Saturday, 30 August 2008

Number, Percentage Of Uninsured U.S. Residents Decreased In 2007, According To U.S. Census Bureau


The number and portion of uninsured U.S. residents declined in 2007 to 45.7 million citizenry, or 15.3% of the population, according to an annual U.S. Census Bureau report released Tuesday, USA Today reports (Cauchon/Appleby, USA Today, 8/27). In 2006, 47 million people were uninsured, or 15.8% of the population (Alonso-Zaldivar, AP/Kansas City Star, 8/26). For the reputation, researchers analyzed data from the Current Population Survey of the 50 states and Washington, D.C. (U.S. Census Bureau release, 8/26). The survey found that:
The number of people with health insurance increased to 253.4 jillion in 2007 from 249.8 billion in 2006 (Little, Chicago Tribune, 8/27);


11%, or 8.1 million, of U.S. children younger than age 18 were uninsured, down from 11.7%, or 8.7 1000000, in 2006 (Dunham, Reuters, 8/26);


The symmetry of people with private coverage dropped to 67.5% from 67.9%;


The proportion of people with employer-sponsored coverage hide to 59.3% in 2007 from 59.7% in 2006, although the number of people with employer-based policy was non statistically different from 2006 (Girion, Los Angeles Times, 8/27);


The proportion of people with any type of populace coverage grew to 27.8% from 27.0% in 2006;


Uninsurance rates differed by race, with 32.1% of Hispanics uninsured in 2007, downward from 34.1% in 2006, left the group with the highest percentage of uninsured. Uninsurance rates for blacks decreased from 20.5% to 19.5% during the period. The rate for whites declined from 10.8% to 10.4%, and the charge per unit for Asian-Americans was up from 15.5% in 2006 to 16.8% in 2007 (New York Times pictorial, 8/27);


Massachusetts graded first overall among states in the proportion of residents with health coverage, with 92.1% covered (Smith, Boston Globe, 8/27); and


Texas stratified last among states with 24.4% of residents having no health reporting (Urbina, New York Times, 8/27).

Government-Sponsored Programs
Census officials attributed the degenerate in uninsured people to an step-up in the number of children -- particularly the number of low-income children -- enrolled in government-sponsored health insurance programs, such as SCHIP and Medicaid (Los Angeles Times, 8/27). The step-up in the percentage of people covered through government-sponsored programs more than stolon the drop in the proportion of people with private coverage, notably those with employer-based insurance, according to David Johnson, chief of the Census Bureau's Housing and Household Economic Statistics division (Knight, Dow Jones, 8/26).

Overall the number of people enrolled in government-sponsored health programs increased to 83 million in 2007 from 80.3 billion in 2006. The number of people enrolled in Medicaid increased from 38.3 gazillion to 39.6 1000000 in 2007 (Los Angeles Times, 8/27). An additional one billion U.S. residents enrolled in Medicare last year, and the federal government's military health concern programs covered 400,000 more masses in 2007 than in 2006 (Dougherty/Zhang, Wall Street Journal, 8/27).

Diane Rowland, executive vice president of the United States of the Kaiser Family Foundation and executive director of the Foundation's Commission on Medicaid and the Uninsured, aforementioned, "In 2007, at least 26 states made efforts to spread out coverage, just as the economy has turned down so have state efforts." She added that policy premiums have been rising faster than wages and inflation, causing many hoi polloi to essay coverage through and through government-sponsored programs. The report also constitute the median income of working-age households was $2,010 lower than its 2000 grade and insignificant when adjusted for inflation (New York Times, 8/27).


Presidential Candidates' Comments
Presumptive Republican presidential campaigner Sen. John McCain (Ariz.) said the report "reminds us that Americans ar suffering in a struggling economy. Too many of our neighbors are living in poverty ... and to a fault many are living without health insurance" (Wall Street Journal, 8/27).

Presumptive Democratic presidential candidate Sen. Barack Obama (Ill.) said, "Today's news confirms what America's struggling families already recognise -- that over the past seven years, our economy has moved backwards" (USA Today, 8/27). In a statement Obama aforesaid that "an additional 7.2 jillion Americans have fallen into the ranks of the uninsured. This is the failed record of George Bush's economic policies that Sen. McCain has called 'great progress'" (Young, The Hill, 8/26).


