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INTERNATIONAL DAY of COMMEMORATION IN MEMORY OF HOLOCAUST VICTIMS

INTERNATIONAL DAY of COMMEMORATION IN MEMORY OF HOLOCAUST VICTIMS
Posted by jj on Jan 24, 2024 in Women Not Categorized, Editor Byline, Newsworthy
INTERNATIONAL DAY of COMMEMORATION IN MEMORY OF HOLOCAUST VICTIMS

Every year around 27 January, UNESCO pays tribute to the memory of the victims of the Holocaust and reaffirms its unwavering commitment to counter antisemitism, racism, and other forms of intolerance that may lead to group-targeted violence. The date marks the anniversary of the liberation of the Nazi Concentration and Extermination Camp of Auschwitz-Birkenau by Soviet troops on 27 January 1945. It was officially proclaimed, in November 2005, International Day of Commemoration in Memory of the Victims of the Holocaust by the United Nations General Assembly

 

The Holocaust profoundly affected countries in which Nazi crimes were perpetrated, with universal implications and consequences in many other parts of the world. The Holocaust was the attempt by Nazi Germany and its collaborators to murder the Jews of Europe.

Member States of the United Nations share a collective responsibility for addressing the residual trauma, maintaining effective remembrance policies, caring for historic sites, and promoting education, documentation and research, more than seven decades after the genocide.

This responsibility entails educating about the causes, consequences and dynamics of such crimes so as to strengthen the resilience of young people against ideologies of hatred. As genocide and atrocity crimes keep occurring across several regions, and as we are witnessing a global rise of antisemitism and hate speech, this has never been so relevant.

Now may be a good time to expand your knowledge of the Holocaust and/or persuade others to do the same.  Go to  Holocaust This is a site established by the World Jewish Congress together with UNESCO “to provide the world with the basic facts about the Holocaust”.  “Understanding the past is critical to building a better and safer future for all.”

SOURCE:  UNESCO  

For more information:  Hollocaust Remembrance

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Negotiations With Drug Manufacturers May Lower Deficit By $237 Billion

Negotiations With Drug Manufacturers May Lower Deficit By $237 Billion
Posted by jj on Jan 24, 2024 in Newsworthy
Negotiations With Drug Manufacturers May Lower Deficit By $237 Billion

Women make up more than half of Medicare recipients and are more likely to skip or delay taking their medications due to cost. 

Women, in particular, stand to benefit from a Biden administration initiative allowing Medicare to negotiate the prices for medications for the first time, experts say. 

The program created under the Inflation Reduction Act aims to reduce the cost of some of the most expensive medications under Medicare, with the first 10 announced this week. Over half of Medicare recipients are women, and an even higher proportion rely on Medicare for their medication coverage. Women are also more likely to skip or delay taking medication due to cost.

“Women typically have lower pay and less wealth, which makes it harder for them to afford care,” said Leigh Purvis, prescription drug principal for the AARP Foundation. The AARP Foundation advocates on behalf of older Americans.  “They are more likely to skip those medications. There’s just a lot of factors that make women potentially more susceptible to those high prescription drug prices. And that’s what makes this change so important for them.” 

Women aged 65 and older also tend to have less flexibility in their budgets if their medication prices increase, said Stacie Dusetzina, a professor of health policy at Vanderbilt Medical Center. 

The selected drugs account for $50.5 billion in Medicare Part D drug costs, according to the Department of Health and Human Services, or about 20 percent of total prescription costs for the program. The drugs were selected based on highest Medicare spending, how long they have been on the market and whether they currently face competition from rivals. The move is currently being fought by the drug industry in court. 

“From our perspective, we think this was a huge success. Prior to now, Medicare was not able to negotiate drug prices on behalf of its tens of millions of beneficiaries,” Purvis told The 19th. “We think that Medicare is going to bring a lot of bargaining clout to the table, and that is going to result in lower drug prices, which, of course, is something that our members have been asking for for a very long time.”

Drug price negotiation is largely popular. According to polling from nonpartisan health policy research group KFF from last year, 89 percent of Democrats and 77 percent of Republicans support the federal government negotiating some drug prices for people with Medicare.

