Top Legislation - View All
Also tagged in: Academic performance, Access to health care, AIDS (Disease), Alcohol and youth, Alcoholism, Ambulatory care, Birth control, Budgets, Business, Child development, Child health, Children, Church and social problems, Citizenship education, Civil rights, Coinsurance, Communications, Community health services, Condoms, Congressional reporting requirements, Consumer discounts, Consumer education, Consumers, Contraceptives, Criminal justice, Data banks, Discrimination in insurance, Discrimination in medical care, Drug abuse, Drugs, Drugs and youth, Education, Elementary and secondary education, Emergency management, Emergency medicine, Employee health benefits, Evaluation research (Social action programs), Families, Federal aid to child health services, Federal aid to health facilities, Federal aid to research, Finance, Generic drugs, Government information, Government publicity, Grants-in-aid, Health education, Health information systems, Health insurance, Health policy, Hospital care, Hospitals, Human immunodeficiency viruses, Immigrant health, Immigration, Insurance companies, Labor, Language and languages, Marriage, Medicaid, Medical care, Medical fees, Medical research, Medically uninsured, Medicine, Nonprofit organizations, Parent and child, Performance measurement, Politics and government, Pregnant women, Prescription pricing, Preventive medicine, Public service advertising, Rape victims, Rebates, Religion, Research grants, School health programs, School-age child care, Science policy, Service learning, Sex, Sex education, Sexual abstinence, Sexually transmitted diseases, Social services, Sociological research, Standards, State and local government, State laws, Technology, Teenage pregnancy, Welfare, Welfare eligibility, Women, Women's health, Women's health services, Youth services
Latest Action: 01/09/2007 - Star Print ordered on the bill. Bill TextA bill to expand access to preventive health care services that help reduce unintended pregnancy, reduce abortions, and improve access to women's health care. 1/4/2007--Introduced. Prevention First Act - Title X Family Planning Services Act of 2007 - Authorizes appropriations for family planning services grants and contracts under the Public Health Service Act (PHSA). Equity in Prescription Insurance and Contraceptive Coverage Act of 2007 - Amends the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 (ERISA) and PHSA to prohibit a group health plan and a health insurance issuer providing group coverage from excluding or restricting benefits in any way for prescription contraceptive drugs, devices, and outpatient services if the plan or coverage provides benefits for other outpatient prescription drugs, devices, or outpatient services. Applies such prohibitions to coverage offered in the individual market. Emergency Contraception Education Act of 2007 - Directs [...] show full description
Also tagged in: Afghanistan, Armed forces, Armed forces reserves, Community health services, Congress, Congressional reporting requirements, Counseling, Defense policy, Demography, Families, Iraq, Iraq compilation, Labor, Medical care, Medicine, Mental health services, Middle East and North Africa, Military dependents, Military operations, National Guard, Social services, South Asia, Telecommunication, Telemedicine, Veterans, Veterans' employment, Veterans' medical care, Veterans' rehabilitation
Latest Action: 10/24/2007 - Committee on Veterans' Affairs. Hearings held. Bill TextA bill to require the Secretary of Veterans Affairs to establish a program for the provision of readjustment and mental health services to veterans who served in Operation Iraqi Freedom and Operation Enduring Freedom, and for other purposes. 5/23/2007--Introduced. Veterans' Mental Health Outreach and Access Act of 2007 - Directs the Secretary of Veterans Affairs to establish a program to provide to veterans of Operations Iraqi Freedom and Enduring Freedom, particularly veterans who served in such Operations while in the National Guard and reserves: (1) peer outreach and support services; (2) readjustment counseling and related services; and (3) mental health services. Directs the Secretary to also provide to immediate family members of such veterans, during the three-year period following the return of the veterans from such a deployment, education, support, counseling, and mental health services to assist in: (1) readjustment to civilian life; (2) recovery from an injury [...] show full description
Also tagged in: Budgets, Civil rights, Discrimination in education, Education, Educational statistics, Federal aid to education, Federally-guaranteed loans, Finance, Government information, Government paperwork, Graduate education, Higher education, Medical care, Medical education, Medicine, Psychologists, Sex discrimination, Student loan funds, Women
Latest Action: 01/04/2007 - Sponsor introductory remarks on measure. (CR S113) Bill TextA bill to amend title VII of the Public Health Service Act to make certain graduate programs in professional psychology eligible to participate in various health professions loan programs. 1/4/2007--Introduced. Strengthen the Public Health Service Act - Amends the Public Health Service Act to allow the Secretary of Health and Human Services to enter into an agreement for the establishment and operation of a student loan fund with any public or other nonprofit school that offers a graduate program in professional psychology. Revises provisions concerning the collection of health professions data, sex discrimination in medical education programs, and definitions to make these applicable to "professional" (rather than "clinical") psychologists.