Comments
Bruce Lesley, president of the children's advocacy grouping First Focus, said, "While this decline is a temporary victory for kids, we fear next year's data testament paint a worse painting for America's children than ever in front, as the effects of a slow economy will be coupled with the inability of Congress to pass renewal of [SCHIP] over President Bush's 2 vetoes" (Los Angeles Times, 8/27).

Peter Cunningham, a senior fellow at the Center for Studying Health System Change, said world health insurance policy programs "are expensive, and when tax revenues fall [it] is going to be harder to hold back them up" (Dow Jones, 8/26). Paul Fronstin, manager of the health research and education program at the Employee Benefit Research Institute, aforementioned that the decrease does not reflect "what's going on right now," adding, "We take a much weaker economy than a year agone, much higher inflation. Very unlikely that this trend will remain into 2008" (Vitez, Philadelphia Inquirer, 8/27).

Kevin Hayden, WellPoint head of government contracting, said that the shift toward political science programs presented "an opportunity for the private sector and the government to work together," and that expanding government-sponsored programs provides options for people world Health Organization do not have access code to employer-sponsored coverage or cannot afford quality health care.

Karen Ignagni, chairwoman of America's Health Insurance Plans, aforementioned the "modest decline" does not "reduce the urgency of the crisis." She said that the individual health policy industry has made several proposals over the past tense two days intended to provide insurance coverage for the uninsured, amend quality and contain costs -- including expanding government programs for low-income and chronically ill patients (Los Angeles Times, 8/27).

Commonwealth Fund President Karen Davis said, "States such as Massachusetts have also played an significant role in stemming the rising tide of uninsured, and thanks to their health rectify law, they now experience one of the last-place uninsured rates," adding, "But 45.7 million uninsured people are far likewise many, and we pauperism a internal solution to this crisis" (New York Times, 8/27).


The Census Bureau report is available online.


Editorials



New York Times: The worsen in the number of uninsured U.S. residents -- from 47 million in 2006 to 45.7 million in 2007 -- indicated in Tuesday's Census Bureau account is a "mirage when it comes to health insurance" because it is still 7.2 million U.S. residents higher than it was in 2000, a Times editorial states. The editorial continues that even the improvements from 2006 to 2007 "were entirely attributable to an increase in the number of people enrolled in Medicaid and other public programs." According to the Times, although there has been six-spot years of "solid economic growth," it "is net is that economic growth alone testament not cut it for most American families." The editorial continues, "The benefits must be shared more broadly," which "means more than progressive taxation, increasing entree to affordable h care, investing more in public education." The editorial concludes, "President Bush was to a fault busy film editing taxes on top earners to think about whatsoever of these priorities. The next president must do much better" (New York Times, 8/27).



Seattle Post-Intelligencer: "Truth be told, we already have a government-funded health care system; we just pretend we don't," according to a Post-Intelligencer editorial. The editorial continues, "There's this supposed mix of private and public insurance, but the fact is the U.S. government (you know, we, the taxpayers) spend nearly a quarter more for government health care programs than suppose, Canada (a country that is conjectural to

Wednesday, 20 August 2008

FDA Warns Consumers About Potential Problems At Two Baltimore Pharmacies

�The U.S. Food and Drug Administration is warning consumers world Health Organization filled prescriptions at The Medicine Shoppe pharmacies located at 8035A Liberty Road and 5900 Reisterstown Road in Baltimore that they may get received drugs that were either expired or suspected counterfeit. The FDA is particularly concerned because a number of the drugs are for serious diseases and could have an adverse essence on treatment.

