protein biotherapeutics industry. Users of its therapies rely on them for their quality of life and, in many cases, for life itself. With operations in more than 30 nations and over 14,000 employees worldwide, its broad range of therapies include biotherapies to treat such disorders as hemophilia and primary immune deficiencies, and vaccines to prevent influenza. The company collaborates with patient and biomedical communities to improve access to therapies, advance scientific knowledge, and support future medical research. For more information, visit http://www.cslbehring.com.

Hemophilia

Hemophilia is an inherited blood-clotting disorder in which excessive and prolonged bleeding occurs because of the absence or abnormality of one of 13 clotting proteins called clotting factors. Hemophilia A, a deficiency in factor VIII, also called classic hemophilia, accounts for about 80% of all people with hemophilia. Hemophilia B (also known as Christmas disease) accounts for about 15% of all cases. One-third of all new cases are spontaneous, with no known family history. Untreated bleeding can cause extreme pain, joint deformities, and even death. The incidence of hemophilia A is approximately 1 in 5,000 male births. Reported by PRWeb 13 hours ago.

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4 VCs were asked what the hottest area of fintech is right now — all they could talk about was insurance

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4 VCs were asked what the hottest area of fintech is right now — all they could talk about was insurance LONDON — Investors from around the world were asked what the hottest area for investment in fintech is right now at a conference on Wednesday. The same sector kept coming up again and again: insurance.

At the Economist Finance Disrupted conference in London this week, three out of the four VCs on the panel "Unicorns vs. Unicorpses" named insurance specifically when asked what was of most interest to them as an area for investment.

The sector was name-checked by: Yann Ranchere, a Geneva-based partner at fintech VC Anthemis; Reshma Sohoni, the CEO and cofounder of early stage UK fund Seedcamp; and Timo Dreger, a managing director at Berlin-based Apeiron Investment Group.

The other investor on the panel — Technology Crossover Ventures general partner John Rosenberg — had a get out of jail free card. His Silicon Valley-based fund focuses on "growth" investment: funding for proven businesses that are scaling. Most insurance startups are far too early stage to sit in his wheelhouse.

All the panellists offered up other areas of interest, such as optimising banking backends and artificial intelligence, but somehow the conversation kept returning to insurance.

Dreger summed up it up well, telling the audience:

"Right now we are looking at InsurTech. It's for sure the hottest thing in 2016 and for sure the hottest thing this year too. The answer is pretty easy why. In the whole insurance industry, there's a lack of innovation and the user experience is pretty horrible."

While everything from loans to wealth management has been "disrupted" by technology over the last few years, insurance remains one of the few areas of finance that is still stubbornly old-fashioned. Insurers mostly operate through brokers and an embarrassingly high percentage of business is done on paper.

Products seem outdated too: home insurance hasn't adapted to the era of Airbnb and car insurance is even more hopeless when it comes to Uber and the sharing economy. The industry seems an obvious area for a tech-savvy startup to "disrupt."

So far most of the innovation and momentum around "InsurTech", as its known, has been in the US, where the health insurance market presents a huge opportunity. The flag-bearer is Oscar, an online health insurer based in New York that has raised over $700 million from investors such as Goldman Sachs, Google, and Fidelity. (Oscar's cofounder is Josh Kushner, brother of Donald Trump's son-in-law and advisor Jared Kushner.)

However, InsurTech is gaining a foothold in Europe. Silicon Valley's Trov recently launched in the UK and Sohoni highlighted Seedcamp's investment in Cuvva, which offers pay-as-you-go car insurance. Founded in 2014, the startup has already insured 150,000 hours worth of driving covering 2 million miles and this week raised £1.5 million from London fund LocalGlobe. Germany also has a particularly thriving InsurTech scene, with notable companies such as Friendsurance and FinanceFox.

Still, the InsurTech revolution may not have arrived just yet. VCs told me insurance was the hottest area of fintech back in 2015 when I took the industry's temperature. The pace of change is slow and not always straightforward.

The signs are positive, however. Back in 2015 VCs complained to me that, while insurance was ripe for disruption, there weren't many entrepreneurs who wanted to tackle it. "Not many startups self-identify as insurance startups," Nektarios Liolios, the managing director of accelerator Startupbootcamp Insurance, told me back then.

Startups are appearing in the space now, a step in the right direction. Dreger told the conference crowd in London this week: "InsurTech right now is where fintech was a couple of years ago. First, startups will focus on distribution but hopefully, in the future, we will see more things."

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