Also tagged in: Budgets, Community health services, Condoms, Congressional reporting requirements, Correctional personnel, Cost accounting, Criminal justice, Criminal statistics, Employee training, Government information, Government paperwork, Government publicity, Health counseling, Health education, Health planning, Health policy, Health surveys, Job training, Labor, Medical care, Medical screening, Medical tests, Medicine, Performance measurement, Preventive medicine, Prison violence, Prisoners, Prisoners' rights, Prisons, Rape, Sex education, Sexually transmitted diseases, State and local government, State laws, Surveys
Latest Action: 09/25/2007 - Sponsor introductory remarks on measure. (CR H10796) Bill TextTo reduce the spread of sexually transmitted infections in correctional facilities, and for other purposes. 1/4/2007--Introduced. Justice for the Unprotected Against Sexually Transmitted Infections among the Confined and Exposed Act of 2007 or the JUSTICE Act of 2007 - Requires the Attorney General to direct the Bureau of Prisons to allow community organizations to distribute sexual barrier protection devices (e.g., condoms) and to engage in sexually transmitted infection (STI) counseling and prevention education in federal correctional facilities. Prohibits a federal correctional facility from taking adverse action against a prisoner who possesses or uses a sexual barrier protection device.Expresses the sense of Congress that states should allow for the legal distribution of sexual barrier protection devices in their correctional facilities. Directs the Attorney General to: (1) conduct a survey of all educational, testing, and other programs in federal and state [...] show full description
Also tagged in: Academic performance, Budgets, Child development, Child health, Child nutrition, Children, Communication in medicine, Communications, Eating disorders, Education, Educational statistics, Elementary and secondary education, Elementary education, Evaluation research (Social action programs), Federal aid to education, Food, Government information, Government paperwork, Health education, Health policy, Higher education, Medical care, Medical research, Medicine, Preventive medicine, Public service advertising, School health programs, Secondary education, Social services, Teacher education, Vital statistics
Latest Action: 05/09/2007 - Referred to the Subcommittee on Early Childhood, Elementary, and Secondary Education. Bill TextTo amend title V of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965 to raise awareness of eating disorders and to create educational programs concerning the same, and for other purposes. 1/4/2007--Introduced. Eating Disorders Awareness, Prevention, and Education Act of 2007 - Amends the Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965 to authorize the use of innovative assistance funds for programs to: (1) improve identification of students with eating disorders; (2) increase awareness of such disorders among parents and students; and (3) train educators with respect to effective eating disorder prevention and assistance methods. Directs the Secretary of Education to carry out a program to broadcast public service announcements to improve public awareness, and to promote the identification and prevention, of eating disorders. Requires the National Center for Education Statistics and the National Center for Health Statistics to: (1) study the impact eating disorders have [...] show full description
