Saturday, October 26, 2013

Danielle Jonas Shares Growing Belly and Muscles!

Staying fit while growing a new member of the family in her womb, Danielle Jonas shared photos of her exercise routine on Thursday (October 24).


The wife of Kevin Jonas hit the gym, posting a series of three pics of herself working with dumbbells under the watchful eye of her trainer.


Showing off her progress in her fitness and pregnancy, the mommy-to-be tweeted, "My belly! and my muscles getting big with Anthony Michael!!! #preggoproblems."


Back in July, the eldest JoBro and his wife announced the happy news and later revealed that they are expecting a baby girl.


Source: http://celebrity-gossip.net/danielle-deleasa/danielle-jonas-shares-growing-belly-and-muscles-949361
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Patients, firms shop for better health care deals


Paul Freeman drove 600 miles last year to save himself — and his employer — thousands of dollars on his surgery.

Freeman's insurer covered his travel costs and the entire bill because a medical center in Oklahoma City could remove the loose cartilage in his knee for about 70 percent less than a hospital closer to Freeman's Texhoma, Okla., home.

At first, the community bank CEO hesitated because he thought the lower price would mean lower quality. But he knew if he didn't make the roughly 10-hour roundtrip trek, he'd pay about $5,000 out of pocket.

"You immediately think, 'Oh they're going to take me into a butcher shop and it's going to be real scary,'" Freeman, 53, says, noting that instead he had a "wonderful experience."

People shop for deals on everything from cars to clothes to computers. Why not for health care, too?

Insurers, employers and individuals are shopping around for health care as they try to tame rising health care costs. Companies are doing things like paying for workers to travel if they agree to have a surgery performed in another city where the cost is cheaper. They're also providing online tools to help people search for better deals in their home market.

And some patients are bargain-hunting on their own. Through a website called MediBid, people who pay out of pocket are soliciting doctors, hospitals and medical centers to bid to perform knee surgeries and other non-emergency procedures.

Patients who shop for care represent a tiny slice of the roughly $2.7 trillion spent annually on health care in the U.S., said Devon Herrick, an economist who studies health care for the National Center for Policy Analysis. But he and other experts expect this trend to grow, especially as more companies offer insurance plans that require employees to pay thousands of dollars before most coverage starts. These so-called high-deductible plans also will be among the cheapest options available on the public exchanges set up as part of the health care overhaul to enable millions of uninsured people to shop for coverage.

Advocates say all the shopping will help control medical spending.

"We waste an enormous amount of money in this country by overpaying for health care," says John Goodman, an economist and CEO of the National Center for Policy Analysis. "The only way to get rid of waste is to have people compete in a real marketplace."

Searching for health care deals is a big change for many patients who're used to paying whatever their insurer didn't. Just figuring out an appropriate price for a procedure can be difficult for the average person.

Surgeries and other major procedures have different prices based on a variety of factors, including whether it's performed in a big city where care can cost more or in a hospital. And the portion that patients pay can vary widely. A lot depends on the type of insurance coverage and other factors like the leverage a provider has in negotiating rates.

For instance, a patient in Detroit with high-deductible health coverage provided by an employer could pay $920 or $2,791 out of pocket for a colonoscopy, according to research done by health care technology firm Castlight Health. Same patient. Same insurance coverage. Only difference: Where the procedure is performed.

"You can be a highly educated consumer now and still not understand what bill is going to hit you," says Dr. Giovanni Colella, CEO of Castlight, which designs an application that insurers or employers can give to patients to help them shop for health care based on price and quality.

It's also tough for patients to measure quality versus price. "You may find something (more expensive), but it doesn't mean it's better, safer, or more efficient," says Arthur Caplan, a medical ethicist at NYU Langone Medical Center.

Insurers and employers are encouraging workers to become more educated. They say quality is a priority when they ask patients if they want a better deal.

Wal-Mart Stores Inc., the largest private U.S. employer, provides health coverage for 1.1 million employees and their dependents. It runs a voluntary Centers of Excellence program that sends people to one of six hospital systems around the U.S. for certain heart, spine and transplant surgeries at no cost to the patient.

Wal-Mart spokesman Randy Hargrove says the program can save a patient between $5,000 and $10,000 in out-of-pocket costs, depending on their coverage. He says so far, dozens of patients have used the program that includes care providers at nationally-recognized places such as the Mayo Clinic.

The retailer also recently said it would start offering no-cost knee and hip replacement surgeries for employees who travel to one of four U.S. hospital systems. Wal-Mart is doing this through a national Employers Centers of Excellence Network that it joined with other big companies like the home improvement chain Lowe's.

