Wednesday 25 July 2012

The True Cost Of Care And How We Are Misled

The True Cost Of Care And How We Are Misled:
English: NHS logo
English: NHS logo (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
I seem to lately not be able to find many plus point’s in today’s ” Care In The Community” but so easily we are told we are here to improve things for the elderly and disabled! So often this is not the case and they just tinker with the edges.
Then you read an article that says -
The Sunday Express examines who should pay for the cost of care. It says that there is a common misconception that people in care homes automatically have to pay for their own care, when in fact anyone reliant on long-term care owing to illness should be assessed for their medical and health needs, as they may be eligible for full NHS funding.
On the face of it seems great and people can get ” FULL” funding from the NHS well would that not be great news! Well anyone reading this can add their take and leave a comment about their experiences and if l get enough l will start a poll and we will try to gauge as much public opinion and l will launch a campaign to get people the funding they need!
Anyway anyone reading my posts will realise l spend so many days a week running my mother’s care provisions, l say running as it is my job as the only member of the family, will to do it! Anyway less of my woes and onto the reason for my earlier comments. These relate to obtaining funding and how and what you are entitled and where to go to get it agreed! On the face of it social services, suggest you do not get them involved as when they do they own all funding and think they can tell you what to do!
As you know l am not a yes man and l just ignored them and worked through the system and eventually got whatever my mother required as she was my guinea pig and would one day catapult me to provide care through a ” Welfare Fund ” for people in need commencing in Warwickshire UK. Well l decided if l had to use my time to help and guide my mother then l may as well make good use of the knowledge gained.
The comments that are related in the article on the Sunday Express state simply if you get assessed you can receive full funding, well please l challenge anyone to get it all paid, the system is designed in so many ways,to prevent you qualifying! There are so many onerous questions and once you get one part sorted, then part two will change it and so on and so on!
After five years l have reached a point whereby l know what l can get, how much l can have and where to get it and l never take NO for an answer! So please do not get disheartened and always look at what others can have and make sure you get all you are entitled and never ever take NO for an answer!
Need advice or guidance let me know, l will always try to help?
Related articles

Filed under: Ace Healthcare News, Ace News Desk Tagged: Care in the Community, Funding, Long-term care, National Health Service, NHS, Nursing home, Old age, Sunday

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Sunday 3 June 2012

Gates Foundation Veteran Yamada Retools Drugmaker Takeda


June 1st

   A man called Tadataka "Tachi" Yamada led global health programs for Bill and Melinda Gates, oversaw GlaxoSmithKline Plc's research, was head physician at the University of Michigan and wrote gastroenterology textbooks. He now has an even bigger task: revitalising drug development for a company that's not found a blockbuster in 13 years.

   In his first six months as chief medical and scientific officer at Takeda Pharmaceutical Co., Asia's largest drug maker, Yamada, 66, created a unit to move into the $25.3 billion global vaccines market and began contests to spur research ideas. He has also focused marketing on poorer nations, where drug demand is growing four times faster than in developed countries.

  Yamada is pressing for change at Takeda because the Osaka, Japan-based company needs new discoveries to replace Actos, the diabetes pill that generated $4.8 billion in the year ended March 2011. That drug's prospects have been diminished, though, as cheaper generics enter the market this August.

 "Takeda has to build up its pipeline now," said Atsushi Seki, a health-care analyst at Barclays Plc in Tokyo. "I'm hopeful Yamada will introduce global ways of managing R&D."

 Takeda is betting Yamada's experience will help the 230- year-old firm better compete with Pfizer Inc., Roche Holding AG and Glaxo, and leverage off last year's 9.6 billion euro ($12 billion) purchase of Swiss rival Nycomed that added customers in 42 more countries.

 Flagging demand for the diabetes tablet and Nycomed acquisition costs will drag Takeda's operating profit down 40 percent to a 14-year-low of 160 billion yen ($2 billion) in the year ending March 2013, the   company said on May 11.

 Actos, first sold in the U.S. in 1999, generated 20 percent of Takeda's 1.51 trillion yen of revenue in the year ended March 31. Sales of the drug will plunge 66 percent to 100 billion yen in the current year, the company predicted.

 Efforts to find replacements have met with disappointment. Takeda has lost more than half its market value since October 2007, when a cholesterol pill in late-stage studies failed safety tests and was later shelved. Marketing approval for alogliptin, the drugmaker's most promising successor to Actos, has been delayed three years, held up by requests from regulators for more safety data. Its absence in the market helped Merck & Co.'s rival treatment, Januvia, generate $3.3 billion last year.

 Takeda has four experimental medicines from its own laboratories in final-stage patient studies in the U.S.: a novel diabetes pill, and treatments for prostate and blood cancer, and ulcerative colitis.