Also tagged in: Aged, Armed forces, Budgets, Case management, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), Chemotherapy, Defense policy, Department of Health and Human Services, Drug abuse, Education, Executive departments, Executive reorganization, Federal advisory bodies, Federal aid to research, Federal officials, Government employees, Graduate education, Health policy, Health surveys, Higher education, Imaging systems in medicine, Lung cancer, Medicaid, Medical care, Medical education, Medical research, Medical screening, Medical technology, Medical tests, Medicare, Medicine, Military medicine, Mortality, Pharmaceutical research, Quality of care, Research centers, Research grants, Science policy, Smoking, Surgery, Technology, Tobacco, Veterans, Veterans' medical care, Vital statistics, Welfare
Latest Action: 08/02/2007 - Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions discharged by Unanimous Consent. (consideration: CR S10842) Bill TextA resolution expressing the sense of the Senate that the President should declare lung cancer a public health priority and should implement a comprehensive interagency program to reduce the lung cancer mortality rate by at least 50 percent by 2015. 8/2/2007--Passed Senate without amendment. (There is 1 other summary) (This measure has not been amended since it was introduced. The summary of that version is repeated here.) Urges the President to: (1) declare lung cancer a public health priority and immediately lead a coordinated effort to reduce the mortality rate of lung cancer by 50% by 2015; (2) direct the Secretary of Health and Human Services to increase funding for lung cancer research; (3) direct the Secretary of Defense to develop a lung cancer screening and disease management program among members of the Armed Forces and veterans and diagnostic programs for the early detection of lung cancer; (4) appoint the Lung Cancer Scientific [...] show full description
Also tagged in: Budgets, Commemorations, Federal aid to research, Health education, Health policy, Health surveys, Medical care, Medical research, Medical screening, Medical tests, Medicine, Preventive medicine, Science policy, Special days, Special weeks, Women, Women's health
Latest Action: 05/08/2007 - Referred to the Subcommittee on Health. Bill TextSupporting the goals and ideals of National Women's Health Week, and for other purposes. 5/8/2007--Introduced. Expresses support for the goals and ideals of National Women's Health Week. Recognizes the importance of: (1) preventing diseases that commonly affect women; and (2) federally funded programs that provide research and collect data on common diseases in women. Calls on women to observe National Women's Check-Up Day by receiving preventive screenings.
Also tagged in: Actions and defenses, Administrative procedure, Administrative remedies, Budgets, Civil rights, Communication in medicine, Communications, Damages, Department of Labor, Discrimination in employment, Dismissal of employees, Employee rights, Employee training, Executive departments, Federal aid to health facilities, Government information, Government paperwork, Government publicity, Governmental investigations, Grievance procedures, Health facilities, Health information systems, Human engineering, Job training, Labor, Law, Legal fees, Medical care, Medical instruments and apparatus, Medical personnel, Medical supplies, Medical technology, Medicine, Nurses, Occupational health and safety, Planning, Risk, Signs and signboards, Standards, Technological innovations, Technology, Technology assessment, Transfer of employees, Wage restitution, Whistle blowing
Latest Action: 05/09/2007 - Referred to the Subcommittee on Workforce Protections. Bill TextTo direct the Secretary of Labor to issue an occupational safety and health standard to reduce injuries to patients, direct-care registered nurses, and other health care providers by establishing a safe patient handling standard. 1/10/2007--Introduced. Nurse and Patient Safety & Protection Act of 2007 - Requires the Secretary of Labor, acting through the Director of Occupational Safety and Health Administration, to establish a Federal Safe Patient Handling Standard to prevent musculoskeletal disorders for direct-care registered nurses and other health care providers working in health care facilities by requiring the elimination of manual lifting of patients through the use of mechanical devices, except during a declared state of emergency. Requires health care facilities to: (1) develop and implement a safe patient handling plan consistent with such standard; and (2) post a uniform notice that explains the standard and the procedures to report patient handling-related [...] show full description
