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Medical copays reduce health care access in MS prisons; Israel planted explosives in pagers sold to Hezbollah according to official sources; Serving looks with books: Libraries fight 'fast fashion' by lending clothes; Menhaden decline threatens Virginia's ecosystem, fisheries.

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JD Vance calls for toning down political rhetoric, while calls for his resignation grow because of his own comments. The Secret Service again faces intense criticism, and a right to IVF is again voted down in the US Senate.

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A USDA report shows a widening gap in rural versus urban health, a North Carolina county remains divided over a LGBTQ library display, and Minnesota Governor Tim Walz' policies are spotlighted after his elevation to the Democratic presidential ticket.

Senate Health Care Bill Could Impact One In Eight West Virginians

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Wednesday, December 16, 2009   

CHARLESTON, W. Va. - For West Virginians, the stakes are high in the current health care reform debate. The Senate bill now under consideration would cover nearly 180,000 in the state who are uninsured.

According to state Senator Dan Foster of Kanawha County, who is also a physician, if no bill passes, the Congressional Budget Office estimates another 45,000 West Virginians will lose their insurance in the next decade.

"It's a tremendous shift of uninsured to insured depending on what happens, a swing of 225,000."

That's equal to about one in eight people, statewide. In his role as a medical professional, Foster says he regularly sees patients who have developed life-threatening complications from conditions that would normally have been simple to treat - except they didn't. Without insurance, he says, they delayed seeking care.

"You'd have someone who would present with a serious infection, when they could have gotten either oral antibiotics, or a short course of antibiotics by vein; the list goes on and on."

Foster says America has a relatively poor life expectancy rate – at least, until people get old enough to qualify for the government-run Medicare program.

"The life expectancy in this country is 30th or 35th in the world – but, if you look at the life expectancy after 65, we're just about as good as anywhere else."

Republicans in the U.S. Senate have attacked the health care reform provisions as being too expensive, but Foster points out that medical care for the uninsured costs 50 percent more than care for people with insurance.



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