Some of the drugs on the list are commonly prescribed, like Elquis, a blood thinner used to treat heart failure. Elquis costs $4,000 per year on average for Medicare enrollees who take it. Other drugs, like Imbruvica, a cancer drug, are less commonly prescribed but even more costly. Average total spending for a Medicare enrollee taking Imbruvica is over $120,000. 

Two on the list, Stelara and Enbrel, will also particularly benefit women when it becomes lower cost. Both medications treat autoimmune conditions like Crohn’s disease and rheumatoid arthritis, and nearly 80 percent of patients diagnosed with autoimmune diseases are women. 

Now that the list of drugs is public, pharmaceutical companies have until October 1 to declare whether they will participate in price negotiation or not. If they opt out, they will either need to pay a large excise tax or pull all of their products from Medicare and Medicaid. Both moves would take a large bite out of their profits. 

Consumers will not feel the result of this move for some time. The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) will publish the negotiated prices on September 1, 2024, but those prices will not go into effect until January 1, 2026. In a news release, CMS announced it will select up to 15 more drugs for 2027, up to 15 more drugs for 2028 and up to 20 more drugs each year after that, in accordance with the Inflation Reduction Act. 

Other Inflation Reduction Act provisions like a $35 cap on out-of-pocket payments for insulin and a $2,000 cap for prescription drugs taken at home will be felt much sooner and take effect in 2025. 

It is unclear whether this move will impact drug prices for people who are not on Medicare — something experts including Purvis will be watching closely.  

“There are some states who are already working on this legislation that would tie the prices that they pay to the prices that are negotiated by Medicare Part D. So there’s a very real chance that people will use the Medicare negotiated prices as the new threshold for when they start negotiating prices for themselves,” she said. 

This story was originally published by The 19th. 

https://19thnews.org/

 

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The Jensen Project

The Jensen Project
Posted by jj on Jan 23, 2024 in Violence

https://www.thejensenproject.org/

As a rape survivor, our founder Janet Jensen discovered that local organizations are doing the hard work to help survivors of sexual violence, but face similar obstacles.

Funding is just a fraction of their needs. Organizations need to know what works and doesn’t. They need the opportunity to expand their leadership skills and find a network of like-minded professionals to get support with staffing, cash flow, fundraising, operations, day-to-day questions, and more.

They need resources and a strategic partner to support them in their work.

The Jensen Project fills this need.

 We believe we’re stronger together. A national, unified front will help us win the fight against sexual violence.

The National Center on Sexual Exploitation

The National Center on Sexual Exploitation
Posted by jj on Jan 23, 2024 in Violence

https://endsexualexploitation.org/about/

The National Center on Sexual Exploitation (NCOSE) exists because people should be free to live and love without sexual abuse and exploitation.

We believe in a world free from sexual abuse and exploitation. We believe every human being deserves the opportunity to live life to its fullest potential; to pursue dreams and ambitions; express creativity and hone talents; seek beauty, truth, and faith; experience hope, joy, and love with family and friends—to thrive. Such a vision requires not only individuals and institutions that work towards its realization but also a culture that embraces its responsibility to preserve and protect human flourishing. We aspire to create that culture.

NCOSE is the leading 501c(3) non-profit organization exposing the links between all forms of sexual abuse and exploitation.

Taking down the multi-billion-dollar sexual exploitation industry is no easy feat. NCOSE has built the infrastructure that is equipped to stand toe-to-toe against the world’s pornographers, pimps/sex traffickers, sex buyers, and exploitation profiteers. With an expansive grassroots network, Research Institute, embedded litigation law firm, training team, and global coalition—paired with our cutting-edge public policy and corporate advocacy tactics—NCOSE is realizing major progress every day. Victories that used to take years are now happening within weeks!

Religious Coalition for Reproductive Rights

Religious Coalition for Reproductive Rights
Posted by jj on Jan 20, 2024 in Reproductive Rights

https://rcrc.org/

Pro Faith. Pro Family. Pro Choice.

Rooted in sacred, moral, and reproductive justice values, the Religious Coalition for Reproductive Choice (RCRC) is a multifaith, intersectional, and antiracist movement for reproductive freedom and dignity leading in spiritual companionship, curating frameworks for faith leaders, and training the next generation of activists.

 

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