Health Reform Explained Video: “Health Reform Hits Main Street”

Watch the newest YouToons video (released Nov. 11, 2014), Health Insurance Explained – The YouToons Have It Covered: http://youtu.be/-58VD3z7ZiQ
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Health care reform explained in "Health Reform Hits Main Street."
Confused about how the new health care reform law really works? This short, animated movie — featuring the "YouToons" — explains the problems with the current health care system, the changes that are happening now, and the big changes coming in 2014. Written and produced by the Kaiser Family Foundation. Narrated by Cokie Roberts, a news commentator for ABC News and NPR and a member of Kaiser's Board of Trustees. Creative production and animation by Free Range Studios.
Also let the YouToons illustrate how health insurance coverage will work under reform. Visit: http://healthreform.kff.org/profiles.aspx

Restoring the “Care” in Healthcare

HeartMath announces the HeartMath Caritas National Pilot Program. Partnering with distinguished professor Dr. Jean Watson and the Watson Caring Science Institute, the program aims to restore the "care" in healthcare by transforming current healing models beyond the "fix it" approach where healthcare solutions can overly focus on drugs and surgery as the sole answer.

The HeartMath Caritas model emphasizes the positive impact that human care brings to the healing process of the patient. The model does not exclude the importance of current practices but rather honors "true care" as a critical component in wholeness healing. The emphasis on care benefits the overall healthcare environment, uniting staff in a shared and focused commitment to improve and care for the lives of others.

Many healthcare sites around the country are participating in this pilot program including, Kaiser Permanente Antioch Medical Center in California, Samaritan Medical Center in Verona, New York, Baptist Health Medical Center in Jacksonville, Florida, and Chesapeake Regional Medical Center in Norfolk, Virginia.

Aimee Schubert, a registered nurse at Bon Secours, St. Mary's Hospital of Richmond, Virginia talks about her experience using HeartMath's applications and Dr. Jean Watson's theory on "caring science."

To learn more about the HeartMath's scientifically validated programs, applications and emWave technologies for healthcare organizations as well as the HeartMath Caritas National Pilot Program go to www.heartmath.com. Read more about their published clinical research at www.heartmath.org.

To learn more about Dr. Jean Watson's "Caring Science" and the Watson Caring Science Institute go to www.watsoncaringscience.org.

On The Line: Sydney Lupkin Discusses Her Recent Reports On Health Issues

Follow us on Twitter (https://twitter.com/vicenews) where we'll announce the next topic for On The Line.

VICE News reporter Sydney Lupkin (https://twitter.com/slupkin) joined On The Line to discuss Truvada for HIV prevention, the right to die, and LGBT med school curriculums.

Read: ‘Southern-ish’ State University Pilots Nation's First LGBT Med School Curriculum – http://bit.ly/1hZSwul

Read: How Some US Doctors Are Hindering HIV Prevention – http://bit.ly/1hZSwKQ

Read: California Right-to-Die Advocate Dies, But Not the Way She Wanted – http://bit.ly/1JhSHYw

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When Cops Play Doctor: How the drug war punishes pain patients

The steady stream of celebrity stories about prescription drug abuse makes Americans keenly aware of the dangers of overdosing on medications like OxyContin and Vicodin. And from President Obama's Drug Czar to California Attorney General Jerry Brown, politicians are calling for greater power to monitor doctor-patient relationships in order to fight the "epidemic" of prescription drug overdosing.

But maybe the real epidemic is underdosing. Countless Americans suffer with severe chronic pain because doctors are afraid to treat them properly.

Michael Jackson's death unleashed a flurry of media stories about all aspects of the pop star's life, including his alleged prescription drug abuse. On the same day countless millions watched Jackson's star-studded memorial service, reason.tv interviewed another musician.

Seán Clarke-Redmond, a man who enjoyed an active live before the neurodegenerative disease ALS, often referred to as Lou Gerig's disease, rendered him nearly immobile—he can no longer even play the piano.

The disease also left him in almost constant pain. Redmond is prescribed some medication, but not nearly enough to keep his pain under control. Dr. Frank Fisher says Redmond's case is an appallingly common one.

"Chronic pain in America is an enormously under treated disease," says Fisher, a Harvard-trained physician. "It's a public health disaster."

Pain specialists like Fisher and patients' groups like the Pain Relief Network battle law enforcement officials who are forever on the lookout for "pill mills" and patients who misuse pain medicine. Fisher notes that the same medications so often associated with celebrity addiction are the same medications that combat pain most effectively.

Fisher has treated his patients with high doses of opioids-that is, until a swat team raided his clinic and threw him behind bars.

"They were trying to give me 256 years to life," says Fisher who argues that fear of prosecution often prevents doctors from treating chronic pain patients effectively.

What allows doctors' medical decisions to be overruled by police?

"What we're dealing with is a mass insanity," says Fisher. "We call it the war on drugs."

"When Cops Play Doctor" is written and produced by Ted Balaker and hosted by Nick Gillespie. Director of Photography is Alex Manning, Associate Producers are Hawk Jensen and Paul Detrick.

A herniated disc – What is it and what surgical treatments are available?

In this animation we explain what a hernia is and that this condition can involve discs in the spine. Although in many cases herniated discs recover without intervention, sometimes surgery is necessary. In the animation we explain the different types of surgical treatment of a herniated disc, such as an open discectomy, a laminotomy and a laminectomy.

Healthchannel makes complex medical information easy to understand. With 2D and 3D animations checked by medical specialists, we give information on certain diseases: what is it, what are the causes and how is it treated? Subscribe to our Youtube channel and learn more about your health!

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