Showing posts with label Chemotherapy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Chemotherapy. Show all posts

Friday, August 15, 2008

Exercise is Key for Cancer Patients

This article in the NY Times discusses how fitness can be beneficial to hasten the recovery of cancer patients as well as fighting the effects of cancer such as the fatigue from chemotherapy, the loss of muscle tone, and the swelling of lymphedema.

Programs are opening up everywhere including the a new partnership between the Y.M.C.A. and the Lance Armstrong Foundation which will offer cancer fitness classes at more than 12 Y’s in 10 states. Cancer survivors are organizing their own classes at Curves International has created new routines for overweight-breast-cancer patients.

Data and research conducted by the National Cancer Institute within the past decade show that cancer patients who exercise regularly have less fatigue, better aerobic capacity, and greater strength than those who do not exercise. There are times though when patients will not be able to perform such strenuous activities, and all exercise plans should be discussed with their oncologists.

Friday, May 2, 2008

Cash Up Front Please

In a recent blog post at the Wall Street Journal Health blog, they report on a serious crisis going on in today’s hospitals: patients are being rejected if they don’t pay their medical bills up front. With the hospital industry’s debt at $31.2 billion in 2006, and rising, the hospitals have a valid reason to ask for the money up front. But most of the time, medical bills more than double a person’s income for the year. Is there a happy median for this situation?

As WSBT TV reports, Lisa Kelly was requested to pay $105,000 before she received her leukemia treatment at M.D. Anderson Cancer Center in Houston. Her insurance did not cover the full amount, and so she had to pay cash before she could even be admitted to the hospital. This hospital is now demanding billing up front instead of invoicing patients later due to the increasing amount of charity cases and those who refuse to pay their doctors bills after they’ve left the hospital.