Saturday, June 30, 2012

Cruise's marriages all ended when wife was 33

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Nicole Kidman, Katie Holmes and Mimi Rogers were all 33 when their marriages to Cruise ended.

By Gael Fashingbauer Cooper

Soon after news broke about Tom Cruise and Katie Holmes' plans to divorce, fans noted a weird coincidence. All of Cruise's three marriages broke up when his wife at the time was 33, and ended when she was 34.

Cruise's first wife was Mimi Rogers, who was 31 when she wed 25-year-old Cruise in May 1987 and 33 when they broke up in 1990.

Cruise then married?Nicole Kidman, 23, in December of 1990, and then separated in 2001, when Kidman was 33.

Holmes,?28,?and Cruise wed in 2006, seven months after daughter Suri was born. And when word came Friday that Holmes had filed for divorce, those with a sense of Cruise history noted that Holmes was also 33.

Divorces, in each case, came when the woman in question had turned 34 (or so we assume with Holmes, who will turn 34 in December).

The coincidence didn't go unnoticed on social media, where no weird fact is too small to escape notice.

"How weird is it that Tom Cruise's three failed marriages have all ended while the women were 34?"?tweeted Karen D'Souza. Others tried to find a connection between the number 33 and Cruise's well-publicized Scientology faith.

And others had fun with a different numerical aspect of the Cruise-Holmes marriage. Wrote Adolf McGough, "Shoutout to Katie Holmes and Tom Cruise. Your marriage lasted 28.47 Kim Kardashian and Kris Humphries marriages."

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Source: http://todayentertainment.today.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2012/06/29/12485327-all-three-of-tom-cruises-marriages-ended-when-wife-was-33?lite

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Americans react to historic health care decision

FILE - In this Setp. 22, 2010, file photo Jerry and Becky Morefield enjoy some time together with their 15-year-old triplets with cerebral palsy in Mahomet, Ill. The children are from left to right, Tucker, Taylor and Tanner. Tucker, the frailest child, died earlier this year. His mother says that thanks to the health care law?s ban on lifetime limits for medical expenses he was able to die peacefully at home with private health insurance covering his care. (AP Photo/Seth Perlman, File)

FILE - In this Setp. 22, 2010, file photo Jerry and Becky Morefield enjoy some time together with their 15-year-old triplets with cerebral palsy in Mahomet, Ill. The children are from left to right, Tucker, Taylor and Tanner. Tucker, the frailest child, died earlier this year. His mother says that thanks to the health care law?s ban on lifetime limits for medical expenses he was able to die peacefully at home with private health insurance covering his care. (AP Photo/Seth Perlman, File)

In this photo taken June 11, 2012, Jim Schreiber, 26, is seen at the offices of Runa in New York. Schreiber is responsible for choosing the company's health insurance plan at Runa, a small tea importing company with seven employees. (AP Photo/Kathy Willens)

FILE - In this March 12, 2012, file photo, Samantha Ames of Washington, poses for a portrait at her home in Washington (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin, File)

FILE - In this Sept. 22, 2010, file photo, Jerry Morefield enjoys some time together with Tucker, one of his triplets with cerebral palsy in Mahomet, Ill. Tucker, the frailest child, died earlier this year. His mother says that thanks to the health care law?s ban on lifetime limits for medical expenses he was able to die peacefully at home with private health insurance covering his care. (AP Photo/Seth Perlman, File)

FILE - In this Sept. 22, 2010, file photo, Jerry and Becky Morefield enjoy some time together with their triplets with cerebral palsy in Mahomet, Ill. The children are from left to right, Tucker, Taylor and Tanner. Tucker, the frailest child, died earlier this year. His mother says that thanks to the health care law?s ban on lifetime limits for medical expenses he was able to die peacefully at home with private health insurance covering his care. (AP Photo/Seth Perlman, File)

(AP) ? The mother of two disabled teens called Thursday's Supreme Court ruling on the health care law wonderful because it bars insurance companies from setting lifetime limits for medical expenses ? a big help to her family.

But a retiree on Medicare called it a "sad day" and worries that the law's new rules coming in 2015 will interfere with treatments doctors can provide.

Across the country, some Americans haven't been dramatically affected yet by the law, which will take a few years to reach full force. But many others say they have felt its effects already and have strong opinions about it.

___

Name: Becky Morefield

Home: Mahomet, Ill.

