Flying The Web For News.
  • Career Exam Study
    Career Exam Study
  • US Politics
    US Politics
  • E-commerce Guide
    E-commerce Guide
  • Dropshipping Guide
    Dropshipping Guide
  • Microsoft Exam
    Microsoft Exam
  • IT Career News
    IT Career News

Article Tools/Herramientas de artículos

+ Larger Font/Fuente más grande | - Smaller Font/Fuente más pequeña




Consumer Daily Reports

Researchers say it could be an answer to declining hospital capacity

By Mark Huffman Consumer News: Home health monitoring can reduce hospitalizations, study finds of ConsumerAffairs
April 18, 2025

Key Takeaways:

  • Hospitalizations cut by 59% for high-risk patients using University of Michigans home monitoring program.

  • $12 million return on investment achieved through reduced readmissions, making the program cost-effective.

  • Largest and longest study to date confirms benefits of remote patient monitoring for various chronic conditions beyond COVID-19.

The number of staffed hospital beds has decreased from approximately 802,000 before the COVID-19 pandemic to around 674,000 post-pandemica 16% decline, according to the Healthcare Leadership Portal. But a new study from the University of Michigan reveals that remote patient monitoring (RPM) can drastically reduce hospital readmissions for high-risk individualscutting hospitalization rates by more than half in the six months following program enrollment.

The findings, published in Telemedicine and E-Health, suggest transformative potential for healthcare systems strained by overcrowding and rising costs.

The study examined the Patient Monitoring at Home (PMH) program, launched at the height of the COVID-19 pandemic in April 2020. Patients with heart failure, uncontrolled hypertension, severe COVID-19, and other high-risk conditions were sent home with a kit containing a tablet, thermometer, blood pressure monitor, pulse oximeter, and scale. This technology enabled them to regularly transmit vital signs and symptom updates to clinicians at U-M Health, which monitored the data in real time and intervened as needed.

"These are promising results for hospitalization prevention," Dr. Sara Margosian, lead author and a geriatric medicine faculty member at U-M Health, said in a press release. "This program targets the people at highest risk for rehospitalization, and the ability to have an intervention that works is really exciting."

Scalable model

The study tracked outcomes from over 1,700 patients, making it the largest and most extensive evaluation of an RPM initiative to date. Among its striking results:

  • A 59% overall reduction in hospitalizations after enrollment.

  • A 49% reduction even when excluding COVID-19 patients.

  • A $12 million net savings through avoided hospitalizationsmaking the initiative not only clinically effective but financially sustainable.

Patients used the monitoring kits for one to two months on average, yet the benefits endured well beyond the monitoring period, the researchers found.

U-M partnered with Health Recovery Solutions to develop an accessible system that doesnt require home internet. The tablet connects to each monitoring device via Bluetooth and transmits data via a secure cellular signal. Patients are prompted to take daily readings and complete disease-specific surveys, which are reviewed by a clinical team that includes nurses, nurse practitioners, and physicians.

As the program matured, adherence improved markedlyby the third year, patients were logging vital signs 75% of the time and completing surveys 71% of the time.




Posted: 2025-04-18 17:02:32

Get Full News Story On Consumer Affairs



Listen to this article. Speaker link opens in a new window.
Text To Speech BETA Test Version.



More News From This Category

Consumer News: Hawai‘i study uncovers how wildfires drive hidden spikes in mortality

Fri, 22 Aug 2025 19:07:08 +0000

Researchers found that the 2023 wildfires quietly pushed the death toll far beyond what met the eye

By Kristen Dalli of ConsumerAffairs
August 22, 2025
  • Not just burns and smoke: August 2023 in Maui saw a 67 % spike in overall deaths, many not officially linked to the wildfire.

  • Our homes became danger zones: 80% of excess deaths happened outside hospitals up from 68% in typical summers.

  • Looking forward: Experts urge wildfire prevention grounded in Native Hawaiian ecological knowledge to avoid repeating this silent disaster.


