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157th Edition – June 30, 2015

By BHI Weekly Newsletter Archives

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Medicare and Medicaid at 50 – The New York Times

By News Archive

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Medicare and Medicaid, the two mainstays of government health insurance, turn 50 this month, having made it possible for most Americans in poverty and old age to get medical care. While the Affordable Care Act fills the gap for people who don’t qualify for help from those two programs, there are important improvements still needed in both Medicare and Medicaid.

At the time the two programs were enacted in July 1965, advocates of Medicare, which today covers 46 million Americans over the age of 65 and nine million younger disabled people, expected that it would expand to cover virtually all Americans. Although polls between 1999 and 2009 showed consistent majorities in favor of expanding Medicare to people between the ages of 55 and 64 to cover more of the uninsured, it never happened.

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Launch of World’s First Open Innovation Programme to Educate Scientists – News Press Release – PharmiWeb.com

By News Archive

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Scientists may apply online until September 22, 2015 at http://www.openinnovationinscience.at for the ‘Lab for Open Innovation in Science’ continuing studies programme taking place in Vienna. 

Health sciences’ two greatest challenges are the lack of incentives for investigating new research questions and the complexity of current research findings, according to a recent survey of international researchers and scientists conducted by the Ludwig Boltzmann Gesellschaft (LBG). These findings provided the impetus for launching the LBG’s  Tell us! crowdsourcing project in their Open Innovation in Science initiative. This initiative invites patients, families, and professionals to actively contribute to the development of scientific research questions in the field of mental illness. Findings from this unique research approach will impact the world’s first educational programme for the application of Open Innovation in science, known as ‘Lab for Open Innovation in Science’ (LOIS).

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UMD research team makes strides in timely food contamination detection – The Diamondback : News

By News Archive

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A process that accelerates the separation of bacteria could be the answer to the food industry’s prayers.

Food contamination, which refers to the presence of unwanted chemicals and bacteria in food, has been plastered across the news lately. Dozens of products have been recalled in the past 60 days. For example, Blue Bell Creameries had a massive recall of all ice cream products due to an April listeria outbreak, according to the FDA’s website.

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Health Appropriations: Billion-Dollar Increases for NIH, But Conflict Elsewhere – AAAS – The World’s Largest General Scientific Society

By News Archive

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Over the past two weeks, in their respective FY 2016 Labor, Health and Human Services, and Related Agencies appropriations bills (known as Labor-H), House and Senate appropriators have shown support for biomedical research funding by recommending NIH budget levels higher than even the Administration had requested. But controversy still reigns over other parts of the bill, particularly patient-centered outcomes research associated with the Affordable Care Act.

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Transhumanist Martine Rothblatt working on 3D printed organs injected with stem cells | 3D Printer News & 3D Printing News

By News Archive

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While we’ve seen how 3D printing has dramatically revolutionized the medical industry by allowing surgeons to print replicas of organs and their surrounding areas in order to better understand them before an actual surgical procedure, the next evolutionary step is to look into 3D printing the organs themselves to replace a patient’s existing failing organ.

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University of Maryland Startup Shell Incubator Companies – DC Inno

By News Archive

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The University of Maryland’s Startup Shell incubator is a conspicuous experiment in student-run startup incubation. Founded in 2012, the incubator has grown to include several dozen startups in its portfolio—and recently, Uber became interested enough in what might come out of the incubator to set aside $25,000 for it as part of a larger collaboration with UMd, including investor grants for student-built businesses. Notably, many of the startups focus on the issues that concern students or directly impact the field students are studying. We’ve picked out eight of the most intriguing and exciting startups to highlight here so that you can check out the types of innovation that UMd is fostering.

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Kirwan says goodbye to chancellor job – Baltimore Sun

By News Archive

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Chancellor of the University System of Maryland William “Brit” E. Kirwan is serving his last day of his 13-year tenure Tuesday before Robert L. Caret takes over on July 1.

Caret is returning to Maryland after serving as president of the University of Massachusetts system. He was president of Towson Univeristy from 2003 to 2011.

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