Also tagged in: Alaska, Alternative medicine, Budgets, Child health, Congress, Congressional reporting requirements, Counseling, Education, Elementary and secondary education, Federal aid to child health services, Federal aid to Indians, Higher education, Indian children, Indian education, Indian medical care, Indians, Medical care, Medical education, Medical personnel, Medicine, Mental health services, Minorities, Preventive medicine, Psychiatry, Psychotherapy, Social services, Suicide, Telecommunication, Telemedicine
Latest Action: 04/10/2007 - Committee on Indian Affairs. Reported by Senator Dorgan with an amendment. With written report No. 110-43. Bill TextA bill to establish an Indian youth telemental health demonstration project. 4/10/2007--Reported to Senate amended. (There is 1 other summary) Indian Youth Telemental Health Demonstration Project Act of 2007 - Authorizes the Secretary of Health and Human Services to carry out a demonstration project to award up to five grants, of up to four years each, for the provision of telemental health services to Indian youth who have expressed suicidal ideas, have attempted suicide, or have mental health conditions that increase or could increase the risk of suicide. Makes eligible for such grants any Indian tribes and tribal organizations that operate one or more facilities: (1) located in Alaska and part of the Alaska Federal Health Care Access Network; (2) reporting active clinical telehealth capabilities; or (3) offering school-based telemental health services relating to psychiatry to Indian youth.
Also tagged in: Aged, Armed forces, Budgets, Case management, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), Chemotherapy, Defense policy, Department of Health and Human Services, Drug abuse, Education, Executive departments, Executive reorganization, Federal advisory bodies, Federal aid to research, Federal officials, Government employees, Graduate education, Health policy, Health surveys, Higher education, Imaging systems in medicine, Lung cancer, Medicaid, Medical care, Medical education, Medical research, Medical screening, Medical technology, Medical tests, Medicare, Medicine, Military medicine, Mortality, Pharmaceutical research, Quality of care, Research centers, Research grants, Science policy, Smoking, Surgery, Technology, Tobacco, Veterans, Veterans' medical care, Vital statistics, Welfare
Latest Action: 11/13/2007 - Mrs. Capps moved to suspend the rules and agree to the resolution, as amended. Bill TextExpressing the sense of the House of Representatives with respect to lung cancer as a public health priority and the recommendations of the Lung Cancer Progress Review Group of the National Cancer Institute. 11/13/2007--Passed House amended. (There is 1 other summary) Recognizes: (1) lung cancer as a public health priority; (2) the importance of reducing the lung cancer mortality rate by at least half by 2015; (3) the benefit of graduate medical education programs in thoracic medicine and cardiothoracic surgery; and (4) the importance of the recommendations of the Lung Cancer Progress Review Group of the National Cancer Institute. Encourages increased investment for lung cancer research and other lung cancer-related programs. Expresses support for efforts to develop a broad-based lung cancer screening and disease management program among members of the Armed Forces and veterans.
