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Anti-Abortion Leader Compares Rape And Incest To Accidents

News Briefs 05-24-2013 Hits:19 Huffington Post - avatar Huffington Post

Anti-Abortion Leader Compares Rape And Incest To Accidents

    The head of a pro-life group in Michigan made a controversial comparison on Wednesday, arguing that women in the state should be forced to pay extra for health insurance that covers abortions, even in cases of rape or incest. "It's simply, like, nobody plans to have an accident in a car accident, nobody plans to have their homes flooded. You have ...

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Duggan Stays On The Ballot

News Briefs - Original 05-24-2013 Hits:30 Bankole Thompson, Chronicle Senior Editor - avatar Bankole Thompson, Chronicle Senior Editor

Duggan Stays On The Ballot

Despite ballot certification, Duggan foes vow challenge Despite the 2-1 vote of the Detroit Election Commission, whose decision was anchored on the city’s new charter to retain mayoral candidate Mike Duggan on the ballot, his challengers are vowing to take the issue straight to court. Candidate Tom Barrow, who raised Duggan’s residency as a technical flap that shouldn’t allow him on the August primary ballot, is promising to campaign against Duggan’s candidacy, which he calls “Aanother suburban transplant taking over the reigns of the city. We already had a failed experiment with Dave Bing and the parachuting in of a Livonia mayor only works for Republican money interests, not everyday Detroiters.” Robert Davis, a labor activist, said he is going to court to fight the issue. Duggan campaign lawyer Melvin “Butch” Hollowell, in an interview with the Michigan Chronicle, said the issue is “not really a close legal question,” because Duggan has met the requirements of the new charter. “I think the election commission did the right thing,” Hollowell said. “This was about having access to the ballot which is an important part of election law all around the country.” According to Hollowell, with today’s ruling the campaign now shifts away from what he describes as “small issues like technicality and allows us to focus on the larger issues such as when you call a police, will they come?” Detroit Election Commission members Detroit City Clerk Janice Winfrey and interim corporation counsel Edward Keelean voted for Duggan to remain on the ballot while the third member, City Council President Charles Pugh, opposed. E-mail bthompson@michronicle.com.

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Report Shows Medicaid Expansion Would Help 25,000 Michigan Veterans and Th…

News Briefs - Original 05-23-2013 Hits:192 Amber Bogins - avatar Amber Bogins

Report Shows Medicaid Expansion Would Help  25,000 Michigan Veterans and Their Families

As AARP works to support Medicaid expansion in Michigan, a recent report by the Urban Institute and Robert Wood Johnson Foundation shows that more than 25,000 currently uninsured Michigan veterans and spouses would receive health coverage if Medicaid is expanded under the Affordable Care Act (ACA). Currently, Michigan legislators are debating the merits of Medicaid expansion, with a decision expected in the coming weeks. Gov. Rick Snyder supports extending Medicaid to 470,000 uninsured Michigan residents. “As we honor our veterans on this Memorial Day, we can provide much-needed help to those who have served our nation by expanding affordable health care coverage to veterans currently without health insurance,” said Jacqueline Morrison, AARP Michigan State Director. “AARP is fighting for affordable health coverage in Michigan to help veterans, as well as the 75,000 hard-working 50 to 64 year olds who are struggling without health insurance.” The report, “Uninsured Veterans and Family Members: Who Are They and Where Do They Live?”, says there are 1.3 million veterans under age 65 uninsured in the United States, and about 40 percent of those could qualify for health coverage through Medicaid expansion. “Our uninsured veterans’ health care coverage depends upon Medicaid expansion, and they deserve our support so they get it,” Morrison said. Many assume that all veterans receive Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) health care coverage, but that’s not the case. VA care is out of reach for low-income veterans who do not live near VA facilities or are unaware that VA care is available. In addition, VA eligibility is determined by other factors including service-related disabilities and income, and many veterans make too much money to qualify for VA assistance, but not enough to afford insurance on their own. Most spouses of veterans do not qualify for VA assistance or for Medicaid under current requirements. The need for care...

