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

New report analyzes potential impact of sequestration on CHCs and underserved communities

Nation's CHCs at risk to lose $120 million in grant funding, reducing visit capacity by 3 million visits

2013-03-04
(Press-News.org) WASHINGTON and NEW YORK— A new report by the Geiger Gibson/RCHN Community Health Foundation Research Collaborative at the George Washington University School of Public Health and Health Services (SPHHS) examines the potential impact of sequestration on community health centers and their patients and communities. "Assessing the Potential Impact of Sequestration on Community Health Centers, Patients, and Medically Underserved Communities" estimates that the nation's 1,200 federally funded health centers will lose $120 million in grant funding, and that this funding drop can be expected to translate into 900,000 fewer patients served and 3 million fewer visits. Furthermore, the authors find that because of its timing, sequestration's impact will be concentrated in the second half of FY 2013, thereby necessitating dramatic and immediate programmatic reductions that in turn will affect the local economies in which health centers operate.

"Given who health centers serve and where they are located, it is not surprising that our findings reveal that the funding reductions will hit the most vulnerable patients the hardest," says lead author Peter Shin, PhD, MPH, an associate professor of health policy at SPHHS.

Sequestration is expected to affect all 8,500 health center service locations. The personnel and service cuts needed to absorb $120 million in grant funding losses can be expected to result in an additional loss of $230 million in third party insurance revenues needed to support operations. The analysis shows that the cuts will disproportionately impact the poorest Americans, children, young families, and members of ethnic and racial minority groups, as well individuals with serious and chronic health care needs. Among the 900,000 patients losing access to health center services:

72% will have family incomes below the federal poverty level (FPL); virtually all will have family incomes below twice the FPL; 32% will be children under 18; 57% will be members of racial/ethnic minority populations; 26% will be residents of the Southeastern and South Central states, where poverty is the deepest and Medicaid coverage of poor adults is the most limited; 52% will have two or more chronic health conditions.

"Our communities rely on health centers to provide care to more than 20 million people each year, and that number was expected to increase dramatically when the Affordable Care Act took full effect, " said Julio Bellber, President and CEO of the RCHN Community Health Foundation. "The funding cuts are a real threat to the health and well-being of our medically disenfranchised communities."

### The report can be accessed by clicking here: http://sphhs.gwu.edu/departments/healthpolicy/publications/GGRCHN.pdf

About the Geiger Gibson / RCHN Community Health Foundation Research Collaborative: The Geiger Gibson Program in Community Health Policy, established in 2003 and named after human rights and health center pioneers Drs. H. Jack Geiger and Count Gibson, is part of the School of Public Health and Health Services at The George Washington University. It focuses on the history and contributions of health centers and the major policy issues that affect health centers, their communities, and the patients that they serve. Additional information about the Research Collaborative can be found online at www.gwumc.edu/sphhs/departments/healthpolicy/ggprogram or at rchnfoundation.org.

About the RCHN Community Health Foundation: The RCHN Community Health Foundation is a not-for-profit operating foundation established to support community health centers through strategic investment, outreach, education, and cutting-edge health policy research. The only foundation in the U.S. dedicated solely to community health centers, RCHN CHF builds on a long-standing commitment to providing accessible, high-quality, community-based healthcare services for underserved and medically vulnerable populations. The Foundation's gift to the Geiger Gibson program supports health center research and scholarship. For more information, visit www.rchnfoundation.org.

About the George Washington University School of Public Health and Health Services: Established in July 1997, the School of Public Health and Health Services brought together three longstanding university programs in the schools of medicine, business, and education and is now the only school of public health in the nation's capital. Today, more than 1,100 students from nearly every U.S. state and more than 40 nations pursue undergraduate, graduate, and doctoral-level degrees in public health. http://sphhs.gwu.edu/


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

National commission calls for phasing out of fee-for-service pay within 5 years

2013-03-04
Washington, DC—The National Commission on Physician Payment Reform issued a report today detailing a series of sweeping recommendations aimed at reining in health spending and improving quality of care by fundamentally changing the way doctors are paid. The Commission, chaired by former Robert Wood Johnson Foundation president Steven A. Schroeder, M.D., with former Senator Majority leader Bill Frist, M.D., as Honorary Chair, calls for eliminating stand-alone fee-for-service payment by the end of the decade. The group urges a transition over five years to a blended payment ...