The products in head include:


-- Lisinopril (20 milligrams)

-- Guaifenesin/Dextromethorphan (600 mg and 1000 mg)

-- Gabapentin (one C mg, three hundred mg and 400 mg)

-- Metoprolol (50 mg)

-- Nifedipine (30 mg)

-- Diclofenac Sodium (30 mg)

-- Glucophage (500 mg Extended Release)

-- Glucovance (125 mg and 500 mg)

-- Glipizide/Metformin (2.50 mg/250 mg)

-- Furosemide (20 mg)

-- Tamoxifen Citrate (10 mg)
-- Metformin HCl ER (500 mg)

-- Calcitrol (0.25 micrograms)


The FDA has no evidence that any former Medicine Shoppe pharmacies outside of the 8035A Liberty Road and 5900 Reisterstown Road facilities are involved.


Because the safety and efficacy of the listed drugs has not been established, the FDA is strongly advising consumers wHO filled prescriptions for these drugs at these 2 pharmacies to contact their prescribing physician immediately for new prescriptions. Additionally, consumers in possession of the above listed prescription drugs from these pharmacies should call FDA at 800-521-5783 for further information on how to dispose of the drugs.


Consumers and health care professionals butt report inauspicious events to the FDA's MedWatch program at 800-FDA-1088, by ring armour at MedWatch, HF-2, FDA, 5600 Fishers Lane, Rockville, Md 20852-9787, or on-line at www.fda.gov/medwatch/report.htm.


More info

Sunday, 10 August 2008

Sugarland is sweet on Billboard 200

Miley Cyrus trades places with the country act




Disney wunderkind Miley Cyrus' reign atop the Billboard cc ends dead after one week as country twain Sugarland outsold her by 8,000 units to claim its first No. 1.

Sugarland took the unusual step of releasing the deluxe edition of "Love on the Inside" -- featuring basketball team extra songs -- a week before the standard version arrived. Sales of both versions are unified together in Nielsen SoundScan's database and on Billboard's charts.

Meanwhile, Cyrus' "Breakout" sees a 56% sales drop from its debut week to domain at No. 2 in an other than uneventful frame on the big chart.

Christian rock lot Third Day has its best chart showing and biggest sales week with "Revelation," which begat a No. 6 bow. And "Kidz Bop 14," the latest kid-friendly reworking of recent pop hits, arrives at No. 8 -- marking the eighth straight top 10 debut for the series.

Elsewhere, Rick Springfield and Alice Cooper watch their highest-charting discs since 1985 and 1991, respectively.

Billboard's Keith Caulfield contributed to this report.


The top 10:

1. Sugarland, "Love on the Inside" (Mercury Nashville, 171,000 units)

2. Miley Cyrus, "Breakout" (Hollywood, 163,000)

3. Soundtrack, "Mamma Mia!" (Decca, 130,000)

4. Kid Rock, "Rock N Roll Jesus" (Top Dog, 96,000)

5. Lil Wayne, "Tha Carter III" (Cash Money, 79,000)

6. Third Day, "Revelation" (Essential, 75,000)

7. Coldplay, "Viva la Vida" (Capitol, 70,0000

8. Kidz Bop Kidz, "Kidz Bop 14" (Razor & Tie, 58,000)

9. Soundtrack, "Camp Rock" (Walt Disney, 58,000)

10. Nas, "Untitled" (Def Jam, 41,000)

Wednesday, 2 July 2008

Michael Armstrong

Michael Armstrong   
Artist: Michael Armstrong

   Genre(s): 
Other
   Easy Listening
   



Discography:


Rockabye Baby No Doubt   
 Rockabye Baby No Doubt

   Year: 2007   
Tracks: 11


Rockabye Baby!: Lullaby Renditions Of Coldplay   
 Rockabye Baby!: Lullaby Renditions Of Coldplay

   Year: 2006   
Tracks: 10


Rockabye Baby! Lullaby Rendi..   
 Rockabye Baby! Lullaby Rendi..

   Year:    
Tracks: 11




 






Monday, 23 June 2008

Jesse Rose

Jesse Rose   
Artist: Jesse Rose

   Genre(s): 
Electronic
   House
   



Discography:


Itchy Dog   
 Itchy Dog

   Year: 2007   
Tracks: 3


More Than One   
 More Than One

   Year: 2006   
Tracks: 11


Didn't I Ep   
 Didn't I Ep

   Year: 2006   
Tracks: 3




 






Monday, 16 June 2008

Mel B: 'I'm working with Janet Jackson'

Melanie Brown has revealed that she is seeking help from Janet Jackson to revive her pop career.