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Inkster Resident Turns 114 Today: America's Oldest Person

News Briefs - Original 05-23-2013 Hits:306 Amber Bogins - avatar Amber Bogins

Inkster Resident Turns 114 Today:  America's Oldest Person

The oldest woman in the U.S. is pushing off questions about her longevity to a higher power. When Jeralean Talley (pictured) was asked why she thinks she has lived so long, the 113-year-old from suburban Detroit lifted her arm and pointed to the sky. “Don’t ask me,” she said. “Ask Him.” Talley, who was born May 23, 1899, in Montrose, Ga., is the third-oldest person in the world, according to the Gerontology Research Group, which verifies age information for Guinness World Records. She earned the title of oldest American when Elsie Thompson of Clearwater, Fla., died March 21, just weeks before her 114th birthday. “I feel all right,” Talley told the Detroit Free Press on Tuesday in the Inkster home in which she has lived for decades. Several of Talley’s 11 siblings lived well into their 90s, said 75-year-old Thelma Holloway, Talley’s only child. Talley, who gave up bowling at age 104, uses a walker to get around and still plans to attend her annual fishing outing with Michael Kinloch, a friend from Wayne County’s Canton Township whom she met at church. “Her memory is phenomenal,” he said. Talley moved to Michigan in 1935, and her husband, Alfred, died in 1988. Her friend, Mary Kennedy, said Talley remains alert and has a sense of humor. “She is original,” Kennedy said. “There is nobody else like her.” The Gerontology Research Group said the world’s two oldest people are 115 and live in Japan.

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Food Assistance Dollars Spent at Supermarkets on Nutritious Foods

News Briefs - Original 05-22-2013 Hits:170 Amber Bogins - avatar Amber Bogins

Food Assistance Dollars Spent at Supermarkets on Nutritious Foods

A majority of people on government food programs get their food from large grocery stores according to a new report, which means they have a wide variety of foods available. More than 82 percent of SNAP benefits (Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, formerly known as food stamps) are redeemed at supermarkets and superstores according to the USDA Food and Nutrition Service (FNS) Retailer Policy and Management Division 2012 Annual Report. $74 billion in client benefits were redeemed in the more than 246,000 participating stores, farmers’ markets, direct marketing farmers, homeless meal providers, treatment centers, group homes, and others authorized to accept SNAP. Supermarkets and superstores made up about 15 percent of the firms allowed to redeem SNAP benefits but continue to redeem the majority of them. In 2012, Michigan had 10,060 authorized firms to redeem SNAP benefits, those firms redeemed nearly $3 billion dollars worth of benefits. But despite recent criticisms by people saying the SNAP recipients waste their food stamps on high-sugar foods and drinks, The U.S. Department of Agriculture reported that most food expenditures by people on SNAP are of the healthy variety. A 2005 study found that 35 percent of SNAP benefits went toward meats and meat alternatives, 20 percent went to grains, another 20 percent to fruits and vegetables, 12 percent to dairy, while only 13 percent went toward other foods. Not unlike the foods purchased by people not on the SNAP program. Click here to read the full report 

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Orr: ‘Detroit has no choice’

News Briefs - Original 05-22-2013 Hits:644 AJ Williams, Chronicle Web Editor - avatar AJ Williams, Chronicle Web Editor

Orr: ‘Detroit has no choice’

Emergency manager takes on critics in candid interview about city’s future KEVYN ORR, Detroit’s emergency financial manager, discusses the challenges facing Detroit while admonishing his critics to look at the facts on the city’s books. — Andre Smith photos Kevyn Orr, Detroit’s emergency financial manager, unfazed by criticisms and mounting opposition, opens up to Michigan Chronicle editor Bankole Thompson in this exclusive sit-down interview about the difficult choices ahead for the city while sharing some of the city’s debt numbers. Orr said he is not an elected official bound to public opinion and that it is time to change course if the city is expected to make any progress. The future of the Detroit Water and Sewerage Department and Detroit Mayor Dave Bing’s comments about Orr are two of the hot button issues discussed in the interview. Orr applauded Detroit’s private sector for what he calls their commitment to the city. MICHIGAN CHRONICLE: When you came on board you talked about the fact that you have faith that good parties can come together. Do you still believe that? KEVYN ORR: I still do. I really do and this is why I mentioned the financial operating plan. I’m going to be fully open with everything. That includes labor, debt holders, citizens, elected officials, the press. Let’s just get it all out there the best we can. Nobody really can debate the numbers. They are what they are. The math is the math. So now the next step becomes what we are going to do about it. I’m assuming rational behavior, that everybody wants to get the city to a position that is both on a sustainable path. a path for growth and a healthier going forward financial practice. MC: Do you get a sense of a rational behavior within the various apparatus that make up city...