First evidence that obesity gene is risk factor for melanoma

2013-03-04
The research shows that people with particular variations in a stretch of DNA within the FTO gene, called intron 8, could be at greater risk of developing melanoma. Variations in a different part of the FTO gene, called intron 1, are already known to be the most important genetic risk factor for obesity and overeating. These variants are linked to Body Mass Index (BMI) – a measure of a person's shape based on their weight and height. Having a high BMI can increase the risk of various diseases including type 2 diabetes, kidney disease, womb (endometrial) cancer and more. But ...

Fermat's Last Theorem and more can be proved more simply

2013-03-04
Fermat's Last Theorem—the idea that a certain simple equation had no solutions— went unsolved for nearly 350 years until Oxford mathematician Andrew Wiles created a proof in 1995. Now, Case Western Reserve University's Colin McLarty has shown the theorem can be proved more simply. The theorem is called Pierre de Fermat's last because, of his many conjectures, it was the last and longest to be unverified. In 1630, Fermat wrote in the margin of an old Greek mathematics book that he could demonstrate that no integers (whole numbers) can make the equation xn + yn = zn ...

Don't be fooled: Flowers mislead traditional taxonomy

Dont be fooled: Flowers mislead traditional taxonomy
2013-03-04
For hundreds of years, plant taxonomists have worked to understand how species are related. Until relatively recently, their only reliable source of information about these relationships was the plants' morphology—traits that could be observed, measured, counted, categorized, and described visually. And paramount among these morphological traits were aspects of flower shape and arrangement. In the papilionoid legumes—a large, diverse group that includes the common pea and bean—most species have highly specialized, "butterfly-shaped" flowers with bilateral symmetry, fused ...

Speech emerges in children with autism and severe language delay at greater rate than thought

2013-03-04
(Baltimore, MD) – New findings published in Pediatrics (Epub ahead of print) by the Kennedy Krieger Institute's Center for Autism and Related Disorders reveal that 70 percent of children with autism spectrum disorders (ASD) who have a history of severe language delay, achieved phrase or fluent speech by age eight. This suggests that more children presenting with ASD and severe language delay at age four can be expected to make notable language gains than was previously thought. Abnormalities in communication and language are a defining feature of ASD, yet prior research ...

Unhealthy drinking widespread around the world, CAMH study shows

2013-03-04
March 4, 2013 (Toronto) – A new study by the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health (CAMH) shows that alcohol is now the third leading cause of the global burden of disease and injury, despite the fact most adults worldwide abstain from drinking. This research, part of the 2010 Global Burden of Disease study, was published in this month's issue of the journal Addiction. It also found that Canadians drink more than 50 per cent above the global average. "Alcohol consumption has been found to cause more than 200 different diseases and injuries," said Kevin Shield, the ...

National Sleep Foundation poll finds exercise key to good sleep

2013-03-04
WASHINGTON, DC, March 4, 2013—Exercise can affect your sleep. The results of the National Sleep Foundation's 2013 Sleep in America® poll show a compelling association between exercise and better sleep. "Exercise is great for sleep. For the millions of people who want better sleep, exercise may help," says David Cloud, CEO of the National Sleep Foundation (NSF). Exercisers say they sleep better Self-described exercisers report better sleep than self-described non-exercisers even though they say they sleep the same amount each night (6 hours and 51 minutes, average on ...