The singer's last album LA State Of Mind failed to break in to the UK top 200, selling only 670 copies in its first week.

However, Brown insisted that she isn't worried about failing in the charts again.

"I'm not scared of having another try," she told Metro. "I am working with the best producers ever. I am now ten tracks in to my new record.

"I am doing something with Janet Jackson, which should be amazing. I am also going to hook up with Missy again."



See Also

Wednesday, 4 June 2008

Jennifer Lopez checks into hospital?

Singer and actress Jennifer Lopez has reportedly checked into hospital in preparation for giving birth.
According to US media reports, the star, who is rumoured to be expecting twins, has now been admitted to the North Shore University Hospital in New York.
The Daily Telegraph reports that a private room in the hospital was kept vacant for the 37-year-old star for the past two weeks.
A patient at the hospital reportedly told Pagesix.com that she overheard hospital staff saying: "JLo is here".

Saturday, 31 May 2008

Teri Hatcher - Hatcher Not Happy About Tv Daughters Dismissal

TERI HATCHER has hit out at the producers of DESPERATE HOUSEWIVES for axing her onscreen daughter from the show.

The actress was devastated when she discovered Andrea Bowen would not be a part of the regular cast for the next season of the hit show.

In the finale, which aired in America on Sunday (18May08), the cast was transported five years into the future - and Bowen's character Julie was revealed to be a student at Princeton University.

As a result, the character will be absent from the next season of the show - and Hatcher thinks that is a mistake.

She tells USA Today newspaper, "She (Bowen) is somebody who I have done the majority of my work with for four years. I've watched her grow up from 13 to 18, get a driver's license.

"I can't begin to tell you the depths of how impossibly hard it is for me to think about her not being there.

"This is a totally producer/network decision that I have nothing to do with, and I guess I can go out on a limb and say I don't support."




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Thursday, 29 May 2008

Age Of Ruin

Age Of Ruin   
Artist: Age Of Ruin

   Genre(s): 
Metal: Thrash
   



Discography:


Tides of Tragedy   
 Tides of Tragedy

   Year: 2004   
Tracks: 12




Often compared to At the Gates and In Flames, Age of Ruin has often been described as a "melodious death metal striation." In other actor's line, they have embraced certain aspects of death metal -- dingy, worrying lyrics and choked, larynx-shredding, evil-sounding growls -- simply they ar far from the kind of virgin, straight-up grindcore one associates with the early recordings of Cannibal Corpse, Obituary, Carcass, or Cancer. While true grindcore is amelodic and is played at an dementedly firm pacing, Age of Ruin plays at different tempos and is comparatively melodious; some of Age of Ruin's recordings have been as vocally extreme as Cannibal Corpse or Carcass, simply musically, they aren't far remote from a thrash metal band such as Megadeth, Anthrax, or Exodus. Many of Age of Ruin's guitar riffs wouldn't be out of place on one of Testament's early albums.Eld of Ruin was formed in Fairfax, VA (a Washington, D.C., suburban area) in 1998; the band's original batting order consisted of Derrick Kozerka on lead vocals, Daniel Fleming (formerly of the bands Jonas and Days Lost) on guitar, Chris Fleming on bass, and Patrick Owens on drums. After circulating a demo called The Opium Dead in 1999, Age of Ruin recorded their first official full-length record album, Black Sands of the Hourglass, in 2000 and redact it out themselves. In 2002, Age of Ruin added guitarist Brian Kerley (formerly of Carved in Stone) to the lineup and went for a five-man, two-guitar attack; that edition of Age of Ruin recorded the EP Fall Lanterns for Tribunal Records. In 2003, the Baltimore-based DFF label put prohibited an Age of Ruin EP titled The Longest Winter Woes, and it was too in 2003 that the band recorded an unlikely remaking of Bon Jovi's '80s pop-metal hit "You Give Love a Bad Name," which Tribunal added to Bootleg Sands of the Hourglass when they reissued that record album in early 2004.Along the means, Age of Ruin has had some lineup changes. After The Longest Winter Woes, drummer Owens left the circle and was replaced by Colin Kercz (once of the Maryland bands Haddonfield and Longshot). When Chris Fleming took off in 2003, he was replaced by bassist Joe Scheibel. And when vocaliser Kozerka left in January 2004, he was replaced by Ben Swan (wHO had been a fellow member of the band Samadhi). With Kozerka's leaving, Daniel Fleming was the only person left from Age of Ruin's original 1998 lineup. Early 2004 launch Age of Ruin signed to Eulogy Recordings (a little label based in Ft. Lauderdale, FL) and on the job on a uncut album coroneted The Tides of Tragedy.