Age: 51

Occupation: Stay-at-home mom of two disabled teenagers

Insurance coverage: Private insurance through husband's employer

As Morefield sees it, the health law allowed her son Tucker to die peacefully at home with private health insurance covering his care.

Tucker, one of three triplets with cerebral palsy, was always the most fragile of the siblings, Morefield said. Five years ago, he maxed out the $1 million lifetime limit in his family's policy when he went into respiratory failure and was hospitalized for 12 weeks.

Hitting the lifetime limit meant the insurance company would no longer pay Tucker's medical bills. The state of Illinois picked up the slack through a program for children with special health care needs. But the program put strict limits on certain medical supplies, leading the family to wash and reuse equipment meant for single use.

Tucker's coverage was reinstated in 2011 because the health care law barred lifetime dollar limits on coverage. He lived another 15 months covered by private insurance. At the end, he had doctor visits at home, oxygen and enough pain medication ? all care that Morefield said would have been restricted under the state program.

"It was a blessing for us," Morefield said. "People who've not had the ongoing medical things we've had don't understand."

Morefield reacted to the Supreme Court decision on Thursday, her birthday, with joy. She called it a great gift that will grant her and her husband peace of mind.

"It's wonderful," she said.

___

Name: Margo Criscuola

Home: Chicago

Age: 66

Occupation: Education consultant

Insurance coverage: Medicare

Criscuola is worried that a controversial board created by President Barack Obama's health overhaul will ration health care and also dictate treatments to doctors. She has family members with a rare genetic condition that she said requires experimental therapies.

"I was listening to the radio this morning and heard the news. I think it's a very sad day for this country, for our medical industry and for our health in this country," Criscuola said.

"If you have a law that requires doctors' treatments to be approved on the basis of their general effectiveness and doctors are not permitted to experiment with other kinds of approaches, that makes it very difficult for special diseases like these to be treated."

The board, called the Independent Payment Advisory Board, is meant to hold down Medicare costs, beginning in 2015. Republicans are targeting the provision for repeal. Criscuola fears the board's influence will go beyond Medicare and permeate the health care system. The White House has said the board is crucial to holding down costs and is barred by the law from rationing care.

The law also encourages a payment model for hospitals, insurers and doctors called "accountable care organizations," which Criscuola believes also will limit doctors' choices in treating patients.

Criscuola has benefited from a provision in the health care law that provides free annual wellness exams to people with Medicare.

"Do I use it? Yeah. Is the benefit I receive from it more than if I had kept the money I paid into Social Security and Medicare payroll taxes and invested it myself? No. It's considerably less," she said. "Will it be around in 15, 20 years? Probably not."

___

Name: Bev Veals

Home: Near Wilmington, N.C.

Age: 48

Occupation: Stay-at-home mom of a 17-year-old and a 20-year-old

Insurance coverage: Coverage under the new law for people with pre-existing conditions

On Thursday morning, waiting for the news, Veals was watching CNN, which initially reported incorrectly that the law had been overturned. She was tense with worry that she would lose her coverage.

"I'm totally, absolutely right now dazed because they first, initially said it had been overturned," Veals said. "I'm sitting here gasping for breath. ... Now they're saying it's being upheld." She added: "It's a relief."

The expense of her breast cancer treatments led to bankruptcy and foreclosure for her family over a horrific 10-year period. Finally, it cost so much that she could no longer afford health insurance. She and her self-employed husband decided to drop her from the family's insurance plan four years ago to reduce their monthly premiums from $1,700 to $400 a month.

She spent the next 27 months uninsured. Then in 2011 she signed up for insurance made possible by the new law. The program helps people who have been turned away by insurance companies because of pre-existing medical conditions. She now pays $377 a month for her insurance with a $1,000 deductible, meaning she pays that much out of pocket before the coverage starts.

"It has only been a little over a year for me, but I can't tell you the dignity being covered brings," Veals said. "My biggest fear was I would have to beg for help to cover medical bills. Panhandling to pay a doctor's bill ... not my idea of the American Dream."

Though raised as a Republican, Veals said her politics are changing.

"As a conservative, I believed if you can't make your way, you don't get your way. Now I've cost more medically than I will ever be able to make. I've changed my political stance because of this," she said. "It doesn't do our economy any good when we have so many people having to file for medical bankruptcy."

