New Study: Your bones affect your appetite and your metabolism!

New Research: Your bones affect your appetite and your metabolism!

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Your skeleton is much more than the structure supporting your muscles and other tissues, it affects your appetite and metabolism too,...

Drug industry bemoans Britain’s lack of science skills

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LONDONBritish pharmaceutical and biotechnology companies face a major skills shortage which threatens future investment and the long-term success of the life sciences sector, according to a new industry report.The Association of the British Pharmace...
Too much sleep could be bad for health, Says New Study

Too much sleep could be bad for health, Says New Study

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Why too much sleep could be bad for your health!. Researchers looking at data from 74 studies have found that sleeping longer...
British Tourists rushed to hospital with mystery ill

British Tourists rushed to hospital with mystery ill

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British tourists suddenly fall ill on New York holiday and are rushed to hospital. Dozens of British tourists were hospitalized in Washington,...

U.S. Democrats discussing fix to healthcare ‘Cadillac tax’

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WASHINGTONU.S. Democratic lawmakers are discussing proposing changes to the "Cadillac tax," a levy on high-cost employer-based healthcare plans passed as part of President Barack Obama's 2010 Affordable Care Act, the Senate's No. 2 Democrat said on Tuesday.

"I'm not proposing eliminating it at this point, I’m open to suggestions for changing it," Illinois Senator Dick Durbin told reporters.

"I don't know if it'll be done this year or next year," Durbin added. "But we're trying to figure out a way to change it or remove it and the impact it would have."

The tax got its nickname because it will apply to premium or "Cadillac" healthcare plans starting in 2018. It would be levied on employer-based coverage that exceeds the thresholds of $10,200 a year for individuals and $27,500 for families.

It was designed to rein in healthcare costs under Obama's healthcare law. Employers could avoid it by replacing expensive plans with cheaper ones.

Congressional Republicans have long sought to repeal the entire Affordable Care Act, also known as Obamacare. Democrats have generally defended the act. But the looming Cadillac tax has grown increasingly unpopular, in part because labor unions say it could encourage employers to cut back on their health insurance plans for workers.

Earlier this autumn, the Democratic front-runner for president, Hillary Clinton, broke with the Obama administration to call for a repeal of the tax. She said the estimated $87 billion in lost revenue from repeal would be offset by her healthcare reform plans.

The leading Senate Democrat, Harry Reid of Nevada, has also said he supports a fix to the Cadillac tax.

The White House on Monday defended the tax, saying it gives employers with high-cost plans an incentive to make the plans more efficient.

But speaking at a news briefing, spokesman Josh Earnest did not rule out changes to the Cadillac tax.

"This law does not take effect until 2018. So we’ll be able to evaluate exactly how it would go into effect. And if in that intervening time there are ideas that are put forward that will strengthen the law, then we’re open to a conversation about that," Earnest said.

Durbin told reporters on Tuesday that "nobody has a clue" among congressional Democrats how the $87 billion in lost revenue from the tax could be replaced.

(Reporting by Susan Cornwell; Additional reporting by Jeff Mason; Editing by Peter Cooney)

Measles Eliminated in UK, say global health leaders

Measles Eliminated in UK, say global health leaders

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Measles is eliminated in the UK and rubella is on the way out, say global health leaders. Elimination of measles or rubella...
Wanaque Center outbreak: Another child dies in virus, Report

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Wanaque Center outbreak: Another child dies in virus, Report. A child patient with respiratory illness at the Wanaque Center for Nursing and...
Poor diet deaths: What we aren't eating is killing us, global study finds

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An international investigation has revealed that people in nearly every region of the planet could benefit from rebalancing their diets. The...
Glaucoma: Tea may help ward off eye disease, study says

Glaucoma: Tea may help ward off eye disease, study says

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Drink tea to prevent glaucoma. How much you have to drink daily?. While experts say the study does not show that the...
WHO: Global population affected by dementia to triple in 30 years

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Dementia cases will triple around the world within a generation, the World Health Organisation has warned. Caring for people with dementia will...

Seattle Muslim Teen Hanging to Be Investigated by FBI as More...

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Seattle Muslim teen found hanged in woods; family seeks answers. The Seattle office of the FBI has said in a statement Thursday that it is...

Elephants’ ‘zombie gene’ protects them from cancer, says new research

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Giants fan, Saints fan – PHoto: Saints Fan Helps Disabled Giants...

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Westminster crash not thought to be terrorism, friends say

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Westminster ‘terror’ crash was an accident, suspect’s friend says. The crash outside the Houses of Parliament that sparked a terror scare was “an accident”, a...

Simon Cowell devastated by the news that his ‘Nanny Heather’

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Simon Cowell reveals his heartbreak that childhood nanny, 78, is suffering with dementia. The music mogul made an emotional phone call to the woman who...