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Latest Legislation - View All
Also tagged in: Animals, Anniversaries, Appalachia, Appalachian Regional Commission, Archives, Authorization, Beaches, Broadband, Budgets, Business, Carbon dioxide, Chesapeake Bay, Child abuse, Child pornography, Child safety, Children, Civil rights, Civil rights enforcement, Civil war, Closed caption television, Coastal zone, Compensation (Law), Coral reefs, Courts of special jurisdiction, Criminal investigation, Criminal justice, Data banks, Debt agreements, Debt relief, Department of Justice, Developing countries, Disabled, Disaster relief, District of Columbia, Down's syndrome, Drug abuse, Economic assistance, Economic policy, Education, Educational exchanges, Employee training, Environmental monitoring, Environmental protection, Environmental research, Europe, Executive departments, Eye care, Federal aid to child health services, Federal aid to health facilities, Federal aid to law enforcement, Federal aid to transportation, Federal aid to water pollution control, Finance, Flowers, Foreign aid, Foreign policy, Forest conservation, Foundations, Government corporations, Government information, Government publicity, Great Lakes, Health information systems, Higher education, History, Homeless, Horticulture, Housing, Humanities, Internet, Investment guaranty insurance, Iraq compilation, Jews, Job training, Maintenance and repair, Maps, Marine ecology, Marine pollution, Marine resources, Marine resources conservation, Maryland, Mass rapid transit, Medical care, Medical research, Medicine, Mental depression, Mental health services, Museums, Music, Nervous system diseases, Ocean currents, Oceanography, Overseas Private Investment Corporation, Paralysis, Poland, Pregnancy, Preventive medicine, Primates, Prosecution, Quality of life, Regional economic development, Religion, Runaway children, School security, Science policy, Slavery, Smithsonian Institution, Social services, Sports, Strategic planning, Stroke, Students, Taxation, Technology, Telecommunication, Telemedicine, Torture, Trails, Transportation, Victims of crimes, Virginia, Vocational rehabilitation, War relief, Water pollution, Water resources, Welfare, Wild animal trade, Women, Women's health
Latest Action: 07/28/2008 - Motion to proceed to measure considered in Senate. Bill TextA bill to advance America's priorities. 7/22/2008--Introduced. Advancing America's Priorities Act - Amends the Public Health Service Act to: (1) establish a system to collect data on amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) and establish a registry for such data; (2) provide for an education and information campaign to promote stroke prevention; and (3) award grants for a pilot project to improve stroke patient outcomes by coordinating health care delivery through telehealth networks.Establishes programs for research, rehabilitation, and quality of life for people with paralysis.Provides for support services to women suffering from postpartum depression and who receive a positive diagnosis of Down syndrome or other prenatally or postnatally diagnosed conditions. Directs the Secretary of Health and Human Services to make grants to states to provide vision care for children. Amends the Runaway and Homeless Youth Act to expand services for homeless youth [...] show full description
Also tagged in: Access to health care, Accreditation (Medical care), Administrative remedies, Adoption, Afghanistan, Aged, Aid to dependent children, Ambulances, Ambulatory care, Anesthetics, Annuities, Appropriations, Armed forces, Armed forces reserves, Barbiturates, Brain, Budgets, Business, California, Capitation (Medical care), Cardiovascular diseases, Case management, Case mix (Medical care), Cash welfare block grants, Children, Chronically ill, Civil rights, Clinical trials, Clinics, Coinsurance, Collection of accounts, Communication in medicine, Communications, Community health services, Competitive bidding, Conflict of interests, Congregate housing, Congress, Congressional investigations, Congressional reporting requirements, Criminal justice, Defense policy, Department of Health and Human Services, Diabetes, Discrimination in medical care, District of Columbia, Drugs, Education, Electronic data interchange, Electronic government information, Estates (Law), Executive departments, Families, Federal aid to health facilities, Federal-state relations, Finance, Foster home care, Genetics, Gifts, Government information, Government procurement, Government trust funds, Governmental investigations, Group medical practice, Head injuries, Health education, Health information systems, Health insurance, Health maintenance organizations, Health policy, Hearing, Higher education, Hospital