___

Name: Carlton Grimmett

Home: Atlanta

Age: 43

Employment: Night security guard at upscale apartment complex

Coverage: Uninsured

Two years ago, Grimmett had a job with good insurance and a wife with diabetes and other health problems. But then his job, doing plumbing and HVAC work at an Atlanta university, was outsourced and he no longer could cover his wife's medical bills.

His wife had to stop going to the private doctors she was seeing, and her husband tried to get her into care elsewhere. But at other facilities, they encountered paperwork, delays and foot dragging, he said. Her health deteriorated.

"When you don't have insurance, they treat you different," he said.

In January 2011, Mary Grimmett started struggling to breathe and was rushed to Grady Memorial, Atlanta's safety net hospital. She qualified for a program that provides discounted and even free care to uninsured people who qualify. But by that time she had pneumonia as well as a broken ankle that needed surgery and was very sick.

She spent two weeks in the hospital and then died of congestive heart failure ? a complication of her other illnesses. She was 39.

Today, Grimmett has a job, making $25,000 a year, but still has no insurance. Under the new health care law, he will be eligible for a government tax credit to help with the cost of buying private health insurance.

That would reduce his estimated annual premiums for health coverage from $5,054 to $1,726.

He is healthy, but the loss of his wife was a tragic lesson in the importance of coverage, he said. When he heard about the Supreme Court ruling from others at a nonprofit where he was volunteering, he said he felt grateful to Obama for helping the poor.

"He's listening to the voice of Jehovah God," he said. He added: "I'm grateful for the hope and opportunity to have health insurance, not just myself but all people who can't afford health insurance. It's a great thing that has taken place today."

___

Name: Jim Schreiber

Home: New York City

Age: 26

Occupation: Works for small beverage business

Insurance coverage: Private insurance through his employer

Schreiber's young and healthy, but still had reason to worry about the Supreme Court decision. He works for a small business and is responsible for switching the company to a new health insurance plan. He has found a plan at a reasonable price, but that price won't be locked in until August.

Early Thursday, he was concerned that the price would jump with a confusing decision on the health care law, or if the court overturned it. Like many other Americans, he saw contradictory news reports about the ruling and "my heart dropped."

He repeatedly refreshed the Web pages on his computer screen and, finally, when the ruling became clear, "it was a relief."

The company is among the 30 percent of businesses with fewer than 10 employees that offer health coverage. Small businesses often pay more for insurance than large companies.

Schreiber is hoping his company can qualify for a tax credit made available by the health care law for small businesses that provide health insurance. The tax credit is one of the most popular ideas in the health law, according to polls.

___

Name: Samantha Ames

Home: Washington, D.C.

Age: 25

Occupation: Recent law school graduate

Insurance coverage: Got back on parents' insurance, thanks to the health care law

When Ames woke up from ankle surgery, her doctor said her ligament had been in worse shape than he previously thought from previous sports injuries.

"He told me if I had injured it once more, it would likely have torn apart entirely," Ames said. "I may never have fully regained my ability to walk. It's only because I was able to get the operation when I did that I was spared a much more severe, painful and lasting injury."

Ames was able to have the $30,000 surgery because she was covered by her parents' insurance, thanks to a provision in the health care law that lets young adults keep that coverage until they turn 26. Nationally, an additional 3.1 million young people are covered as a result.

She is uncertain whether she will have a job that provides insurance when she turns 26 in October.

But "I'm so relieved I did not just lose my health insurance today," she said.

___

AP Medical Writer Mike Stobbe contributed from Atlanta.

___

AP Medical Writer Carla K. Johnson can be reached at http://www.twitter.com/CarlaKJohnson

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/bbd825583c8542898e6fa7d440b9febc/Article_2012-06-28-Supreme%20Court-Health%20Care-Ordinary%20Americans/id-38eb3ce3660c434f9c026e7b21a94fc8

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Friday, June 29, 2012

Full body massage NYC ? Beauty, Health and Fitness

Touch is very vital for living a healthy life. Humans need touch. A touch can soothe and relieve you of stress and depression. A full body massage NYC can do more than just soothe one?s senses. Massage by a professional massage therapist will help in keeping the muscles active and well-nourished so that they are nimble and responsive at times of stress. It also improves blood-circulation which can in turn, aid in healing and thus improve your general health. A full body massage also benefits the lymphatic system which handles one?s immunity. Regular sessions will make you supple and energetic and also guarantee a glowing skin.