Wildfires grab headlines for the visible flames and heartbreak, but theres often a quieter, hidden toll.

A recent Frontiers in Climate study revealed that the 2023 Lhain wildfires in Maui didnt just claim lives directly; they also spurred a dramatic rise in overall deaths across the county. And shockingly, many of these extra fatalities didnt even make the official wildfire death count.

Wildfires can cause a measurable, population-wide increase in mortality, beyond what is captured in official fatality counts, researcher Michelle Nakatsuka said in a news release. This suggests the true toll of the Lhain wildfire was even broader than previously understood.

It also points to the need for prevention strategies that go beyond reactive wildfire control. As Native Hawaiians, the co-first authors are especially hopeful that wildfire mitigation strategies will center knaka maoli perspectives, including the restoration of traditional agroecological systems.

The study

Rather than counting only confirmed fire-related fatalities, the researchers looked at a broader measure known as all-cause excess mortality thats how many more people died during the wildfire month than would normally have.

They trained a statistical model (called SARIMA) on five years of Maui County data (August 2018July 2023), excluding COVID-19-related deaths, to predict what the death count shouldve been.

Then, they compared that to the actual deaths in August 2023. To ensure the findings were solid, they ran 5,000 simulations and calculated confidence intervals, even checking what happens if COVID data stayed in the baseline for fairness.

The results

In August 2023, Maui County experienced an estimated 82 excess deaths a whopping 67% increase over expectations.

Additionally, during the peak week ending August 19, deaths surged by 367% more than triple what the model predicted. Interestingly, most of these fatalities happened outside medical facilities 80% versus 68% in prior months hinting that emergency access was severely hampered.

Although official reports noted around 100102 wildfire deaths, these excess mortality figures suggest other indirect causes like delayed treatment or smoke-related health crises played a role.

Wildfires can cause death in a variety of ways, researcher Dr. Kekoa Taparra of UCLA said in the news release.

In this case, recent reports suggest many deaths were due to direct exposure, smoke inhalation and burns. Others likely stemmed from disruptions in healthcare, like not being able to access critical medications or emergency treatment. Wildfires can also exacerbate pre-existing conditions.

Looking to the future

As events like this unfortunately become more commonplace, the researchers hope that these findings spark change for future wildfires.

In the short term, its critical for people exposed to wildfires to get immediate medical treatment, Nakatsuka said. Fast, accessible emergency care can save lives.

In the long term, wed like to see more policy investment in wildfire prevention rooted in Native Hawaiian ecological knowledge, Dr. Taparra added.

This includes restoring traditional agroecological systems, removing dry, non-native grasses, restoring traditional pre-colonial water systems, and improving fire risk modeling to better guide preparedness efforts.


Read More ...


Consumer News: Beyond 130: Rethinking the blood pressure sweet spot

Fri, 22 Aug 2025 19:07:08 +0000

Researchers look at how pushing harder on blood-pressure goals could save lives and still make sense for your wallet

By Kristen Dalli of ConsumerAffairs
August 22, 2025

  • Intensive blood-pressure control (below 120 mm Hg) prevents more heart-related events than standard targets, even when real-world measurement quirks are considered.

  • The study shows this aggressive approach is cost-effective with roughly $42,000 per quality-adjusted life-year gained.

  • However, this approach also comes with added risks like falls or kidney issues and increases medication use and clinic visits, so its not a one-size-fits-all answer.


High blood pressure is a serious health hallmark linked to heart attacks, strokes, and heart failure.

Until recently, aiming for systolic pressure under 130 or even 140 mm Hg has been standard. However, new research from Mass General Brigham suggests that aiming lower below 120 mm Hg is not only more protective but also a smart investment in your health.

Our findings suggest the intensive said in a news release.

The study

The researchers used a simulation model combining data from trusted sources like the SPRINT clinical trial and nationwide surveys, plus other published findings. They looked at three blood-pressure targets: under 140, under 130, and under 120 mm Hg.

