Jobs’ liver transplant shows power of the rich (AP)

FILE - In this Oct. 14, 2008 file photo, Apple Inc. CEO Steve Jobs smiles during a product announcement at Apple headquarters in Cupertino, Calif.  A published report says Jobs, who has been on medical leave for undisclosed reasons since January, received a liver transplant two months ago, Saturday, June 20, 2009. (AP Photo/Paul Sakuma, file)AP - A celebrity like Apple CEO Steve Jobs scores a rare organ transplant and the world wonders: Did he game the system? The rich have plenty of advantages that others don't. But winning the "transplant lottery" involves more than the size of your wallet — and true medical need.


Federal advisory panel: Just 4 rabies shots needed (AP)

AP - People exposed to rabies need only four vaccinations, not the five currently recommended, a vaccine advisory committee said Wednesday. In the past, rabies shots were dreaded almost as much as the disease itself. Until the 1970s, an encounter with a rabid animal led to at least 14 shots in the abdomen. But vaccines have improved, and five shots in the arm or thigh have been the U.S. standard for more than 20 years.

Disease prevention often costs more than it saves (AP)

Instructor Gretchen Gentry, right, leads  Paul Mullen, center, and Starleata Gray in a series of stretching exercises during a diabetes prevention class at a YMCA in Indianapolis, Tuesday, June 23, 2009.  Mullen, 66, of Indianapolis, has lost 18 pounds and brought his blood sugar down because of lifestyle changes he learned in the program. He pays $115 for the yearlong program, on top of his Y membership fee. (AP Photo/Michael Conroy)AP - When it comes to health care spending, an ounce of prevention is seldom worth a pound of cure. Take Mrs. Jones, a hypothetical 55-year-old obese woman at risk for diabetes. It costs $900 a year to hire a personal lifestyle coach to help her lose weight and prevent diabetes. Suppose that the coaching works for Mrs. Jones, and she is spared diabetes and all the resulting health bills.