Full body massage NYC is the answer to many health problems of the modern lifestyle. A trained masseuse can guarantee you a solution for health issues like sleep problems, tired eyes, sinus problems, headaches, and concentration problems. They also have solutions for workplace fatigue, tension and posture problems. Do you have tight shoulders? Are strained eyes troubling you? Are your tired feet slowing you down? Full body massage NYC has the answers for all your troubles.

A full body massage in New York may cost you anywhere from $20 to $150 or more depending on the duration of the therapy. The experience of the full body massage in NYC, by a trained masseuse is indeed worth every penny. As you reach the therapist?s office, you will be guided to your own private space. The masseuse may use a variety of aromatic oils to ease your muscles and senses. These oils will not only aid in the massage but also seep into your skin and nourish it to give a glowing and youthful appearance. The therapist may start at the feet soothing the tired muscles through a series of strokes and pressure applied at the right spots. They will work each of your toes individually and stretch them back and forth and make them nimble and relaxed. They will work their way up your legs, hips and your lower back relaxing and rejuvenating the muscles as they go. As they reach your lower back, they will apply gentle pressure with their thumbs into the muscles at either side of the spine so as to release the stiff muscles. They will relax the tight shoulder muscles as they work their way up to your neck. They take unique maneuvers along your arms and hands and relax the fatigued muscles. A skilled masseuse or masseur can ease headaches and tension by using techniques like applying gentle pressure on your cheekbones, temples and around your hairline. They have special techniques to relieve tired eyes. With gentle pressure, they will rub their way from under the eyebrow near the eye socket towards the bridge of the nose in tiny circular motions. The masseuses and masseurs skilled in the full body massage in NYC will usually start at the feet, and work their way through your back, shoulders, arms, hands and neck, finishing at your head.

There are different methods or techniques applied in the full body massage NYC. You may experience different degrees of pressure, stroking and movements depending on the method of massage you choose. It is very important to choose a masseur or masseuse for an effective full body massage NYC.? A massage therapist has to undergo rigorous training and has to be well-informed about the systems of the body and how they function together. They are experts in application of pressure and stroking techniques to different parts of the body in order to boost circulation and to loosen muscles without causing any injury to the client.

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Source: http://www.akcesoria-kosmetyczne.pl/skin-care/full-body-massage-nyc-3/

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Israel holds beauty pageant for Holocaust survivors

JERUSALEM, June 29 (Reuters) - A beauty contest for Holocaust survivors stirred deep emotions in Israel on Friday, with organisers hailing it an affirmation of life and detractors calling it a macabre spectacle.

Fourteen women who survived the Nazi genocide took the pageant stage before a packed hall in the city of Haifa. Each of the contestants shared a bit of their personal stories before the capacity crowd.

The event touched a raw nerve with some Israelis who saw it as cheapening the memory of the 6 million Jews killed in the Holocaust during World War Two.

Others said it was a self-image boost for aging survivors, some of whom have fallen into poverty.

Shimon Sabag, director of Helping Hand, a private group that aids thousands of the estimated 200,000 Holocaust survivors living in Israel, said the contest held on Thursday had been so successful he may hold a similar event next year.

"There were 1,000 survivors there who enjoyed the event," Sabag told Reuters. "People don't have to see Holocaust survivors mainly as a group of wheelchair-bound victims."

Former Israeli lawmaker Colette Avital, who heads a survivors' organisation, was quoted by local media as denouncing the competition as "macabre".

The contest winner, silver-haired Romanian-born Hava Hershkovitz, 79, regaled with a blue and white sash as a tiara was placed on her head. She said the victory was "her revenge, showing how despite the horrors her family went through, her beauty and personality have endured," according to Shabag.

"We should never forgive and forget what they went through, but I find this a very constructive way to show these people remain beautiful," he added.

Hershkovitz, one of hundreds of survivors in an assisted living facility sponsored by Sabag's group, won a family weekend at a resort and all 100 contestants were issued with electronic distress buttons.

(Writing by Allyn Fisher-Ilan; Editing by Jon Boyle)

? 2011 Reuters

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Source: http://feeds.vision.org/~r/NewsFromReuters/~3/r9-hIISQAyc/article.aspx

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Wednesday, June 27, 2012

Home prices rise in nearly all major US cities

FILE-In this April 26, 2012, file photo, a sign advertises a pending residential real estate sale in Framingham, Mass. Home prices rose in nearly all major U.S. cities in April from March, further evidence that the housing market is slowly improving even while the job market slumps. (AP Photo/Bill Sikes)

FILE-In this April 26, 2012, file photo, a sign advertises a pending residential real estate sale in Framingham, Mass. Home prices rose in nearly all major U.S. cities in April from March, further evidence that the housing market is slowly improving even while the job market slumps. (AP Photo/Bill Sikes)

(AP) ? Home prices rose in nearly all major U.S. cities in April from March, further evidence of a housing market that is slowly improving even while the job market slumps.

