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Spectranetics Receives CE Mark Approval For ThromCat(R)XT
Spectranetics Corporation (Nasdaq:SPNC) reported that it has received the CE mark approval for its next-generation ThromCat® XT Thrombus Removal System, a single-use, disposable device indicated for mechanical removal of thrombus from native coronary arteries and infra-inguinal arteries. The launch of the product will commence immediately within the European Union. The approval triggers a milestone payment of $1.5 million pursuant to the Company"s Amended Development and Regulatory Services agreement with Kensey Nash Corporation (Nasdaq:KNSY).
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American Academy Of Hospice And Palliative Medicine Leader Suggests Health Care Reforms To Cut Costs
Congress can help diminish barriers to quality care for people with serious illness, according to Howard Tuch, MD, MS, a spokesperson for the American Academy of Hospice and Palliative Medicine (AAHPM). AAHPM was one of three groups that presented information at a Capitol Hill briefing coordinated by the offices of US Reps. Earl Blumenauer and Charles Boustany, MD, sponsors of legislation (HR 1898) that would provide Medicare coverage for "end of life" care consultations.
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U.S. Marshals Seize Drug Products Manufactured By Caraco Pharmaceutical Laboratories Ltd. FDA Acts To Prevent Repeated Drug Quality Problems
U.S. Marshals, at the request of the Food and Drug Administration, today seized drug products manufactured by Caraco Pharmaceutical Laboratories Ltd. (Caraco), at the company"s Michigan facilities in Detroit, Farmington Hills, and Wixom. The seizure also includes ingredients held at these same facilities. "The FDA is committed to taking enforcement action against firms that do not manufacture drugs in accordance with our good manufacturing practice requirements," said Janet Woodcock, M.D., director of the FDA"s Center for Drug Evaluation and Research. "Compliance with these standards prevents harm to the public."
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Health Benefits Tax Gains Support In Congress, Opponents In Business

"You can think of Congress"s efforts to pay for health reform as being a little bit like a battle to slay a many-headed Hydra," writes the New York Times" economic columnist, David Leonhardt. Congress has floated idea after idea for paying for comprehensive health reform, but their proposals have failed to make ends meet because they "do not raise revenue as quickly as health costs rise." Most new taxes - such as a surtax on the rich proposed in the House - increase only as quickly as the economy, while health costs have inflated much more quickly over the last decade. One way around the problem is to tax something that grows as quickly as health costs: health spending. "If Congress taxes health care, the revenue has a chance of rising with health spending. A health tax will also create an incentive for workers and businesses to slow the growth of health spending - thus reducing the amount of taxes needed to pay the nation"s health bill." The Senate Finance Committee, whose anxiously awaited proposal could be released this week, "has been considering precisely such a tax, on the health benefits that Americans receive from their employers." One problem with the plan is that new taxes on workers - or employers - are not politically popular (Leonhardt, 7/28). One solution is a plan to shift that tax to insurers that offer "individual plans valued at more than a certain limit, likely $25,000 or higher. The insurers would have to pay an excise tax on such policies, and the cost would likely be passed on to employers," the Wall Street Journal reports. The plan could also curb growing health costs by charging insurers, employers and perhaps workers more for "plans that encourage unnecessary tests and procedures." Existing proposals in the House hope to pay for health care by increasing taxes for top earners, but given that the tax on insurers offering gold-plated plans would grow comparably with health costs and give everyone involved a reason to restrain spending, some congressman are now growing interested. Majority Whip Jim Clyburn, D-S.C., called the tax on benefits "a better way" to pay for reform than boosting income taxes. Majority Leader Steny Hoyer said it"s a "reasonable alternative" (Hitt and Bendavid, 7/29). Not everyone is enamored, however. In addition to insurers, who the tax targets, many big businesses could also be forced to pay direct taxes under the latest benefits-tax plan, which was first proposed by Sen. John Kerry, D-Mass, Kaiser Health News reports. More than half of all workers who receive insurance through their employers are actually covered directly by their companies, business that are said to be "self-insured." Under Kerry"s proposal, those companies would be taxed just like insurers if the benefits they offer employees add up to more than the $25,000-a-year threshold (Gold, 7/29). In addition, "some insurance experts say the reason certain plans are so expensive isn"t that they"re providing lavish benefits like full-body diagnostic scans and tummy tucks. Instead, the super-high premiums are likely being charged to older, sicker people, either as individuals buying their own coverage, or working for a small employer," the Associated Press reports (Alonso-Zaldivar, 7/28). This information was reprinted from kaiserhealthnews.org with kind permission from the Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation. You can view the entire Kaiser Daily Health Policy Report, search the archives and sign up for email delivery at kaiserhealthnews.org. © Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation. All rights reserved.


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