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Detroit Medical Center: Medicine For All Time

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Since its beginning, the practice of medicine has been characterized by uncharted trails and the inspiring acts of fearless men and women, whose will to overcome challenges and setbacks have produced unimaginable triumphs.


Over many decades, the Detroit Medical Center (DMC) and its healthcare professionals have made significant contributions to medicine and Detroit’s African American presence is imprinted in every step of the journey from outsider to beneficiary to pioneer to leader.


Seventy-five years ago, DMC’s foundation institutions, Harper University Hospital, Children’s Hospital of Michigan and Hutzel Women’s Hospital, were already decades into serving the Detroit area community.


From its very beginning, Children’s Hospital cared for young patients of all races. But it was in the late 1940s that discussions about admitting Black medical residents began.  And while history records a few African American physicians, nurses and other medical professionals at Children’s, Grace (Sinai-Grace) and Detroit Receiving Hospitals in the 1940s and ’50s, greater diversity would come in the 1960s when local African American physicians echoed the national call for equality and access.


Currently, Detroit Medical Center has one of the nation’s largest representations of African American physicians and executives in decision-making roles. In fact, in the last 75 years, DMC has become a reflection of the world’s many cultures, embracing physicians, patients, families and staff of every race and ethnicity.


Today, with its 10 hospitals and institutions, 2,000 licensed beds, 3,000 physicians and 12,000 full time employees, DMC continues to build on its legacy of triumph over trial and has broadened its designation as an industry leader, marking ground breaking territory in 21st century healthcare.


In this last decade:


DMC was an industry leader in its transition to system-wide Electronic Medical Record (EMR), now a centerpiece of patient safety and hospital quality, at all its hospitals.


It also stepped out front to advance the use of robotic medicine, and remote medical technology, making many procedures less invasive and closing the gap of time and distance between patient and physician.


Its adoption of the nation’s first 29 minute emergency room service guarantee, and more recently real time estimates on emergency room wait times, has received national recognition and patient applause.

The introduction of DMC’s Cardio Team One, the region’s first 24/7 on-site cardiology team, is also setting new response standards.


Breakthrough heart procedures are part of DMC’s legacy. Five decades ago, in 1952, the medical center made world news when an artificial heart designed by GM engineers working with physicians was used to perform the world’s first open heart surgery at Harper Hospital.


In nearly each decade, Detroit Medical Center has led advances that helped shape the healthcare industry.


In the 1980s, Detroit Receiving Hospital was Michigan’s first American College of Surgeons verified Level 1 Trauma Center and currently trains the majority of the state’s emergency physicians. In the early part of 2000, Receiving became the first center in the United States to use hyperbaric oxygen therapy to treat burns, wounds, smoke inhalation and other medical conditions. The therapy is now widely used with almost miraculous results.
Hutzel Women’s Hospital, founded nearly 140 years ago, is the state’s first and only hospital dedicated solely to the health needs of women. The National Institute of Child Health and Human Development’s decision to locate the nation’s first hospital-based Perinatology Research Branch at Hutzel, means ongoing research and advancement in the prevention of premature birth and infant mortality will be generated here, in Detroit, at the Detroit Medical Center, for the benefit of infants worldwide.


In the 1970s, DMC’s Rehabilitation Institute of Michigan (RIM) created the first driver re-training program for disabled people. Now approaching its 60th year, RIM is world renowned for its Center for Spinal Cord Injury Recovery and has restored hope and quality of life for victims of stroke, trauma and other injuries.


From research in artificial vision at Wayne State University’s Ligon Research Center of Vision at DMC’s Kresge Eye Institute, to a renowned Sports Medicine Program that serves the Detroit Pistons, Red Wings, Tigers and everyday athletes of all ages, to advanced pediatric medicine, women and infant care, emergency services, cardiac care family medicine and advanced research, the Detroit Medical Center’s next 75 years promise to be as groundbreaking as the last.


Just as importantly, DMC has helped set the tone for a new discussion on urban health care and how to support similar hospital systems that have traditionally cared for all who enter their doors.


But perhaps, DMC’s proudest accomplishment is its reputation as a trusted provider of quality healthcare for families and communities and as a partner in the growth and development of the region.

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