The Standard & Poor's/Case-Shiller home price index released Tuesday showed increases in 19 of the 20 cities tracked. That's the second straight month that prices have risen in a majority of U.S. cities.

And a measure of national prices rose 1.3 percent in April from March, the first increase in seven months.

San Francisco, Washington and Phoenix posted the biggest increases in April. Prices fell 3.6 percent in Detroit, the only city to record a drop.

The month-to-month prices aren't adjusted for seasonal factors. Still, prices in half of the cities are up over the past 12 months.

Prices are increasing as the housing market has slowly started to recover. Sales of new and previously occupied homes are up over the past year, in part because mortgage rates have plunged to the lowest levels on record. Builders are more confident and are starting to build more homes.

Consistent prices increases benefit the broader economy. Homeowners feel wealthier, encouraging them to spend more. Rising prices also encourage more Americans to buy homes because they are more confident that their investment will appreciate over time.

"If you are no longer quite so afraid that prices are going to fall, you are more likely to buy," said Pierre Ellis, a senior economist at Decision Economics.

Major homebuilder stock prices rose sharply Tuesday after the home price index was released. PulteGroup jumped more than 5 percent, Lennar and Toll Brothers increased more than 4 percent and D.R. Horton gained more than 3 percent.

The S&P/Case-Shiller monthly index covers roughly half of U.S. homes. It measures prices compared with those in January 2000 and creates a three-month moving average. The April figures are the latest available.

Even with the gains, the index is 34 percent below its peak reached in the summer of 2006, at the height of the housing boom. Based on the 20-city index, home prices are now at about the same level as in early 2003.

And prices continue to fall in some hard-hit areas. Prices in Atlanta have plunged 17 percent over the past 12 months, the biggest year-over-year drop.

The largest gain was in Phoenix, where prices rose 8.6 percent in that stretch.

The weaker markets continue to weigh on national prices. A measure of prices for all 20 cities fell 1.9 percent over the 12 months that ended in April.

Still, other measures show home prices have risen nationally during that period. CoreLogic, a private firm, calculates that prices rose 1.1 percent nationally in those 12 months. The Federal Housing Finance Agency, which oversees mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, says prices have increased 3 percent in that time.

Recent data indicate that the housing market has started to recover more than five years after the bubble burst.

Greater interest from buyers is boosting builder confidence. In May, builders requested the highest number of permits to build homes and apartments in three and a half years.

The supply of homes for sale remains extremely low, which has helped stabilize prices. The inventory of previously occupied homes is back down to levels last seen in 2006. And there were 145,000 new homes for sale in May. That's only slightly higher than in April, which was the lowest supply on records dating back to 1963.

Despite the modest gains in housing, the broader economy has weakened in recent months. Employers have added an average of only 73,000 jobs a month in April and May. That's much lower than the average of 226,000 added in the first three months of this year. Some economists worry that the sluggish job market could weigh on home sales just as the housing market is flashing signs of recovery.

Associated Press

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Supreme Court Union Ruling, Knox v. SEIU, Could Cut Back Labor's Political Speech

WASHINGTON -- The ability of organized labor to spend money on political issues recently took a hit from the Supreme Court.

The case, Knox v. Service Employees International Union, Local 1000, asked whether a local union needed to send out a notice before deducting certain fees from the paychecks of non-union members covered by SEIU-negotiated contracts. The fees in question constituted a "special assessment" to help challenge two California state ballot referendums in 2005. In a 7-2 ruling, the court on June 21 concluded that the public sector union did not give proper notice to non-union members before making the deductions.

But in a tighter 5-4 opinion -- one that has received relatively little attention in the midst of the Obamacare frenzy -- the court went above and beyond that question to address a larger issue of political spending by unions.

With Justice Samuel Alito writing the opinion, the court concluded that a longstanding precedent -- that the First Amendment demands that non-union members covered by union contracts be given the chance to "opt out" of such special fees -- was insufficient. Instead, the majority said, non-members should be sent a notice giving them the chance to "opt in" to the special fees.

