PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Rice U. study: State deregulation of open-heart surgery beneficial to patients

2012-10-04
(Press-News.org) Certificate of Need, a form of state government regulation designed to keep mortality rates and health care costs down, appears to do neither for heart bypass surgery, according to a health economics researcher at Rice University and Baylor College of Medicine (BCM). Her findings are reported in an article appearing in today's online edition of the journal Medical Care Research and Review.

Lead author Vivian Ho, the chair in health economics at Rice University's Baker Institute for Public Policy and a professor of medicine at BCM, found that states that removed Certificate ofNeed regulations experienced a 4 percent decrease in the average cost of patient care. These regulations are designed to prevent hospitals that do not treat a minimum prescribed volume of patients from offering open-heart surgery.

"We discovered in a previous study that states that removed Certificate of Need regulations for open-heart surgery experienced no change in patient mortality," Ho said. "Now that we have learned that the cost of patient care is also lower after deregulation, I am doubtful of the value of these regulations."

Currently 25 states maintain Certificate of Need regulations for open-heart surgery, including Georgia, Maryland, New York and Washington. Ho's study evaluated bypass surgery patients in 34 states, seven of which removed Certificate of Need regulations during her study period between 1991 and 2002. (Only two more states have deregulated open-heart surgery since then.) Deregulation led to more hospitals building new facilities to perform open-heart surgery, which raises costs. However, the cost savings from lowering average costs per patient outweighed the additional costs of these new facilities.

Ho speculated that cost savings result from deregulation because competition encourages hospitals to deliver higher quality care. "The desire to attract more patients in a competitive market leads hospitals to offer higher quality care," Ho said. "It may soundcounterintuitive, but recent studies show that higher quality surgery lowers costs because costly hospital complications are avoided when one improves care."

Ho believes that the results should serve as a lesson to policymakers as they consider the future of Certificate of Need regulations as well as other regulations of the health care system.

###

The study was supported by a grant from the National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute at the National Institutes of Health.

For more information or to schedule an interview with Ho, contact Jeff Falk, associate director of national media relations at Rice, at jfalk@rice.edu or 713-348-6775.

Related materials:

For a copy of the study, "State Deregulation and Medicare Costs for Acute Cardiac Care," please contact jfalk@rice.edu.

Ho bio: http://bakerinstitute.org/personnel/fellows-scholars/vho

END



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

The mathematics of leaf decay

2012-10-04
CAMBRIDGE, MA -- The colorful leaves piling up in your backyard this fall can be thought of as natural stores of carbon. In the springtime, leaves soak up carbon dioxide from the atmosphere, converting the gas into organic carbon compounds. Come autumn, trees shed their leaves, leaving them to decompose in the soil as they are eaten by microbes. Over time, decaying leaves release carbon back into the atmosphere as carbon dioxide. In fact, the natural decay of organic carbon contributes more than 90 percent of the yearly carbon dioxide released into Earth's atmosphere ...

Newborn mortality was higher for several years after large-scale closures of urban maternity units

2012-10-04
After a series of Philadelphia hospitals started closing their maternity units in 1997, infant mortality rates increased by nearly 50 percent over the next three years. The mortality rates subsequently leveled off to the same rate as before the closures, but pediatric researchers say their results underscore the need for careful oversight and planning by public health agencies in communities experiencing serious reductions in obstetric services. Between 1997 and 2007, 9 of 19 obstetric units closed in Philadelphia, resulting in 40 percent fewer obstetric beds. Other research ...

Simple test may ease management of esophagitis

2012-10-04
A simple new test, in which the patient swallows a string, can monitor treatment of eosinophilic esophagitis as effectively as an invasive, expensive and uncomfortable procedure that risks complications, particularly in children. Researchers from the University of Illinois at Chicago College of Medicine, working in collaboration with clinician-investigators at the University of Colorado Denver/Children's Hospital Colorado and Lurie Children's Hospital in Chicago, reported their findings in a study published recently online in the journal Gut. Eosinophilic esophagitis, ...

Group therapy is an effective treatment option for depressed women with Type 2 diabetes

2012-10-04
MAYWOOD, Ill. – Gender-specific group therapy is effective for treating depressed women with Type 2 diabetes, according to a study published in the latest issue of the Annals of Behavioral Medicine and funded by the National Institute of Nursing Research. Evidence suggests that antidepressants may disrupt blood-sugar control and can be associated with increased weight gain; therefore, other treatment options are needed for depression. "Using antidepressants to treat depression, although important, can be associated with side effects that make compliance an issue for people ...

New study sheds light on cancer-protective properties of milk

2012-10-04
Amsterdam, The Netherlands, October 3, 2012 – Milk consumption has been linked to improved health, with decreased risks of diabetes, metabolic syndrome, and colon cancer. A group of scientists in Sweden found that lactoferricin4-14 (Lfcin4-14), a milk protein with known health effects, significantly reduces the growth rate of colon cancer cells over time by prolonging the period of the cell cycle before chromosomes are replicated. In a new study, investigators report that treatment with Lfcin4-14 reduced DNA damage in colon cancer cells exposed to ultraviolet (UV) light. ...