K3

Alanis has Flavours of Entanglement

Alanis will release a new album in June


Maverick/Reprise recording artist Alanis Morissette has announced a 9 June for her New Zealand release for highly anticipated new album Flavors Of Entanglement. Co-written and produced by Guy Sigsworth (Bj�rk, Imogen Heap), the album is Morissette's first original studio release in four years.
While hewing to a familiar process - creating songs as snapshots of her life - Morissette found cathartic support during a big transition in her life. "I often write in retrospect, but this was written in real time," she says. "This record helped me through some fragile moments. Every song was like a life raft."
Morissette's penchant for eclecticism, whether musical, spiritual or otherwise, brought new sounds and styles into this latest effort, which she's been previewing for fans during her tour with Matchbox Twenty. Among the new songs included in her electrifying live set is lead single "Underneath," which reflects Mahatma Gandhi's notion that "You must be the change you want to see in the world"; "Versions of Violence," a jarring deconstruction of human behaviour, and "Citizen of the Planet," a poetic narrative of her life story and transnational perspective set against a backdrop blending Eastern percussion, strings and electronic hues.
"There's not another artist-male or female-who can take you on the kind of emotional journey that Alanis can," says Sigsworth. "She has this ginormous, super-massive, planet-eating emotional range. She goes all the way-10 on the Richter Scale-and we're at the epicenter with her as she sings whole worlds into existence. She can be raging and hostile, distraught and desolately heartbroken, glowingly nostalgic, sensual, breezy and self-deprecating-all in one album."
Since her arrival in 1995 Alanis Morissette has become one of the most influential singer-songwriter-musicians in contemporary music. Her deeply expressive music and performances have earned vast critical praise, seven Grammy Awards and a dedicated fan base that extends throughout the world, with album sales exceeding 40 million worldwide.   Morissette's 1995 debut, Jagged Little Pill, was followed by such eclectic and acclaimed albums as Supposed Former Infatuation Junkie (1998), MTV Unplugged (1999), Under Rug Swept (2002), So-Called Chaos (2004), Jagged Little Pill Acoustic (2005), her greatest hits album, The Collection (2005), as well as musical contributions to theatrical releases ranging from Dogma and The Devil Wears Prada to De-Lovely, The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe and City Of Angels (the latter two earning her a Golden Globe nomination for Best Original Song and Grammys for Best Rock Song and Best Female Rock Vocal Performance, respectively). She's lent her talents to other albums and forums, including collaborations with Ringo Starr, Dave Matthews Band and Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan.
Her acting work includes roles on HBO's "Sex and the City" and "Curb Your Enthusiasm," along with a three-episode arc on FX's "Nip/Tuck" and the part of God in the controversial film Dogma. On stage, Morissette starred in The Vagina Monologues and in the off-Broadway play The Exonerated as death row inmate Sunny Jacobs. Morissette recently completed her first lead film role as "Sylvia" in the film adaptation of Philip K Dick's novel Radio Free Albemuth.
Of course, she delivered one of the most memorable performances of her career last year with a riotous parody of the Black Eyed Peas' hit "My Humps." Entertainment Weekly lauded the YouTube sensation, which has been viewed more than 13 million times to date, as one of the top downloads of '07 and praised Alanis for "revisiting the age-old question, 'What you gonna do with all that ass, all that ass inside them jeans?'"  
Flavors Of Entanglement out 9 June, 2008

Charlie Sheen - Richards Sheen Agreed To Reality Show

CHARLIE SHEEN tried to use ex-wife DENISE RICHARDS' new reality TV show to negotiate better access to their two daughters, the actress has claimed.