The ruling appears to be the first significant limit on union political spending since the high court opened the floodgates with its 2010 Citizens United decision, allowing for unlimited electoral spending by unions and corporations. Knox v. SEIU could lay the foundation for future legal challenges over unions' political spending and the dues collection process in general.

"The court's opinion makes clear its displeasure with 60 years of precedent on the dues issue, which have placed the burden on employees who object [to political spending] to opt out," said William Gould, who from 1994 to 1998 chaired the National Labor Relations Board, the federal agency that governs labor relations in the private sector. "This decision is an invitation to litigate this issue."

Although the Knox case involved special assessments on non-union members, Gould said, the Supreme Court?s reasoning suggests that it could be applied to all union dues that fund political spending paid by non-members. The next time that a union goes through the standard process of notifying non-members they have the ability to opt out, the union may well be met with a legal challenge, warned Gould. "[This decision] indicates that if these five [justices] are there when these cases come back to the Court, that the Court will decide these cases adversely to unions," he said.

That thought has the National Right to Work Legal Defense Foundation, which represented the plaintiffs in the case, and similar groups celebrating -- and labor advocates fearing the worst.

Patrick Semmens, vice president of the foundation, said via email that while some justices have used similar language in the past, the Knox decision confirms that now a majority believe "compulsory unionism" is a violation of First Amendment rights.

"Predicting the Supreme Court's next step can be tricky, but we're certainly hopeful that Knox will open the door to cutting away more of Big Labor's power to coerce nonmember employees to pay money to a union they don't want and didn't ask for," said Semmens.

SEIU Secretary-Treasurer Eliseo Medina said that the potential shift to an opt-in system could make "everything more complicated," but that such a transition was "do-able." He was more concerned that the court?s ruling might give momentum to what he sees as an anti-labor agenda being pursued in several states.

"It's gonna give the [Wisconsin Gov.] Scott Walkers of the world, the [Ohio Gov.] John Kasichs of the world, an implicit green light to continue with attacks on working people," Medina said. "It's going to create more litigation, it's going to create more fights in the states, because these governors in these states are interested in prosecuting an ideological war against workers."

Medina said he was also frustrated by what some labor advocates are calling the Supreme Court's double standard when it comes to political speech in the wake of Citizens United.

"There is nothing in this [Knox] decision that even speaks to the question of shareholders, or corporations having to tell shareholders about any of the contributions they make," Medina said, calling the ruling politically motivated. "The language, to me, signals what has been the rightward drift of the Supreme Court ? Now they've come up with a decision to make it more difficult for workers to be able to effectively participate in the [political] process."

Carrie Biggs-Adams, a staff representative at the Communications Workers of America, also blasted the ruling as a "complete double standard."

"They're trying to find ways to make it harder and harder for us to exist," she said.

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Tuesday, June 26, 2012

VatorNews - Healthtech is taking off as the must-fund sector

Summer swimsuit season is upon us and a lot of people are trying to get their health back on track, even the high and consumer tech business sectors.?

A new report by healthcare accelerator Rock Health gathered all the digital health companies, that received at least $2 million in investments, and found that those deals are up 73% compared to last year. In total,$675 million in digital health investments occurred in the first six months of this year, compared to $390 million at this point last year.

Throughout 2011, 92 companies collected at least $2 million in investment, as so far this year, the industry is already at 68 deals, once you add in the deal that went through last week for Valence Health to the tune of $30 million.

The report found that four segments of digital health have gotten the most attention: physician tools, sensors, home health and data/analytics.?

And the clear earner in investments is that fourth segment, with health juggernaut Castlight Health, which helps collect the analytics about different procedures, healthcare providers and payments so that, for the first time ever, a patient can see just how much they will have to pay before they walk into a procedure or office. Just a few weeks ago, Castlight Heatlh raked in the biggest health tech investment ever with a $100 million Castlight Health deal.

Other notably sizable investments this year included the $50 million injection from Norwest Equity Partners that GoHealth received (another cost comparison site in a similar space to Castlight), a $40 million investment from Insight Venture Partners to Kinnser Software, and a $39 million allotment from Sequoia and Qualcomm Life to Airstrip Technologies.?