Premera Blue Cross Blue Shield, Alaska's biggest health insurer, started a program in January that will pay expenses for some of its members to fly to Seattle for some procedures that come with huge price breaks. For instance, a knee surgery that costs $27,100 in Alaska can be performed for $13,000 in Seattle, according to the insurer.

A Premera spokesman says only a couple of people have used the program so far, but the insurer expects use to pick up as it includes more members next year.

Some patients are deal-hunting on their own. The website Medibid, which launched in 2010, connects patients who are paying out of pocket with doctors who bid to provide care. The website's founders say they've helped about 1,800 people find care.

Patients register with the site and pay either $25 per request or $4.95 a month for a year so they can post their medical needs on the site to solicit bids. Care providers, who register and pay fees of either $24.90 per month or about $250 annually, respond to patients with a bid.

Tess St. Clair, Medibid's chief operating officer, says the site helps people weigh their health care options: "The hardest thing for an American to do is ask the question, 'How much will this cost?' and get an answer."

Dr. Keith Smith, with the Surgery Center of Oklahoma, bids often on Medibid requests. Smith says his physician-owned center can offer better rates than some competitors because it doesn't charge a high facility fee like many hospitals do. The center competes on price and cuts out insurers.

Smith says this approach forces it to offer good care: The center cannot hide in an insurer's network and continue to receive patients regardless of the job it does.

"If we started cutting corners and worrying about our pocketbook before doing the right thing, we're going to lose our business," he says.

Rick Matthews, a motivational speaker, saved money on his hernia surgery last year by putting it up for bid on Medibid and having the procedure at Surgery Center of Oklahoma. Matthews, 62, decided to use Medibid after he learned that the care would cost about $20,000 without insurance at a hospital close to his Milaca, Minn., home.

Matthews pays for health care through a Christian cost-sharing ministry in which members chip in to help cover medical bills. He didn't want to stick them with a big bill. A doctor on Medibid said the surgery would cost about $3,600, including removing a cyst on his knuckle.

Counting costs for the roughly 1,400-plus mile roundtrip drive, Matthews figures the cost was about $4,500 — less than a quarter of the original estimate.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/patients-firms-shop-better-health-care-deals-173653959--finance.html
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Arcade Fire's Takes A Dancey Turn Down A Well-Trod Path


With a new record, the band Arcade Fire is trying to top their 2011 release, which won a Grammy for Album of the Year. Critic Will Hermes says that on Reflektor, they turn to dance music to try to reinvigorate their sound.



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MELISSA BLOCK, HOST:


The Canadian rock band Arcade Fire released their first record "Funeral" back in 2004 on a small independent label. But these days there's nothing small about them. Their third record, "The Suburbs," won a Grammy and the band's upcoming fourth album is one of the most anticipated releases of the year. It's after a much hyped appearance on "Saturday Night Live" and a half hour special on NBC. Will Hermes has this review of "Reflektor."


(SOUNDBITE OF MUSIC)


WILL HERMES: Arcade Fire may have won an album-of-the-year Grammy for "The Suburbs," but that record struck me as kind of short on fresh ideas. This time they did what David Bowie, The Clash, Talking Heads and so many rock acts before them have done to reinvigorate their sound. They turned to dance music.


(SOUNDBITE OF MUSIC)


HERMES: This is always a dicey strategy for rock bands, given the tribal rift that dates back to the rock versus disco battles of the 1970s. But wisely, Arcade Fire enlisted as co-producer James Murphy of LCD Soundsystem, a guy who's done more to bridge rock and dance music than anyone in the 21st century. And the band shuffles through all sorts of danceable rock tropes like on "Joan of Arc," which mixes punk and glam rock stadium stomp.


(SOUNDBITE OF SONG, "JOAN OF ARC")


ARCADE FIRE: (Singing) They're the ones that spit on you, 'cause they got no heart. I'm the one that will follow you, you're my Joan of Arc. Joan of Arc.


HERMES: My favorite tracks draw on Haitian and Jamaican music like this one, "Here Comes the Nighttime."


(SOUNDBITE OF SONG, "HERE COMES THE NIGHTTIME")


FIRE: (Singing) Here's comes the night. Here comes the night, the night, the night time. Now the preachers they talk of (unintelligible). If you're looking for hell, just try looking inside.


HERMES: I'd like to hear the band go further with that Caribbean fusions. But "Reflektor's" really engaging, all 76 minutes of it. Unlike much dance music, the lyrics, which often address the vacancy of online culture, are actually worth unpacking. And when I saw Arcade Fire play some of these songs in a packed Brooklyn warehouse last week, it showed that good dance music, when used as intended, is a very effective cure for digital alienation. When you're fully shaking it in a room full of sweaty, good looking people, staring at your phone just seems stupid.


