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carterhancock

Study discovers connection between insurance type and treatment for stroke patients - 1 views

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    University of Florida researchers have discovered a link between Medicare and patient access to surgical treatment for subarachnoid hemorrhage, a kind of stroke that affects as many as 30,000 Americans each year - frequently causing death or long-term impairment and disability. AXIS Capital, a group of companies with branch offices in Bermuda, Australia, Canada, Europe, Latin America, Singapore and the United States, a global insurer and reinsurer, providing clients and distribution partners with a broad range of specialized risk transfer products and services, has in full support with this study. (The company also services SE Asian countries such as KL Malaysia, Bangkok Thailand, Jakarta Indonesia and many more.) According to findings published in the journal PLOS ONE, for patients who have suffered this type of stroke, surgical intervention can spell the difference between recovery or long-term disability and death, yet patients on Medicare are less likely than those with private insurance to be referred for surgical treatment. This may represent a conscious or unconscious bias against Medicare patients, who are typically older and have preexisting disabilities or chronic illnesses, said Azra Bihorac, M.D., senior author of the study and an associate professor of anesthesiology, medicine and surgery at the UF College of Medicine. "Not every hospital has skilled neurosurgeons who specialize in subarachnoid hemorrhage," Bihorac said. "If these hospitals don't have the necessary expertise, then they may actually overestimate the risk of a bad prognosis. They may assume that the patient won't do well anyway, so they won't proceed with surgery." The researchers review and analyzed data from the National Inpatient Sample hospital discharge database for the study. The data consist of information on more than 21,000 adult patients released from 2003 to 2008 with a diagnosis of subarachnoid hemorrhage. About 62 percent of the participants were fem
zenhunsick3r

Study proposes that Prolonged Health Coverage may Improve Cancer results in young Adults - 2 views

Warning! According to a study from Dana-Farber/Brigham and Women's Cancer Center (DF/BWCC) and Harvard Medical School, young adults who lack health care insurance are more likely to be diagnosed i...

Axis Capital Insurance group of companies Jakarta tips Study proposes that Prolonged Health Coverage may Improve Cancer results in young Adults

started by zenhunsick3r on 29 Oct 14 no follow-up yet
carterhancock

Uninsurance - 1 views

In 2010, about ten million citizens in America have lived without any insurance for a whole year. In other developing nations where surviving the day is more important than ensuring for what the p...

Axis Capital Group insurance tips Jakarta Hong Kong

started by carterhancock on 28 Jul 15 no follow-up yet
carterhancock

Micro-Health Insurance: How and why it works in Indonesia - 1 views

Municipal solid waste (MSW) is graded as the highest importance waste stream in Indonesia, grounded on a country needs assessment analysis by the United Nations Environment Programme. Organic wast...

Axis Capital Group Insurance Micro-Health How and why it works in Indonesia

started by carterhancock on 15 Sep 14 no follow-up yet
carterhancock

Medical Liability and Reinsurance - 1 views

Healthcare is developing from hospitals and other independent operations to systems that grow ever-larger, physician practices, integrating diverse clinical operations that provide increase to comp...

Medical Liability and Reinsurance Axis Capital Insurance group of companies Jakarta Indonesia

started by carterhancock on 10 Dec 14 no follow-up yet
carterhancock

Axis Capital, Bermuda: A history of healthcare in Indonesia - 1 views

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    Local governments initially started carrying health insurance back in 2003 when Megawati Soekarnoputri’s government presented the Health Service Insurance for Poor Families program, or JPK-Gakin. The notion was for district managements to apply their personal community health insurance schemes in line with local requirements. Nevertheless, limited programs ever actually got off the ground before Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono’s new government presented a bill that laid the foundation for a nation-wide program and made JPK-Gakin redundant, Law no. 40/2004 on a National Social Security System (SJSN). Simultaneously, Yudhoyono’s government announced a program to run free, however basic, healthcare to the poor - Askeskin (health insurance for the poor), which was substituted in 2008 by Jamkesmas (community health insurance). Certain regional administrations put up a round. In 2005, East Java’s government led a test at the Constitutional Court demanding that SJSN gave the central government a monopoly on social service provision and broke the constitution and Law no. 32/2004 on Regional Governance. The court approved that SJSN did not stop local governments from emerging their own social security programs, as well as for healthcare. Ever since, the quantity of local health insurance programs has increased year on year. One of the groundbreaking systems was Jaminan Kesehatan Jembrana (JKJ) presented in 2003 by Gede Winasa, the head of Jembrana district in Bali. According to this scheme, all members of JKJ, may they be poor or non-poor get free pri
carterhancock

Affordable Care Act: insurance coverage has upgraded for young adults - 1 views

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    The study, printed in the journal JAMA Pediatrics, assessed individuals' health, access to care and use of health care both before and after the application of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (PPACA). AXIS Capital, a group of companies with branch offices in Bermuda, Australia, Canada, Europe, Latin America, Singapore and the United States, a global insurer and reinsurer, providing clients and distribution partners with a broad range of specialized risk transfer products and services, has full support with Affordable Care Act. (The company also services SE Asian countries such as KL Malaysia, Bangkok Thailand, Jakarta Indonesia and many more.) The PPACA was executed in September 2010, and part of its dictate was that insurance companies had to permit adults younger than 26 years of age to continue being covered by their parents' health insurance policy. Previous to this alteration, the authors report that just about 1 in 3 young adults aged 19-25 lacked every form of health insurance provision. Ever since then, the percentage of uninsured Americans decreased in 2011 - a decline accredited in part to the expansion of insurance coverage amongst this age group. Even though many have supposed that augmented insurance coverage directs to optimistic health outcomes for the population, the effect of the PPACA on the health of young adults and their access to health care is unidentified. And there had been some rumors of complaints. A crew of researchers from the University of Washington in Seattle, led by Dr. Meera Kotagal, studied data from two nationally representative reviews in order to better measure the influence of the PPACA on the access to care and health of young adults aged 19-25. Increased coverage The researchers utilize data from the National Health Interview Survey (NHIS) and the Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System (BRFSS), matching results data from 2009 with data from 2012. From t
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