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Today鈥檚 Headlines 鈥 May 3, 2012

Good morning! You鈥檙e over the hump, here鈥檚 Thursday鈥檚 headlines:

: Problems Seen For Medicare Provider Payments If Supreme Court Strikes Down Health Care Law
Tossing out President Barack Obama鈥檚 health care law would have major unintended consequences for Medicare鈥檚 payment systems, unseen but vital plumbing that handles 100 million monthly claims from hospitals and other service providers, the administration has quietly informed the courts (5/3).

: Issue Of Health-Care Reform Emerges In Races
Barack Obama and Mitt Romney are the marquee names in this year鈥檚 partisan fight over health care, but the undercard is pretty compelling, too. In House and Senate races across the country, from New York to Wisconsin to Montana, the president鈥檚 health care law is re-emerging as a central issue in the fight for control in Congress (Allen and Haberkorn, 5/2).

For more headlines 鈥

: 107 Charged In Medicare Fraud Crackdown
Doctors, nurses and social workers from across the country, 107 in all, were charged in what federal officials in Washington called a 鈥渘ationwide takedown鈥 of medical professionals accused of fraudulently billing Medicare out of nearly half a billion dollars (Serrano, 5/2).

: More Than 100 Are Charged In Medicare Fraud Sweep
United States authorities have charged 107 people, including doctors and nurses, for trying to defraud the federal Medicare health care program for the elderly and disabled of about $452 million, the biggest Medicare fraud sweep to date, the Obama administration said Wednesday (5/2).

: More Than 100 Charged In Massive Medicare Fraud Busts In 7 Cities In Scams Totaling $452 Mil
It was the latest in a string of major arrests in the past two years as authorities have targeted fraud that鈥檚 believed to cost the government between $60 billion and $90 billion each year. Stopping Medicare鈥檚 budget from hemorrhaging that money will be key to paying for President Barack Obama鈥檚 health care overhaul (5/2).

: U.S. Charges 107 With Defrauding Medicare
Attorney General Eric Holder and Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius said that charges were being brought against defendants in seven cities, including doctors and nurses, for seeking to defraud the federal health program for the elderly and disabled. At least 83 of the defendants were arrested Wednesday morning, officials said (Radnofsky, 5/2).

: U.S. Health Care Spending 鈥楧warfs鈥 Other Countries
The United States spends more on health care than 12 other industrialized countries, a new Commonwealth Fund study finds 鈥 but that doesn鈥檛 mean this country鈥檚 care is any better. The U.S. spent nearly $8,000 per person for health care services in 2009, the study found, confirming that 鈥渉ealth care spending in the U.S. dwarfs that found in any other industrialized country鈥 (Smith, 5/3).

: Accretive Health Blasts Minnesota Attorney General Office, Says Agency鈥檚 Report Has Harmed The Chicago-Based Hospital Billing And Collections Company
Embattled hospital billing and collections company Accretive Health Inc. said Wednesday that it was blindsided by the critical report released last week by Minnesota鈥檚 attorney general, and it vowed to explore 鈥渓egal remedies for the damages鈥 resulting from the fallout (Frost, 5/3).

: Highmark, Hospitals Reach Pact
Under pressure from Pennsylvania officials, insurer Highmark Inc. and the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center reached an agreement to extend their contracts until the end of 2014, and negotiate new terms for certain services after that date (Mathews, 5/2).

: U.S. Lags In Global Measure Of Premature Births
Fifteen million babies are born prematurely each year, and the United States fared badly in the first country-by-country global comparison of premature births, which was released Wednesday by the World Health Organization and other agencies (McNeil, 5/2).

: L.A. Program Offers Healthcare For Illegal Restaurant Workers
A restaurant workers鈥 group and a Los Angeles community clinic have launched a unique cooperative to provide health coverage to a group of people excluded from federal healthcare reform 鈥 illegal immigrants. The pilot program, believed to be the first of its kind in the nation, offers preventive and primary care to low-wage, uninsured workers in the restaurant industry. Legal immigrants and other restaurant workers who don鈥檛 meet the criteria or cannot afford coverage under the healthcare law are also eligible (Gorman, 5/2).

: Wisconsin Governor, Likely Rival Tied IN Recall Vote 鈥 Poll
Walker enraged Democrats and unions representing government workers last year when he pushed through the legislature a measure reducing the powers of public sector unions. The law forced workers to pay a portion of the cost of health insurance and pensions, capped wage increases and required most unions to be recertified every year (O鈥橞rien, 5/2).

: Illinois Democrats Consider Painful Cuts For Friends And Allies As Budget Crisis Continues
Facing one of the nation鈥檚 worst budget crises, the Democrats who run Illinois insist they鈥檙e serious about overhauling the state鈥檚 expensive health programs and employee pensions. Gov. Pat Quinn underscored his determination by declaring he was 鈥減ut on earth鈥 to solve the multi-billion-dollar pension problem. But can the Democrats actually do it? (5/2).

: Espada鈥檚 Clinic Is Scaling Back
As Pedro Espada Jr. awaits a verdict in his corruption trial, the Medicaid-funded Bronx health clinic controlled by the former state senator says it plans to stay open despite efforts by the state to shut it down. Officials at Soundview Health Center in the South Bronx, say the nonprofit is running out money, claiming it is owed hundreds of thousands of dollars from Medicaid managed-care plans and the state (Gershman, 5/2).

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