The former Bond girl has been criticised for allowing three-year-old Sam and Lola, two, to appear on Denise Richards: It's Complicated, which debuts in the U.S. on Monday (26May08).

But Richards claims Sheen actually signed the waiver allowing them to feature in the show, and only changed his mind when he realised he could use it to land more access to the girls.

The dispute went to court and a judge ruled in Richards' favour.

Speaking on U.S. morning TV's The Today Show on Wednesday (21May08), she said, "When I originally approached Charlie he didn't have a problem, he signed the waiver that I needed."

She adds that she refused Sheen's demands for a change in the custody arrangement, "(Because) I didn't want to change our custody for the show. They were two completely separate things.

"When people watch the show, my children are on it very little."

Of the deterioration of her relationship with Sheen since their split in 2005, she says, "Charlie is a stranger to me. He's my ex-husband and the father of my children and he's a stranger."




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Kirsten Dunst checks into rehab - reports

Actress Kirsten Dunst has checked herself into rehab, according to reports.
The 'Spider-Man' actress has joined Eva Mendes at the Cirque Lodge clinic in Utah, where Lindsay Lohan underwent a two-month treatment programme last year.
A Utah source told Star magazine that Dunst, who has played Spider-Man's love interest Mary Jane Watson in all three movies, broke down in tears when she checked in.
The insider said: "She desperately needed help. She seemed to be intoxicated when she checked in because she was acting really erratic.
"She was extremely emotional, constantly breaking down in tears.She is not in a good place right now, but, thankfully, she's getting the help she needs."
A spokeswoman for Dunst declined to comment last night.

Prince Croke Park gig confirmed

Prince will play a gig at Dublin's Croke Park in June.
The 'Purple Rain' singer is lined up to perform his greatest hits for the last time for Irish fans at a concert in Croke Park on 16 June.
Tickets, priced €66.50, go on sale on 5 March.
Celine Dion, Westlife and Neil Diamond have already confirmed shows at the venue for later this year.
Prince played 21 gigs at London's O2 arena last year to promote his 'Planet Earth' album.
He played the Point Theatre in 2002 and afterwards performed at an impromptu private party at Spirit nightclub on Abbey Street in Dublin.

Sex And The City - The Things They Say 8430

"It's so amazing when I'm interviewed people always put a year or two on me and they always leave his age at the same - 28. And he's been 28 for the past five years now, it's crazy." SEX AND THE CITY star KIM CATTRALL, 51, reveals the negatives of dating 29-year-old Canadian chef ALAN WYSE.




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Gervais planning Extras spin-off?

Ricky Gervais may be planning an Extras spin-off starring Stephen Merchant's dopey agent and Barry from 'EastEnders' as a pair of bumbling crimefighters.
The BBC comedy ended after two series and a Christmas special.
But actor Shaun Williamson, who played Barry, revealed that Gervais had come up with another idea for his character and useless agent Darren Lamb (Merchant).
He told radio station Heart: "I would have loved another 10 series of 'Extras' but I can totally understand them wanting to call it a day.
"The one thing we did bandy about, half in jest and half seriously, was the idea of a spin-off for my character Barry and the agent. Ricky thought they could go around in a camper van solving crimes or something."
He added: "That's strictly on the backburner for now as Ricky is busy in Hollywood at the moment. I'd jump at the chance to work with him again."
Williamson said he nearly turned down the 'Extras' role. "I thought for about 10 minutes about not taking it and then I realised I might never get the chance to work with Ricky and Stephen again.
"I am so proud to have been involved with 'Extras' and I can understand them wanting to finish it.
"They've got so much more going for them and I think they have got a great film in them to make, whether it's an 'Extras' film or just a great British film, and I'm sure they'll make it."