(Press-News.org) "A major intent of the ACA is to control health care spending and increase access to necessary services for those who need it most," said Alliance Director Christine Ferguson, J.D. "With America's rising obesity rates leading to worsening health outcomes and equally alarming cost projections, leaving obesity unaddressed is both unsustainable and unacceptable."
At the core of the Task Force's recommendations is the tenet that obesity and weight-related interventions should receive the same consideration as any other health condition. The Task Force noted that while more research is needed, there are evidence-based obesity and obesity-related chronic disease prevention, treatment and management services available that could and should be covered as a way to stem the obesity epidemic.
Specifically, the recommendations propose that:
No obesity prevention, treatment or management services should be summarily excluded from the new essential health benefits package coverage requirements under the ACA;
All evidence-based preventive services be covered;
All preventive benefits be covered with no or reduced cost-sharing; and
All evidence-based treatments for obesity be covered with reasonable cost-sharing.
Federal, evidence-based recommendations underpin the Task Force's proposal to include obesity services in the EHB. The Task Force cites recommendations from the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force and the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute as part of the evidence base for including these services.
Obesity affects one-third of U.S. adults and is linked to increasing the risk of more than 20 chronic diseases and health conditions, including diabetes, that cause devastating consequences and increased mortality. "Including obesity-related services as part of the EHB has potential to improve the health of millions of Americans," said Ferguson, "especially those that are currently medically underserved and suffering from the greatest weight-related disease burden."
###
The Alliance EHB Task Force members include the American Medical Group Association, Black Women's Health Imperative, Canyon Ranch Institute, Care Continuum Alliance, COSHAR Foundation, Obesity Action Coalition, OWL-The Voice of Midlife and Older Women, Reality Coalition, Red Hot Mamas, Service Employees International Union, The Obesity Society and Trust for America's Health.
About the STOP Obesity Alliance
The Strategies to Overcome and Prevent (STOP) Obesity Alliance is a collaboration of consumer, provider, government, labor, business, health insurers and quality-of-care organizations united to drive innovative and practical strategies that combat obesity. The Alliance receives funding from founding sponsor, Sanofi, and supporting sponsor, Allergan, Inc. For more information, visit www.stopobesityalliance.org.
STOP Obesity Alliance Task Force urges HHS to give obesity equal weight in essential health benefits
Federal, evidence-based recommendations underpin Alliance Task Force’s proposal to include obesity services in the essential health benefits package
2011-08-31
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Researchers build a tougher, lighter wind turbine blade
2011-08-31
Efforts to build larger wind turbines able to capture more energy from the air are stymied by the weight of blades. A Case Western Reserve University researcher has built a prototype blade that is substantially lighter and eight times tougher and more durable than currently used blade materials.
Marcio Loos, a post-doctoral researcher in the Department of Macromolecular Science and Engineering, works with colleagues at Case Western Reserve, and investigators from Bayer MaterialScience in Pittsburgh, and Molded Fiber Glass Co. in Ashtabula, Ohio, comparing the properties ...
Landlubber fish leap for love when tide is right
2011-08-31
One of the world's strangest animals – a unique fish that lives on land and can leap large distances despite having no legs – has a rich and complex social life, a new study has found.
The odd lifestyle of the Pacific leaping blenny (Alticus arnoldorum) has been detailed for the first time in research findings that throw new light on how animal life first evolved to colonise the land.
The Pacific leaping blenny is a marine fish yet is terrestrial in all aspects of its daily adult life, eking out a precarious existence in the intertidal zone of rocky shores in Micronesia, ...
Suicide methods differ between men and women
2011-08-31
Women who commit suicide are more likely than men to avoid facial disfiguration, but not necessarily in the name of vanity. Valerie Callanan from the University of Akron and Mark Davis from the Criminal Justice Research Center at the Ohio State University, USA, show that there are marked gender differences in the use of suicide methods that disfigure the face or head. While firearms are the preferred method for both men and women, women are less likely to shoot themselves in the head. The study is published online in Springer's journal Sex Roles.
Although a number of ...
Wakeup call for college students: New research finds you need to catch more z's
2011-08-31
University of Cincinnati research finds that college students could be undermining their own education, simply because they're not practicing proper sleep habits. The study, led by Adam Knowlden, a UC doctoral student in UC's Health Promotion and Education Program, also holds recommendations for students to form better sleep habits that will ultimately enhance their learning.
The study evaluated the sleep habits of nearly 200 undergraduate college students between the ages of 18 and 24 who were not living with a parent or legal guardian. The study included 130 females ...
Hands-on dads give kids an edge
2011-08-31
This release is available in French.
Montreal, August 30, 2011 — Fathers who actively engage in raising their children can help make their offspring smarter and better behaved, according to new research from Concordia University.
Published in the Canadian Journal of Behavioural Science, the long-term study examined how fathers can positively influence the development of their kids through hands-on parenting.