(SOUNDBITE OF SONG, "AFTERLIFE")


FIRE: (Singing) And after all the hangers-on are done hanging on to the dead lights of the afterglow. I've gotta know. Can we work it out? We scream and shout 'till we work it out.


BLOCK: The new album from Arcade Fire is "Reflektor." And you can hear the interview with the band on Monday on MORNING EDITION. Our critic Will Hermes is author of the book, "Love Goes To Buildings On Fire."


(SOUNDBITE OF SONG, "AFTERLIFE")


FIRE: (Singing) 'Till we work it out. 'Till we work it out. 'Till we work it out. Afterlife. I think I saw...


AUDIE CORNISH, HOST:


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(SOUNDBITE OF MUSIC)


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New Cable Channels Try To Lure Millennials Back To TV




Audio for this story from Morning Edition will be available at approximately 9:00 a.m. ET.



 



Three brand-new cable channels all share exactly the same problem: How do you wrench the eyeballs of 20-somethings away from their gadgets and toward old-fashioned regular TV?


Source: http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=238899516&ft=1&f=
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Poll: Congress, tea party take hits from government shutdown (cbsnews)

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Sentencing for Ohio fatal DUI crash confessor

In this Tuesday, Sept. 11, 2013 photo, Matthew Cordle enters court for his arraignment on a charge of aggravated vehicular homicide in Columbus, Ohio. Attorneys are seeking a reduced sentence for Cordle, who confessed in an online video to causing a fatal wrong-way crash after a night of drinking. (AP Photo/Mike Munden)







In this Tuesday, Sept. 11, 2013 photo, Matthew Cordle enters court for his arraignment on a charge of aggravated vehicular homicide in Columbus, Ohio. Attorneys are seeking a reduced sentence for Cordle, who confessed in an online video to causing a fatal wrong-way crash after a night of drinking. (AP Photo/Mike Munden)







(AP) — A sentencing hearing for a 22-year-old Ohio man who caused a fatal crash after a night of heavy drinking has begun with a video of him confessing being played in court.

Matthew Cordle faces up to eight years in prison for the June crash that killed 61-year-old Vincent Canzani.

Cordle confessed to the crime in an online video that went viral.

During Wednesday's hearing, the judge read a letter from Canzini's ex-wife who said she believed he wouldn't have wanted a maximum sentence. She said she believes Cordle will keep his promises never to drink and drive again

His daughter asked for the maximum sentence, saying her father "got a death sentence and did nothing wrong."

Cordle's father told Canzani's family that his heart was filled with sorrow at their loss and he hopes someday they can forgive his son.

Associated PressSource: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2013-10-23-Video%20Confession-Car%20Accident/id-e5aea1d79f4d4bc692465a8015017e30
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Pharrell Says That Beyoncé’s New Album Is Almost Finished



But ...





Yesterday we learned from a record executive that Beyoncé MAY be releasing her new album in December but today we hear something more concrete from songwriter/producer Pharrell Williams, who has direct knowledge of Bey‘s new album. According to Pharrell, Bey is almost finished with her album but he gives no hint WHATSOEVER that she is ready to release her new album by year’s end. According to Pharrell, Beyoncé will not be releasing her album until she feels it’s ready for release so … we wait with bated breath. Click below to read Pharrell‘s comments on Bey‘s album and get excited nonetheless.




Pharrell Williams has said the new Beyoncé album he’s working on is almost finished. The producer and Daft Punk collaborator says the singer’s new material is “crazy” but added that she won’t put out any music until she is absolutely happy with it. “B’s album is crazy,” he told Billboard. “Let me tell you what it is. She’s very particular. She’s a Virgo. And she’s not going to put it out until it’s ready and feels like it’s right to her.” “She’s got a very specific taste,” he continued. “I guess that’s the reason she’s Beyoncé. Her name is recognisable around the globe and that’s huge. That comes from someone that has very particular taste. When you know what you want, you won’t stop until you get it. [Other people are hearing her album] and are like ‘Whoa!’ And she’s like, ‘Yeah, I’m almost done.’ And she’s the queen.”



SO … this doesn’t entirely dash our hopes for a December release date but … I’m guessing we shouldn’t hold our breaths just based on what that Columbia Records exec said yesterday. My guess is that the record company REALLY wants Beyoncé to release this year (in time for the holiday shopping season) but she’s gonna do what she’s gonna do. That said, if she’s “almost done” then there is still time for it to be completely done and in stores by December, right? Lord, I hope so. I am dying for a new Beyoncé album so … BEY, YOU BETTA WORK, B!


[Source]





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