Here are some of the latest health and medical news developments, compiled by the editors of HealthDay:
More Than 11 Million Signed Up For Subsidized Health Coverage: White House
A preliminary estimate shows that 11.4 million Americans signed up for subsidized private health insurance this year under the Affordable Care Act, the White House said Tuesday evening.
The final number could be higher because federal officials have given an extension to people who started their applications but couldn’t finish them before last Sunday’s deadline. The new deadline for these people is Sunday, Feb. 22, the Associated Press reported.
In addition, Democrats want President Barack Obama to give uninsured people facing tax penalties a second chance to sign up for health insurance.
The final number could be lower if people who enrolled for coverage this year fail to pay their share of premiums, the AP reported.
Last year, 8 million people signed up, but only 6.7 million were still in the program by fall. Some of those who left the program found other coverage, such as through a job.
“The Affordable Care Act is working,” Obama said in a video released by the White House. “It’s working a little better than we anticipated. Certainly, I think, working a lot better than many of the critics talked about early on.”
However, there are still legal hurdles. Early next month, the Supreme Court will hear a case from plaintiffs who claim the literal text of the health care law only permits the federal government to offer subsidies in states that have created their own insurance markets. Most states have not done that, the AP reported.
If the court rules against the federal government, millions of people would lose their subsidies, and most of those would cancel their insurance plans.
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Breast Milk Consumption Growing Trend Among Body Builders
Some bodybuilders are drinking human breast milk in the mistaken belief it will give a boost to their muscles.
There are dozens of online forums and articles about this growing trend, and some online breast milk banks are paying women up to $1,200 a month for selling extra breast milk, according to ABC News.
Experts are concerned.
“I would discourage anyone from purchasing breast milk from those untrusted sources,” said pediatrician Dr. Lana Gagin, ABC News reported. “The way this milk is stored and processed is not always safe.”
“There is nothing in breast milk that can be of benefit to a healthy adult or there is nothing in breast milk that would enhance your physical performance,” Gagin noted.
Breast milk isn’t “harmful” to adults, but there is no evidence that demonstrates the benefits of adults consuming human milk, said registered nurse Emily Pease, ABC News reported.
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Babies of Teen Fathers at Greater Risk for Genetic Defects: Study
Teen fathers pass along six times as many genetic mutations to their children as teen mothers, according to a new study.
Researchers analyzed DNA from more than 24,000 parents and their children and found that children born to fathers 20 or younger had many more mutations than those born to older fathers and to teen mothers and adult fathers, NBC News reported.
The results may help explain why children of very young parents are much more likely to have genetic defects than those of older parents, according to study leader Dr. Peter Forster of the University of Cambridge in England and the Institute for Forensic Genetics in Munster, Germany.
There may be something wrong with the sperm of boys and younger men, Forster told NBC News.
The study was published in the journal Proceedings of the Royal Society B.
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