Their model also accounted for the fact that in everyday clinical settings, blood-pressure readings arent always perfect they included typical measurement error.

The simulation estimated long-term health outcomes, such as heart attacks, strokes, and heart failure, and balanced those against adverse events from treatment (like falls, kidney damage, low blood pressure, and slow heart rate), plus the added costs of more medications and clinic visits.

The results

Even with real-world blips in measurement, targeting under 120 mm Hg prevented more cardiovascular events than the 130 mm Hg goal.

Additionally, when researchers crunched the numbers, the cost per quality-adjusted life-year was about $42,000. In the U.S. health care world, thats seen as cost-effective.

This study should give patients at high cardiovascular risk and their clinicians more confidence in pursuing an intensive blood pressure goal, Dr. Smith said in the news release.

While these findings are positive, the researchers also found that these lower blood pressure targets led to an increased health care spending due to more frequent doctors visits, as well as a higher risk of adverse events related to blood pressure treatment, such as falls, kidney injury, hypotension, and bradycardia.

Finding the right candidates

The researchers explain that its up to doctors to determine which patients are ideal candidates for these stricter blood pressure regulations.

Our results examine the cost-effectiveness of intensive treatment at the population level, Dr. Smith said. However, given the additional risk of adverse events related to antihypertensives, intensive treatment will not be optimal for all patients. Patients and clinicians should work together to determine the appropriate medication intensity based on patient preferences.


Read More ...


Consumer News: Tesla faces new federal probe into delayed accident reporting

Fri, 22 Aug 2025 19:07:08 +0000

Crashes involving Autopilot may have been reported late or bundled with other reports

By James R. Hood of ConsumerAffairs
August 22, 2025
  • NHTSA investigating whether Tesla delayed reporting crashes involving Autopilot and Full Self-Driving.
  • Probe marks first Tesla safety investigation since Donald Trumps return to the White House.

  • Investors had expected Trump era to ease scrutiny, but tensions with Elon Musk may change that.


Federal safety regulators have opened a new investigation into Tesla over whether the company failed to promptly report crashes involving its driver-assistance technology.

In a federal filing released Wednesday, the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) said Tesla may have violated reporting requirements that mandate automakers disclose crash data within days of an incident. Regulators found numerous incident reports in which Tesla submitted information months late, often in bulk filings rather than on a rolling basis.

The inquiry zeroes in on Teslas Autopilot system and its so-called Full Self Driving technology, which are designed to assist motorists but still require an attentive driver behind the wheel. While NHTSA has launched multiple safety probes into Tesla vehicles in recent years, this marks the first such action since President Trump returned to office.

Political context

The timing underscores the shifting political context surrounding Teslas autonomous driving ambitions. Musk, once a close Trump ally and major donor, has since fallen out with the president. Investors had expected Trumps administration to curtail or even end federal safety investigations into Tesla, potentially accelerating Musks self-driving push. Instead, the new probe signals heightened scrutiny.

Tesla told regulators it has since corrected problems with its reporting system, but NHTSA said it will audit the companys data to confirm. Weve heard from industry partners that crash reporting requirements for automated vehicles is way too expensive, Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy said earlier this year. But these reports help DOT monitor road safety. So to balance these concerns, weve streamlined the process.

The investigation comes just weeks after a jury found Tesla liable in a fatal 2019 Autopilot crash, ordering the company to pay $329 million in damages. Tesla has vowed to appeal.


Read More ...


Consumer News: School supplies, lunches cost a little less in 2025

Fri, 22 Aug 2025 16:07:08 +0000

Lunch staples are down 3.34%, supplies down 7.05%

By Mark Huffman of ConsumerAffairs
August 22, 2025
  • The cost of popular school lunch items is down 3.34% year-over-year, led by Oat & Honey granola bars (-20.1%) and applesauce cups (-5.1%), though some items like mozzarella string cheese (+2.4%) and fruit snacks (+1.4%) rose slightly.

