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2012 Compendium
December 2011
Increasing TRICARE Mail order Pharmacy Incentives Alarms Community Pharmacies
An Obama administration proposal that affects drug co-pays in TRICARE has raised
concerns from trade groups representing community pharmacies, which, in 2010, filled
40% of TRICARE prescriptions.
Progress Notes December 2
Dr. Stephen Cozza, associate director at the Center for the Study of Traumatic Stress (CSTS) received the Frank Ochberg Award for Media and Trauma Study from the International Society for Traumatic Stress Studies (ISTSS) during the society’s annual meeting in Baltimore in November.
Progress Notes December
XIN JIN, PHD, RECEIVED THE PETER AND PATRICIA GRUBER INTERNATIONAL
RESEARCHA WARD from the Society of Neuroscience.
Inconclusive Report Does Little to Cool Down Burn Pit Controversy
WASHINGTON — Whether exposure to war zone burn-pits causes long-term health issues has created heated debate among military officials, veterans, Congress members and currently deployed troops.
Oct 1 2013 Circle the Date for Massive Coding Changeover at VA & Elsewhere
WASHINGTON — Oct. 1, 2013, might mean little to most clinicians now, just a day somewhere between Labor Day and Halloween in about two years.
Legislators Skeptical about Improvements at Problem Plagued Miami VAMC
WASHINGTON — Only a few weeks after members of the House Committee on Veterans’ Affairs expressed skepticism about testimony that the problem-plagued Miami VA Medical Center (VAMC) is now running smoothly, the facility’s director was removed from her position.
Winning is the science of being totally prepared
When this issue of US Medicine reaches our readers, we will be well into the holiday season and drawing 2011 to a close. Like many, I often find myself using this time of year to reflect on the previous 12 months, new directions, challenges, successes and failures.
VA’s Mental Health Care As Good or Better than Private Sector Study Finds
WASHINGTON — Veterans with mental illness and substance abuse cost nearly three times as much to treat as the average veteran. According to a VA-commissioned study by the RAND Corp. looking at data from one year of care (2007), such veterans represented 15% of patients using VA healthcare services, but accounted for 32.9% of costs.
Suicide Prevention Not Working Returning Troops Could Increase Problem
WASHINGTON — Efforts to prevent suicides among servicemembers are not working, according to a new report that warns that the problem is likely to get much worse as more troops return from deployment.
VA Opens Fifth Polytrauma Rehabilitation Center to Care for Wounded
SAN ANTONIO, TX--VA has dedicated a new polytrauma rehabilitation center (CRC) at the South Texas Veterans Health Care System (STVHCS) here.
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