Not getting sleepy? Stanford research explains why hypnosis doesn't work for all

2012-10-04
STANFORD, Calif. — Not everyone is able to be hypnotized, and new research from the Stanford University School of Medicine shows how the brains of such people differ from those who can easily be. The study, published in the October issue of Archives of General Psychiatry, uses data from functional and structural magnetic resonance imaging to identify how the areas of the brain associated with executive control and attention tend to have less activity in people who cannot be put into a hypnotic trance. "There's never been a brain signature of being hypnotized, and we're ...

NASA sees fifteenth Atlantic tropical depression born

NASA sees fifteenth Atlantic tropical depression born
2012-10-04
The fifteenth tropical depression of the Atlantic Ocean hurricane season was born on Oct. 3 an NASA's Terra satellite captured an image of it as it came to be. NASA's Terra satellite passed over newborn Tropical Depression 15 on Oct. 3 at 8:52 a.m. EDT in the central Atlantic Ocean and the Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) instrument captured an image of the storm. Shortly after the image was created, forecasters at the National Hurricane Center looking at the MODIS and other satellite data determined that the low pressure area had become a depression. On ...

NASA sees strongest side of Tropical Storm Maliksi

NASA sees strongest side of Tropical Storm Maliksi
2012-10-04
NASA's Aqua satellite took an infrared "picture" of Tropical Storm Maliksi in the western North Pacific Ocean and identified the strongest part of the storm being east of its center. On Oct. 3 at 1500 UTC (11 a.m. EDT), Tropical storm Maliksi had maximum sustained winds of 45 knots (51.7 mph/83.3 kph). It was located about 470 nautical miles (541 miles/870.4 km) south-southeast of Tokyo, Japan, near 29.4 North and 143.1 East. Maliksi was speeding to the north-northeast at 21 knots (24.1 mph/38.8 kph). The Atmospheric Infrared Sounder (AIRS) instrument that flies ...

Nadine bringing tropical storm conditions back to the Azores

Nadine bringing tropical storm conditions back to the Azores
2012-10-04
VIDEO: On Oct. 2 at 11:43 p.m. EDT, heavy convective thunderstorms were found in Nadine's northeastern quadrant by NASA's Tropical Rainfall Measuring Mission (TRMM) satellite. Wind shear had separated the center... Click here for more information. NASA satellites continue to gather data from Tropical Storm Nadine on its twenty-second day of life in the eastern Atlantic as it threatens the Azores again. NASA data has shown that wind shear is pushing the bulk of clouds and ...

NASA identifies where Tropical Storm Gaemi's power lies

NASA identifies where Tropical Storm Gaemis power lies
2012-10-04
Tropical Storm Gaemi is packing a lot of power around its middle and on one side of the storm, and that was apparent in NASA satellite imagery. NASA's Terra satellite passed over Tropical Storm Gaemi on Oct. 3 at 0300 UTC (11:00 p.m. EDT, Oct. 2) and the Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) instrument captured a true-color image of the storm. The image showed a bright white, rounded area around the center that indicated higher, stronger thunderstorms. Higher, stronger thunderstorms also wrapped around the center in a wide band that stretches from north ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Pregnancy complications linked to cardiovascular disease in the family

Pancreatic cancer immune map provides clues for precision treatment targeting

How neighborhood perception affects housing rents: A novel analytical approach

Many adults report inaccurate beliefs about risks and benefits of home firearm access

Air pollution impacts an aging society

UC Davis researchers achieve total synthesis of ibogaine

Building better biomaterials for cancer treatments

Brain stimulation did not improve impaired motor skills after stroke

Some species of baleen whales avoid attracting killer whales by singing too low to be heard

Wasteful tests before surgery: Study shows how to reduce them safely

UCalgary researchers confirm best approach for stroke in medium-sized blood vessels

Nationwide, 34 local schools win NFL PLAY 60 grants to help students move more

New software developed at Wayne State University will help study chemical and biological systems

uOttawa study unveils new insights into how neural stem cells are activated in the adult human brain

Cystic fibrosis damages the immune system early on

Novel ‘living’ biomaterial aims to advance regenerative medicine

Warding off superbugs with a pinch of turmeric

Ophthalmic complications in patients on antidiabetic GLP-1 medications are concerning neuro-ophthalmologists

Physicians committee research policy director speaks today at hearing on taxpayer funded animal cruelty

New technology lights way for accelerating coral reef restoration

Electroencephalography may help guide treatments for language disorders

Multinational research project shows how life on Earth can be measured from space

Essential genome of malaria parasite Plasmodium knowlesi mapped

Ice streams move due to tiny ice quakes

Whale song has remarkable similarities to human speech in terms of efficiency

Uncovered: How mice override instinctive fear responses

A pathway that contributes to insulin resistance can be targeted, mouse study shows

Special Issue: The cryosphere

Scientists discover brain mechanism that helps overcome fear

Mantis shrimp clubs filter sound to mitigate damage

[Press-News.org] Rice U. study: State deregulation of open-heart surgery beneficial to patients