  • Prices for 15 common items are down 7.05% from 2024, with construction paper (-51.6%), broadline markers (-23.8%), and fine line markers (-12.3%) showing the steepest drops.

  • While some supplies (like notebooks and folders) stayed flat, others climbedmost notably dry erase markers (+20.6%), kids scissors (+3.7%), and washable glue (+11.8%).


Families continue to struggle with the cost of living, but a new report from Datasembly, which tracks prices in real time, finds that some back-to-school costs are going down.

According to the data, the total cost of popular school lunch staples has fallen 3.34%, year-over-year. The biggest decline is the price of a 5-bar package of Oat & Honey granola bars, which is down more than 20% from 2024.

But pretzel twists, white bread, mayo, fruit snacks and mozzarella cheese all cost slightly more.

Heres the breakdown:

Lunch Box Staples

July 2024

July 2025

YOY $ Change

YOY % Change

Oat & Honey granola Bars -gluten free, 5 bars

$8.59

$6.86

-$1.73

-20.1%

Applesauce cups - 6pk, 4oz

$3.13

$2.97

-$0.16

-5.1%

Classic Yellow Mustard 14oz

$2.42

$2.37

-$0.05

-2.1%

Black forest ham 9oz

$5.16

$5.06

-$0.10

-1.9%

Roasted Turkey Breast 9.oz

$5.16

$5.07

-$0.09

-1.7%

American Cheese slices, 24 ct

$5.50

$5.41

-$0.09

-1.6%

Whole Grain bread

$3.67

$3.64

-$0.03

-0.8%

Pretzel Twists, 16oz

$4.01

$4.01

$0.00

0.0%

White Bread

$3.94

$3.95

$0.01

0.3%

Squeeze real mayonnaise 20 oz

$6.27

$6.29

$0.02

0.3%

Mixed Fruit Snacks 10 pack

$5.53

$5.61

$0.08

1.4%

Mozzarella String cheese 12 ct

$6.15

$6.30

$0.15

2.4%

TOTAL

$59.53

$57.54

-$1.99

-3.34%

School supplies

Families are also catching a break when they stock up on school supplies. The report shows the total cost of 15 items usually found in kids backpacks is down 7.05% from last year.

Three items are down by double-digit percentages. Construction paper is down the most more than 50%.

The costs of a college notebook, a 4-pocket paper folder and 150 sheets of wide-ruled paper are the same as last year. Hand sanitizer, kids' scissors, a 12-inch ruler, washable glue and dry markers have all increased in price since last year. The price of markers recorded the largest increase, 20.6%.

Heres the breakdown:

School Supplies

July 2024

July 2025

YOY $ Change

YOY % Change

Construction paper, 96 sheets

6.26

3.03

-$3.23

-51.6%

Broadline markers 10 ct

4.25

3.24

-$1.01

-23.8%

Fine line markers 10 ct

3.51

3.08

-$0.43

-12.3%

1 subject Notebook

1.67

1.52

-$0.15

-9.0%

Washable Glue Sticks, 3pk

3.32

3.13

-$0.19

-5.7%

Pencils 10pk

3.88

3.77

-$0.11

-2.8%

Colored pencils 24 ct

3.78

3.69

-$0.09

-2.4%

3 subject college ruled notebook

4.99

4.99

$0.00

0.0%

4 pocket paper folder

1.69

1.69

$0.00

0.0%

150ct wide ruled paper

3.19

3.19

$0.00

0.0%

hand sanitizer 8oz

4.67

4.69

$0.02

0.4%

Kids Scissors

2.67

2.77

$0.10

3.7%

12inch ruler

2.01

2.09

$0.08

4.0%

Washable Glue 4oz

1.44

1.61

$0.17

11.8%

Dry Erase Markers 4pk

5.43

6.55

$1.12

20.6%

TOTAL

$52.76

$49.04

-$3.72

-7.05%

In 2024, lunch box staples saw a modest 1.16% increase while school supplies saw prices rise 3.6% over the prior year.