 Over a 2-hour meeting at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, in January 2011, Takeda President Yasuchika Hasegawa persuaded Yamada to lend his expertise to overhauling what he said was "a rather deadlocked" R&D effort. That suited Tokyo-born Yamada, who left Japan at age 15 and wanted to contribute to his mother country before retiring.

 "He decided to give us a hand because he couldn't stand by and watch while we struggled," Hasegawa, 65, said in an interview.

 Yamada, who was asked by Hasegawa to work at Takeda for at least four years, has made his first task trying to uncover hidden talent within the group's labs. He introduced a contest in April 2011 in which researchers anonymously submit research proposals for grant money. The 25 best pitches, as voted by a panel of referees, are awarded as much as $50,000. Another, dubbed "beauty and the beast," has staff voting for the best and worst ideas.

  Yamada has also encouraged Takeda scientists to focus their work first and foremost on needed treatments, rather than the volume of potential drugs produced, he said.

 "Meeting unmet medicals needs with innovative solutions is the only way you get paid," Yamada said in an interview from the company's Tokyo office.

 Yamada recruited Rajeev Venkayya, a critical care specialist and former Special Assistant to President George W. Bush for Biodefense, from the Gates Foundation in January to helm an expansion of Takeda's vaccines unit. The business, which supplies only shots for the Japanese market, is developing a four-in-one pediatric immunization using a novel polio strain and a vaccine for Haemophilus influnzae type b, or Hib.

 People in low- and middle-income countries will eventually demand the vaccines used in richer nations, Yamada said. "The opportunity is clear," he said.

 The worldwide vaccines market excluding North America, European Union members and Japan, probably expanded 11 percent to $6.78 billion last year and will increase about 10 percent annually for the next five years, researcher Kalorama Information said.

 'Room for Others'

 "They are large markets now and there is room for others," said Bruce Carlson, publisher at Kalorama. Economic- and population-growth in emerging markets mean they have "strong pent up demand" for the vaccines sold in developed countries, Carlson said in an e-mail.

 Yamada managed a $9 billion health fund tackling global killers such as AIDS, tuberculosis and malaria for the Gates Foundation, and helped negotiate lower prices for life-saving childhood vaccinations, said Bill Gates, the foundation's billionaire co-chairman.

 Bill Gates

 "Tachi took us from being an organization of grant-makers to one with strategies focused on results," Gates, 56, said in an e-mail. "At every turn he pushed his team to be innovative. He is able to think about the science and, at the same time, care deeply about the people we serve."

 Tokyo-born Yamada, a grandson of the first Japanese citizen to be fully trained as an American physician, studied medicine in the U.S. and became the chairman of internal medicine at the University of Michigan Medical School. His father, Tadayoshi, is a former senior managing director of Yawata Iron & Steel Co., which later became Nippon Steel Corp., Japan's largest steelmaker. The younger Yamada was president of the American Gastroenterological Association and edited the Textbook of Gastroenterology before joining London-based Glaxo, where he was appointed chairman of R&D in 2000.

 Yamada is one of eight senior executives hired by Takeda in the past four years. The others include Frank Morich, who led Bayer AG's health-care unit; Deborah Dunsire, chief executive officer of Millennium Pharmaceutical Inc., which Takeda bought in 2008; and Paul Chapman, hired from Glaxo to head research.

 Leading "an organization that's becoming multicultural," is an opportunity Yamada said he relishes. "I'm very Japanese still, but I can be a bridge to Western culture," he said.

With thanks to the following people who allowed me to share this article:

 To contact the reporter on this story: Kanoko Matsuyama in Tokyo at kmatsuyama2@bloomberg.net .

 To contact the editor responsible for this story: Jason Gale at j.gale@bloomberg.net

My personal opinion is that on the face of it these people interested in peoples health but as l read the post l could see that it was more and more geared to making profits out of people who are in need of being kept healthy! So comments by certain of these people do not inspire me to the view that we will not see these named companies receiving adoration from their fellow peers but also greater profits for the pharmaceutical industry as a whole. ED - Ian K Draper  


Monday 26 March 2012

The Price Of Health Care Privatisation

What gets forgotten is the political manipulation by this government in covering up the bigger picture. Firstly the calculation for any elderly person`s income is based on the allowances they receive, this is then utilised by the HMRC to obtain a calculation for tax purposes.

Also in my mother`s case as an 89 year she receives so-called " Care In The Community " this increase in state pension will force my mother to pay increased care costs, that have risen since 2009 from £31.99 per week to this Aprils increase up to nearly £60.00. For just 2 hours care per day. So learn your facts about political manipulation of figures l have it took 30 years +.