rates, Hospitals, Housing, Imaging systems in medicine, Indian medical care, Inspectors general, Insurance premiums, Iraq, Iraq compilation, Judicial review, Kidney diseases, Language and languages, Law, Life insurance, Living wills, Long-term care, Lung diseases, Managed care, Marketing, Medicaid, Medical care, Medical economics, Medical education, Medical ethics, Medical fees, Medical laboratories, Medical personnel, Medical records, Medical savings accounts, Medical supplies, Medical tests, Medically uninsured, Medicare, Medicine, Medigap, Mental depression, Mental health services, Middle East and North Africa, Military occupation, Military operations, Minorities, Minority health, Nuclear medicine, Nursing homes, Obesity, Oxygen, Pensions, Performance measurement, Pharmacies, Physical examinations, Physicians, Politics and government, Post-traumatic stress disorder, Prescription pricing, Preventive medicine, Psychiatry, Psychotherapy, Psychotropic drugs, Public contracts, Quality of care, Rural affairs, Rural health, Sexual abstinence, South Asia, Speech disorders, Standards, State and local government, Subsidies, Technology, Telecommunication, Telemedicine, Terminal care, Terrorism, Translating and interpreting, Transportation, Veterans, Veterans' medical care, Welfare, Welfare eligibility, Women, Women's health
Latest Action: 07/15/2008 - Vetoed by President. Bill TextTo amend titles XVIII and XIX of the Social Security Act to extend expiring provisions under the Medicare Program, to improve beneficiary access to preventive and mental health services, to enhance low-income benefit programs, and to maintain access to care in rural areas, including pharmacy access, and for other purposes. 7/15/2008--Public Law. (There are 3 other summaries) (This measure has not been amended since it was passed by the House on June 24, 2008. The summary of that version is repeated here.) Medicare Improvements for Patients and Providers Act of 2008 - Title I: Medicare - Subtitle A: Beneficiary Improvements - Part 1: Prevention, Mental Health, and Marketing - (Sec. 101) Amends title XVIII (Medicare) of the Social Security Act (SSA), as amended by the Medicare, Medicaid, and SCHIP Extension Act of 2007, to cover additional preventive services. Includes body mass index and end-of-life planning among initial [...] show full description
Also tagged in: Access to health care, Accreditation (Medical care), Afghanistan, Aged, Aid to dependent children, Ambulances, Ambulatory care, Anesthetics, Armed forces, Armed forces reserves, Budgets, Business, Capitation (Medical care), Cardiovascular diseases, Cash welfare block grants, Children, Chronically ill, Coinsurance, Community health services, Congress, Congressional reporting requirements, Defense policy, Diabetes, Disabled, Drugs, Education, Electronic data interchange, Emergency management, Families, Federal aid to health facilities, Finance, Government trust funds, Health information systems, Health insurance, Health policy, Higher education, Hospital rates, Hospitals, Imaging systems in medicine, Insurance premiums, Iraq, Iraq compilation, Kidney diseases, Lung diseases, Marketing, Medicaid, Medical care, Medical education, Medical fees, Medically uninsured, Medicare, Medicine, Medigap, Mental health services, Middle East and North Africa, Military operations, Minorities, Minority health, Performance measurement, Physicians, Prescription pricing, Preventive medicine, Public contracts, Quality of care, Rural affairs, Rural health, Self-help devices for the disabled, South Asia, State and local government, Subsidies, Technology, Telecommunication, Veterans, Veterans' medical care, Welfare
Latest Action: 06/17/2008 - Referred to the Subcommittee on Health. Bill TextTo amend titles XVIII and XIX of the Social Security Act to extend expiring provisions under the Medicare Program, to improve beneficiary access to preventive and mental health services, to enhance low-income benefit programs, and to maintain access to care in rural areas, including pharmacy access, and for other purposes. 6/9/2008--Introduced. Medicare Efficiency and Development of Improvement of Care and Services Act (MEDICS Act) of 2008 - Amends title XVIII (Medicare) of the Social Security Act (SSA) to provide for coverage of additional preventive services.Provides for gradual elimination of copayment rates for Medicare psychiatric services.Places prohibitions and limitations on certain sales and marketing activities under Medicare Advantage (MA) plans and prescription drug plans.Requires offering of a range of Medicare supplemental policies.Extends the qualifying individual program. Provides for application of a full low-income subsidy [...] show full description