"Fathers make important contributions in the development of their children's behaviour and intelligence," says Erin Pougnet, a PhD candidate in the Concordia ...
Mayo Clinic finds social media valuable tool to recruit study participants for rare diseases
2011-08-31
ROCHESTER, Minn. - Mayo Clinic has identified a new benefit of social media and online networking: a novel way to study rare diseases. Through patient-run websites dedicated to heart conditions and women's heart health, a team of cardiologists led by Sharonne Hayes, M.D., is reaching out to survivors of spontaneous coronary artery dissection, also known as SCAD, a poorly understood heart condition that affects just a few thousand Americans every year.
Study recruitment through social media and online networks could help researchers assemble large and demographically diverse ...
Patients' underlying health linked to worse outcomes for melanoma, U-M study finds
2011-08-31
ANN ARBOR, Mich. — It's not how old but how frail patients are that can predict how well they will fare after a melanoma diagnosis. In fact, young patients in poor health may have worse outcomes than older patients in good shape.
A new study from the University of Michigan Comprehensive Cancer Center finds that patients with decreased core muscle density were more likely to see their cancer spread to distant parts of the body.
These findings may also support the idea that the patient's biological response to a tumor is important in controlling the spread of melanoma. ...
Mother-son ties change over time, influence teen boys' behavior, Wayne State study finds
2011-08-31
DETROIT – Relationships between mothers and their sons change during childhood and adolescence, however, not all relationships change in the same way. A Wayne State University-led study has found that how the relationships change may affect boys' behavior when they become teens.
The research team, led by Christopher Trentacosta, Ph.D., assistant professor of psychology in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences at Wayne State University, looked at 265 mother-son pairs from low-income families in Pittsburgh, starting when the boys were 5 through adolescence. The families ...
Localizing language in the brain
2011-08-31
CAMBRIDGE, Mass. -- New research from MIT suggests that there are parts of our brain dedicated to language and only language, a finding that marks a major advance in the search for brain regions specialized for sophisticated mental functions.
Functional specificity, as it's known to cognitive scientists, refers to the idea that discrete parts of the brain handle distinct tasks. Scientists have long known that functional specificity exists in certain domains: In the motor system, for example, there is one patch of neurons that controls the fingers of your left hand, and ...
Role of soy in menopausal health reported
2011-08-31
Soy has recently been reviewed and supported for introduction into general medical practice as a treatment for distressing vasomotor symptoms of menopause, such as hot flashes, but its use in other medical areas, such as heart health, requires further research, according to a new report reviewing the risks and benefits of soy protein, isoflavones and metabolites in menopausal health from The North American Menopause Society (NAMS)/Wulf H. Utian Translational Science Symposium, published in the July Menopause, the peer-reviewed NAMS journal.
"Although a significant amount ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Consistent policy, not “patchwork” regulations, recommended for the coexistence of crops
LEDs shed light on efficient tomato cultivation
2025 Ig Physics Nobel Prize for perfect pasta sauce
Bright squeezed light in the kilohertz frequency band
Water flowed on ancient asteroid
AI model offers accurate and explainable insights to support autism assessment
Process for dealing with sexual misconduct by doctors requires major reform
Severe pregnancy sickness raises risk of mental health conditions by over 50%
Early humans may have walked from Türkiye to mainland Europe, new groundbreaking research suggests
New study shows biochar’s electrical properties can influence rice field methane emissions
Guangdong faces largest chikungunya outbreak on record
Tirzepatide improves blood sugar control in children aged 10-17 years with type 2 diabetes inadequately controlled on existing therapies (SURPASS-PEDS trial)
An old drug, in a low dose, shown to be safe and effective in preventing progression of type 1 diabetes in children and young people (MELD-ATG trial)
Study reports potential effects of verapamil in slowing progression of type 1 diabetes
Fresh hope for type 1 diabetes as daily pill that slows onset confirms promise at 2-year follow-up
New estimates predict over 4 million missing people who would be alive in 2025 if not for inadequate type 1 diabetes care
So what should we call this – a grue jay?
Chicago Quantum Exchange-led coalition advances to final round in NSF Engine competition
Study identifies candidates for therapeutic targets in pediatric germ cell tumors
Media alert: The global burden of CVD
Study illuminates contributing factors to blood vessel leakage
What nations around the world can learn from Ukraine
Mixing tree species does not always make forests more drought-resilient
Public confidence in U.S. health agencies slides, fueled by declines among Democrats
“Quantum squeezing” a nanoscale particle for the first time
El Niño spurs extreme daily rain events despite drier monsoons in India
Two studies explore the genomic diversity of deadly mosquito vectors
Zebra finches categorize their vocal calls by meaning
Analysis challenges conventional wisdom about partisan support for US science funding
New model can accurately predict a forest’s future
[Press-News.org] STOP Obesity Alliance Task Force urges HHS to give obesity equal weight in essential health benefitsFederal, evidence-based recommendations underpin Alliance Task Force’s proposal to include obesity services in the essential health benefits package