Read More ...


Consumer News: Sales of existing homes jumped in July

Fri, 22 Aug 2025 13:07:08 +0000

A slight decline in mortgage rates seems to have made a big difference

By Mark Huffman of ConsumerAffairs
August 22, 2025
  • Existing-home sales rose 2.0% in July, reaching an annual rate of 4.01 million.

  • Inventory hit its highest level since May 2020, giving buyers more options.

  • Home prices showed near-zero growth, with many regions seeing price reductions.


Buyers returned to the housing market in July as mortgage rates drifted lower. Existing-home sales rose 2.0% to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 4.01 million, according to the National Association of Realtors.

The rebound comes as wage growth outpaces home price gains, making ownership slightly more affordable and boosting buyer confidence.

Wage growth is now comfortably outpacing home price growth, and buyers have more choices, said Lawrence Yun, NARs chief economist. Condominium sales increased in the South region, where prices had been falling for the past year.

Regional trends

Sales momentum varied across the country. The Northeast posted the strongest monthly gain, up 8.7%, followed by the South, up 2.2%, and the West, up 1.4%. The Midwest slipped 1.1% compared with June. Year-over-year, sales improved in the South, Northeast, and Midwest, but fell in the West.

Median prices painted a mixed picture. Nationally, the typical existing home sold for $422,400, virtually unchanged from a year earlier. Regional disparities stood out: prices rose in the Northeast (0.8%) and Midwest (3.9%), but fell in the South (0.6%) and West (1.4%).

Inventory at a four-year high

Inventory climbed to 1.55 million units in July, a 15.7% increase from a year earlier and the highest level since the early months of the COVID-19 pandemic. That equates to a 4.6-month supply of homes, slightly below June but above July 2024.

Homebuyers are in the best position in more than five years to find the right home and negotiate for a better price, Yun said. The ever-so-slight improvement in affordability is inching up home sales.

Despite sluggish price growth, homeowners remain in solid financial shape. NAR reported that only 2% of transactions were foreclosures or short sales, a near-record low. Since July 2019, typical homeowners have gained 49% in home price appreciation.

Single-family sales rose 2.0% in July, while condo and co-op transactions gained 2.8% on the month. However, condo sales remain down 2.6% compared to last year, with prices slipping 1.2%.

Overall, NAR said the housing market appears to be shifting in favor of buyers, with more inventory and easing price pressures creating opportunities not seen since before the pandemic.


Read More ...


Related Bing News Results

Consumer Spending Update: Economic Confidence Dips in August

Fri, 15 Aug 2025 10:06:00 GMT
Economic confidence decreased to 111.8 in this month’s Rasmussen Reports Economic Index, more than four points lower than July.

Consumer Reports: Food safety regulation rollback - KCRA Channel 3

Thu, 17 Jul 2025 12:01:00 GMT
In 2022, Consumer Reports found salmonella in nearly one-third of the ground chicken it tested, and in some turkey samples, too. The results pointed to serious gaps in federal food safety oversight.

Consumer Reports: The best insect repellents for 2025 - MSN

Mon, 14 Jul 2025 11:19:00 GMT
To find the best bug sprays, Consumer Reports put repellents to the ultimate test–having real people stick their arms into cages full of hungry mosquitoes. After testing lotions, sprays, and ...

Consumer Reports: The best insect repellents for 2025

Mon, 14 Jul 2025 11:10:00 GMT
Consumer Reports’ tests found that products that contain 30% OLE, or 20% picaridin, worked effectively, though not all work as well as the best DEET products.

Consumer Spending Update: Economic Confidence Rises in June

Wed, 11 Jun 2025 17:00:00 GMT
Economic confidence increased to 112.1 in this month’s Rasmussen Reports Economic Index, more than five points lower than in May. Please sign up for the Rasmussen Reports daily e-mail update (it ...


Blow Us A Whistle




Related Product Search/Búsqueda de productos relacionados