Also tagged in: Access to health care, Accreditation (Medical care), Afghanistan, Aged, Aid to dependent children, Ambulances, Ambulatory care, Anesthetics, Armed forces, Armed forces reserves, Budgets, Business, Capitation (Medical care), Cardiovascular diseases, Cash welfare block grants, Children, Chronically ill, Coinsurance, Community health services, Congress, Congressional reporting requirements, Defense policy, Diabetes, Disabled, Drugs, Education, Electronic data interchange, Emergency management, Families, Federal aid to health facilities, Finance, Government trust funds, Health information systems, Health insurance, Health policy, Higher education, Hospital rates, Hospitals, Imaging systems in medicine, Insurance premiums, Iraq, Iraq compilation, Kidney diseases, Lung diseases, Marketing, Medicaid, Medical care, Medical education, Medical fees, Medically uninsured, Medicare, Medicine, Medigap, Mental health services, Middle East and North Africa, Military operations, Minorities, Minority health, Performance measurement, Physicians, Prescription pricing, Preventive medicine, Public contracts, Quality of care, Rural affairs, Rural health, Self-help devices for the disabled, Sexual abstinence, South Asia, State and local government, Subsidies, Technology, Telecommunication, Veterans, Veterans' medical care, Welfare
Latest Action: 06/12/2008 - Motion to proceed to measure considered in Senate. (consideration: CR S5539-5564) Bill TextA bill to amend titles XVIII and XIX of the Social Security Act to extend expiring provisions under the Medicare program, to improve beneficiary access to preventive and mental health services, to enhance low-income benefit programs, and to maintain access to care in rural areas, including pharmacy access, and for other purposes. 6/6/2008--Introduced. Medicare Improvements for Patients and Providers Act of 2008 - Amends title XVIII (Medicare) of the Social Security Act (SSA) to provide for coverage of additional preventive services.Provides for gradual elimination of copayment rates for Medicare psychiatric services.Places prohibitions and limitations on certain sales and marketing activities under Medicare Advantage (MA) plans and prescription drug plans.Requires offering of a range of Medicare supplemental policies.Extends the qualifying individual program. Provides for application of a full low-income subsidy assets test under the Medicare [...] show full description
Also tagged in: Budgets, Commemorations, Federal aid to research, Health education, Health policy, Health surveys, Medical care, Medical research, Medical screening, Medical tests, Medicine, Preventive medicine, Science policy, Special days, Special weeks, Women, Women's health
Latest Action: 05/08/2008 - Received in the House. Bill TextA concurrent resolution supporting the goals and ideals of National Women's Health Week. 5/7/2008--Passed Senate without amendment. (There is 1 other summary) (This measure has not been amended since it was introduced. The summary of that version is repeated here.) Expresses support for the goals and ideals of National Women's Health Week. Recognizes the importance of: (1) preventing diseases that commonly affect women; and (2) federally funded programs that provide research and collect data on diseases that commonly affect women. Calls on women to observe National Women's Check-Up Day on May 12, 2008 by receiving preventive screenings.
Also tagged in: Budgets, Business, Children, Citizenship, Congress, Congressional investigations, Congressional reporting requirements, Federal aid to child health services, Finance, Government information, Government publicity, Health insurance, Health policy, Immigration, Income tax, Investment advisers, Medicaid, Medical care, Medically uninsured, Medicine, Partnerships, Pensions, Poor children, Standards, Tax-deferred compensation plans, Taxation, Welfare
Latest Action: 04/29/2008 - Read twice and referred to the Committee on Finance. Bill TextA bill to amend title XXI of the Social Security Act to reauthorize the State Children's Health Insurance Program, to limit income eligibility expansions under that program until the lowest income eligible individuals are enrolled, and for other purposes. 4/29/2008--Introduced. Responsible Expansion of the State Children's Health Insurance Program Act of 2008 - Amends title XXI (State Children's Health Insurance) (SCHIP) of the Social Security Act, as amended by the Medicare, Medicaid, and SCHIP Extension Act of 2007, to revise, reauthorize, and extend the SCHIP program through FY2013. Requires the state SCHIP plan to specify how it will achieve coverage for 85% of eligible targeted low-income children in the state. Prohibits payment for child health assistance for a targeted low-income child in a family whose income exceeds 300% of the poverty line. Sets forth special rules for children with family income between 200% and 300% of the applicable poverty line.[...] show full description