This is our opinion and feelings about the the posts added to this blog by ourselves and writers who have asked to write on our blog network and does not necessarily represent our agreement or disagreement with the writers concerned. Please add #AceHealthNews to your tweets and follow us on twitter at http://twitter.com/AceHealthNews and quality healthcare. Thank you, Ian

Thursday 8 December 2011

Capitol Christmas Tree lights Nation’s Capital

Capitol Christmas Tree lights Nation’s Capital:
A 63-foot Sierra white fir from the Stanislaus National Forest in California was lit as the 2011 Capitol Christmas Tree during a ceremony Dec. 6 on the west front lawn of the Capitol. The Christmas tree is adorned with about 3,000 ornaments, all homemade by California residents, and 10,000 energy-efficient lights. (U.S. Forest Service photo)

A 63-foot Sierra white fir from the Stanislaus National Forest in California was lit as the 2011 Capitol Christmas Tree during a ceremony Dec. 6 on the west front lawn of the Capitol. The Christmas tree is adorned with about 3,000 ornaments, all homemade by California residents, and 10,000 energy-efficient lights. (U.S. Forest Service photo)


About one week after its arrival to Washington, D.C., the Capitol Christmas Tree flashed its 10,000 lights and dazzled onlookers on the west front lawn of the Capitol Dec. 6.


Speaker of the House John Boehner and 7-year-old Johnny Crawford of Sonora, Calif., who was randomly selected to help light the tree, lit the 63-foot Sierra white fir that hails from the Stanislaus National Forest in northern California. The verdant tree was adorned with about 3,000 ornaments which were all voluntarily homemade by residents of the Golden State.


During the 20-day, 4,500-mile cross-country trip, which was funded by private sponsors, the Californian tree made 23 stops in nine states, including Gallup, N.M., the third poorest community in the United States. For the first time, the U.S. Forest Service’s Capitol Christmas Tree team delivered 14 pallets of non-perishable food items, all donated by California residents during the tree’s home state tour, to two food pantries in Gallup Nov. 16.


“It seemed like the right thing to do,” said Shandy Bearden, a Forest Service member of the Christmas tree planning team. “Even a 6-year-old can give a can of food and feel good that they’re giving something of themselves and that they’re sharing.”


Also for the first time in the holiday project’s history, the Forest Service partnered with a local American Indian tribe from the tree’s home of Tuolumne County. The Tuolumne Band of Me-wuk Indians blessed the Sierra white fir in a ceremony prior to the tree’s harvesting.


Following tradition involving community members of the national forest’s home state, the Capitol Christmas Tree team held two contests to feature winning artists and singers whose work represented this year’s theme of “California Shines.” The winners were California natives: Marc Davis of Dublin, Calif. for his winning photograph titled “Granite Ablaze,” and singers Kate Wallace and Anne J. Dahlgren for their song titled “Peace, Peace, Peace.”


The Capitol Christmas Tree “brings people together and I think that’s what the season’s about,” said Maria Benech, Forest Service Capitol Christmas Tree coordinator from the Stanislaus National Forest. “We’re very honored to provide the tree from the state of California as a gift to the people of the nation.”


The Capitol Christmas Tree will be lit every evening from dusk to 11 p.m. through Jan. 1, 2012.



This is our opinion and feelings about the the posts added to this blog by ourselves and writers who have asked to write on our blog network and does not necessarily represent our agreement or disagreement with the writers concerned.Please add #AceHealthNews to your tweets and follow us on twitter at http://twitter.com/AceHealthNews and quality healthcare. Thank you, Ian

Monday 5 December 2011

CDC Vital Signs

CDC Vital Signs: "CDC Vital Signs™ – Learn about the latest public health data. Read CDC Vital Signs™…"

'via Blog this'

This is our opinion and feelings about the the posts added to this blog by ourselves and writers who have asked to write on our blog network and does not necessarily represent our agreement or disagreement with the writers concerned.Please add #AceHealthNews to your tweets and follow us on twitter at http://twitter.com/AceHealthNews and quality healthcare. Thank you, Ian

Taking Acetaminophen Safely

Taking Acetaminophen Safely

For more information please download the PDF attached thank you.

http://www.nlm.nih.gov/medlineplus/tutorials/takingacetaminophensafely/rx229102.pdf

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This is our opinion and feelings about the the posts added to this blog by ourselves and writers who have asked to write on our blog network and does not necessarily represent our agreement or disagreement with the writers concerned.Please add #AceHealthNews to your tweets and follow us on twitter at http://twitter.com/AceHealthNews and quality healthcare. Thank you, Ian

Primatene Mist With Chlorofluorocarbons No No Longer Available After Dec. 31, 2011

Primatene Mist With Chlorofluorocarbons No Longer Available After Dec. 31, 2011


Please download the attached PDF for more information

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This is our opinion and feelings about the the posts added to this blog by ourselves and writers who have asked to write on our blog network and does not necessarily represent our agreement or disagreement with the writers concerned.Please add #AceHealthNews to your tweets and follow us on twitter at http://twitter.com/AceHealthNews and quality healthcare. Thank you, Ian