And while Rock Health found that the Bay Area is clearly the hub for health tech investments and startups, bringing in $189 million of investments this year, Austin, Chicago, Boston, New York CIty, San Diego, Pittsburg and Indianapolis also have drawn investors' attention for their steps to bring high tech to the health field.?

When I spoke with Giovanni Colella, the CEO and co-founder of Castlight Health about the new funding his company was able to secure, he was extremely excited by the newly fueled focus on health technology and what it would mean for the everyday consumer.

"Health and medical expenses are something that every person grapples with," he told me. "And we are finally pulling back the cloak of secrecy that has been keeping consumers uninformed and giving them the power to control their own health future, which is a completely new way to see the health and medical sphere."

With companies from personal fitness tracking technology like FitBit, all the way to big data software businesses like Castlight Health, it looks like the way we view, manage and pay for our health and medical is forever changing. ?

?

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Industry News Daily ? Monday, June 25, 2012 | TrueCar Blog

TrueCar.com?s daily industry news summary for Monday, June 25, shares the most important news from across the automotive industry.

TrueCar in the News

Chevy Cruze recalls over fire concerns shouldn?t have lasting impact ? MLive.com
New cars have lesser problems ? Gulf News
Honda finance arm is a leasing powerhouse ? Automotive News
The GM Plant that refuses to die, searching for Mr. Scarce Car ? Jalopnik
In a Silicon Valley milestone, Tesla motors beings delivering Model S ? Oakland Tribune
Tesla?s new sedan will make or break the company ? My Desert

TrueCar Racing
Star Mazda ? Freiberg Scores Second Top-10 At Iowa ? Auto Channel
2012 Iowa: Chevrolet IndyCar Qualifying Recap ? Paddock Talk

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Press Releases/Blog Posts

Pricing: 2013 Lexus GX 460 Luxury Utility Vehicle
June 2012 New Car Sales Expected to Be Highest June Since 2007 According to TrueCar.com

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Industry

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Auto News

Tesla delivers first cars to customers; predicts one-hour recharging time

? Tesla predicts the vehicle can be recharged in just one hour
? The vehicle goes 300 miles
? One Tesla Model S is built a day at the factory for quality-control reasons
? The plant will ramp to 80 cars a day by year?s end
? An annual pace of 8,000 units from a single shift
? Tesla has 9,800 reservations worldwide after the first quarter
? A buyer that makes a $5,000 reservation will have to wait until May 2013 for a Model S to be delivered
? Tesla has 12 US factory stores and will add 10 new ones this year ? some will replace older stores

Detroit News

Toyota to ship French-built Yaris to US

? Toyota will start producing Yaris subcompacts at a French plant for export to North America
? It will ship 25,000 vehicles a year starting in May 2013
? This is the first time they will ship cars from Europe
? Toyota will invest 8 million euros, or $10.4 million? ? they will export only gas-powered Yaris

Auto News

Honda finance arm is a leasing powerhouse

? Honda finance lease deals accounted for more than 16% of all new-vehicle lease transactions industrywide ? that led Toyota Financial, Ford Motor Credit and Nissan Infiniti Financial which had about 11%
? Leasing is becoming a larger part of automakers? finance portfolios and LeaseTrader predicts leasing could represent as much as 40% of the new-vehicle market by 2020

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Auto News

Chevy Spark outdoes rivals? content, space

? Arrives in showrooms in August or September
? The car is sold in other markets, but for North America the car received a stiffer suspension and larger tires
? Available as a five-speed manual and four-speed automatic
? Electric power steering was also added, which will help to get better fuel efficiency
? The vehicle has Chevrolet?s MyLink infotainment system with a 7-inch touch screen? ? the rear seat has space to fit two adults
? Spark is available in a wide variety of new off-the-wall colors, like jalapeno, techno pink and lemonade

USA Today

? Team designed the vehicle in Michigan
? It?s a large family sedan ? a class of vehicles that really only exists in the US
? It has been around since 1994 and was previously designed in Japan, because that was how Toyota operated ? but the change comes with the 2013 model
? Development began in 2008 and ?09 and a team of young engineers near the tech center near Ann Arbor stepped into the development
? Teams from both Ann Arbor and California collaborated

USA Today

BMW recalls X5, X6 crossovers over steering defect

? BMW is recalling 2,642 2012-13 BMW X5s and 2013 BMW X6s due to incorrect manufacturing of the steering system
? Power steering fluid could possibly leak into the engine compartment which would cause a loss to the hydraulic power steering, making it more difficult to steer

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