Also tagged in: Budgets, Cancer, Case management, Child health, Children, Clinics, Comprehensive health care, Education, Federal aid to education, Federal aid to health facilities, Federal aid to research, Health information systems, Health policy, Health surveys, Higher education, Medical care, Medical education, Medical research, Medicine, Mental health services, Minority health, Preventive medicine, Quality of care, Quality of life, Research grants, Science policy
Latest Action: 04/17/2008 - Sponsor introductory remarks on measure. (CR S3146-3147) Bill TextA bill to improve and enhance research and programs on cancer survivorship, and for other purposes. 4/17/2008--Introduced. Pediatric, Adolescent, and Young Adult Cancer Survivorship Research and Quality of Life Act of 2008 - Amends the Public Health Service Act to direct the Secretary of Health and Human Services, acting through the Director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), to expand and intensify CDC's cancer control programs. Requires the Secretary to: (1) provide guidance to states, in collaboration with the Director of the National Cancer Institute (NCI), on interventions that may be incorporated into state cancer control programs to improve the long-term health status of childhood cancer survivors; (2) encourage states to incorporate strategies for improving their care into their comprehensive cancer plans; (3) collaborate with the NCI Director to improve or develop systems for tracking cancer survivors; and (4) enhance control programs to include [...] show full description
Also tagged in: Budgets, Commemorations, Federal aid to research, Health education, Health policy, Health surveys, Medical care, Medical research, Medical screening, Medical tests, Medicine, Preventive medicine, Science policy, Special days, Special weeks, Women, Women's health
Latest Action: 05/19/2008 - Received in the Senate and referred to the Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions. Bill TextSupporting the goals and ideals of National Women's Health Week, and for other purposes. 5/14/2008--Passed House without amendment. (There is 1 other summary) (This measure has not been amended since it was introduced. The summary of that version is repeated here.) Expresses support for the goals and ideals of National Women's Health Week. Recognizes the importance of: (1) preventing diseases that commonly affect women; and (2) federally funded programs that provide research and collect data on common diseases in women. Calls on women to observe National Women's Check-Up Day by receiving preventative screenings.
Also tagged in: Commemorations, Communication in medicine, Communications, Congress, Congressional reporting requirements, Congressional tributes, Ex-Members of Congress, Government information, Government publicity, Health education, Health surveys, Medical care, Medical research, Medicine, Muscular diseases, Names, Research centers, Science policy, Senate
Latest Action: 02/08/2008 - Read twice and referred to the Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions. Bill TextA bill to amend the Public Health Service Act to provide for research with respect to various forms of muscular dystrophy, including Becker, congenital, distal, Duchenne, Emery-Dreifuss Facioscapulohumeral, limb-girdle, myotonic, and oculopharyngeal muscular dystrophies. 2/8/2008--Introduced. Paul D. Wellstone Muscular Dystrophy Community Assistance, Research, and Education Amendments of 2008 - Amends the Public Health Service Act to designate centers of excellence for research on various forms of muscular dystrophy as Paul D. Wellstone Muscular Dystrophy Cooperative Research Centers. Requires the Muscular Dystrophy Interagency Coordinating Committee to give special consideration to enhancing the clinical research infrastructure required to test emerging therapies for the various forms of muscular dystrophy. Requires the Secretary of Health and Human Services to ensure that any data on patients that is collected as part of the Muscular Dystrophy Surveillance,[...] show full description
Also tagged in: Commemorations, Communication in medicine, Communications, Congress, Congressional reporting requirements, Congressional tributes, Ex-Members of Congress, Government information, Government publicity, Health education, Health surveys, Medical care, Medical research, Medicine, Muscular diseases, Names, Research centers, Science policy, Senate
Latest Action: 02/07/2008 - Referred to the Subcommittee on Health. Bill TextTo amend the Public Healt |