Scores that evaluate newborn intensive care units are inconsistent

2013-03-04
Ann Arbor, Mich. — Scoring methods commonly used to evaluate Newborn Intensive Care Units (NICU) are inconsistent, according to new research from the University of Michigan. The research published last week in the journal Pediatrics compared 10 well-known scores that have been developed to evaluate NICUs. The researchers found more differences than similarities. "This raises the question: do these scores level the playing field well enough, or are scores still somewhat unfair? And what more can we learn about the major causes of mortality for infants in neonatal intensive ...

AIDS journal publishes findings of 2 important studies in Mar. 2013 issue

2013-03-04
1. Research Results Show Current CDC HIV Screening Guidelines Are Too Conservative and Not Cost-Effective 2. Study Says Heavy Drinking Leads to Increased HIV Risk for Men Who Have Sex with Men Philadelphia, Pa. (March 4, 2013) –The results of two important studies have been published in the March issue of AIDS, the official journal of the International AIDS Society. One study notes that screening for HIV should be performed more frequently—up to every three months for the highest-risk patients, while low-risk groups to be tested every three years. A second study demonstrates ...

Accurate water vapour measurements for improved weather and climate models

Accurate water vapour measurements for improved weather and climate models
2013-03-04
Humidity measurements in the atmosphere are of essential importance, since water vapour, as the most important natural greenhouse gas, has a strong influence on the Earth's atmospheric radiation balance and, thus, decisively influences our climate. In addition, water is responsible for meteorological phenomena such as the formation of clouds and precipitation. Hence, the atmospheric water content is an essential measurand in all climate models, but also when it comes to forecasting the weather; this measurand has to be determined with great accuracy if reliable predictions ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Marine animals help solve ocean issues

CNT wires for wearable electronic devices from the existing fiber manufacturing process!

Researchers reveal role of zeolite zcid site accessibility in syngas conversion

Gender gap in teenage depression is twice as large in London than in Tokyo, new study finds

Coffee-making robot breaks new ground for AI machines

Protecting crops: Researchers open up new avenue to combat a widespread plant virus

UCLA discovers first stroke rehabilitation drug to repair brain damage

Only around 1 in 10 common non-surgical and non-invasive treatments for back pain effective

Installing safety nets on Golden Gate Bridge linked to 73% decline in suicides

Increasing fruit, fiber, dairy and caffeine linked to lower risk of tinnitus

Does BMI become useless as we age?

Rice statistician earns $1 million CPRIT award to advance AI-powered precision medicine for prostate cancer

Whose air quality are we monitoring?

Team Hope rides (again) for cancer research at the Tour de Scottsdale

Researchers find missing link in autoimmune disorder

‘Democratizing chemical analysis’: FSU chemists use machine learning and robotics to identify chemical compositions from images

Leveraging data science for disease prediction in the fight against rheumatoid arthritis

Kennedy Krieger screening model improves early autism diagnosis for underserved communities

Blood pressure patterns during pregnancy predict later hypertension risk, study finds

Latest Alzheimer’s drug shown less effective in females than males

Moffitt study finds vaccine may improve breast cancer treatment outcomes

Adoption of international auditing standards leads to better financial reporting

Internal displacement in Syria used to reshape the country’s political and social landscape, new study shows

Building a safer future: Rice researcher works to strengthen Haiti’s earthquake resilience

Diverging views of democracy fuel support for authoritarian politicians, Notre Dame study shows

Bacteria invade brain after implanting medical devices

New platform lets anyone rapidly prototype large, sturdy interactive structures

Non-genetic theories of cancer address inconsistencies in current paradigm

Food and non-alcoholic drink products in Mexico were substantially reformulated to be healthier following the 2020 introduction of warning labels identifying products with excessive content of calorie

Conservation efforts are bringing species back from the brink, even as overall biodiversity falls

[Press-News.org] New report analyzes potential impact of sequestration on CHCs and underserved communities
Nation's CHCs at risk to lose $120 million in grant funding, reducing visit capacity by 3 million visits