The Albuquerque (N.M.) Journal
reports that baby boomers are turning to knee and hip replacements in
impressive numbers to keep up the unprecedented active lifestyle they
have grown up with. There is little doubt that you would find the trend
alive in your area, too. Doctors wonder if
the joints they put in now will last a lifetime, given that boomers
will live longer than any generation before them.
The story says:
Statistics from the American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons
show that more than 418,000 total and partial knee replacements are
performed each year, 15 percent of them on baby boomers; of the 328,000
total and partial hip replacements done, boomers are the recipients of
more than 20 percent.
Demand for Knee Replacements Will Increase More Than 600 Percent in 25 Years
As we age, the demand
for knee and hip replacements is going to grow so much that national
studies now predict there will be a shortage of orthopedic surgeons to perform them all. Read this, from the American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons:
The demand for total
joint replacement is expected to increase so dramatically in the next
25 years that there may not be enough orthopedic surgeons
to perform the surgeries, as indicated by results from recent research
on the topic. As presented at the 73rd Annual Meeting of the American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons (AAOS), the study projects the number of hip- and knee-replacement procedures that will be performed in the United States through the year 2030.
Lead author Steven M.
Kurtz, Ph.D., director of the Philadelphia office of Exponent Inc., an
engineering and scientific consulting firm, and his research team
projected that the number of procedures for primary (first-time) total
knee replacement would jump by 673 percent -- to 3.48 million -- in 2030.
The number of primary total hip replacements, the authors estimate,
will increase by 174 percent -- to 572,000 -- in 2030. Partial joint
replacements were projected to increase by only 54 percent. The
research team based its projections on historical procedure rates from
1990 to 2003, combined with population projections from the U.S. Census
Bureau.
Also expected to become more prevalent is the repair or replacement
of the artificial joint, called revision joint replacement. The
number of revision surgeries likely will double by 2015 for total knee
replacement and by 2026 for total hip replacement, according to the
authors. Currently, hip revisions outnumber knee revisions, but knee
revisions should surpass hip revisions after 2007, Kurtz stated.
"There's definitely going to be a huge need for more orthopedic surgeons," explained Kurtz, who is also research associate professor at Drexel University's School of Biomedical Engineering in Philadelphia. "If
the massive expected demand for total joint replacement is not planned
for before 2030, patients may end up waiting a long time for a new hip
or knee."
Keeping Track of Dad
I found a Chicago Tribune
story about how technology is emerging that allows the families of aging
parents to monitor their folks from miles -- even hundreds of miles -- away.
The technology, while intrusive, also may help seniors live at home
much longer.
Illegal Immigrants Who Drive
The marches nationwide point to the passion behind the immigration
story. Here is a backstory worth taking a look at. Across
the country, police departments arrest illegal workers who drive
without a
license. They can't get a license, but that does not stop many
from buying cars, which they need so they can get to work.
Nine states now allow undocumented residents to drive, even if they are
not legal residents of this country.
Stateline.org says:
Driver's licenses already are being revamped under a 2005 federal law -- the Real ID Act
-- that for the first time dictates how states must document identity
when issuing a driver's license and overrides policies in nine states
that now allow agencies to license illegal immigrant drivers.
States could opt to follow Tennessee and Utah in issuing "certificates" to illegal immigrant drivers. Tennessee authorities, however, recently suspended their program over fear of fraud.
The (Santa Rosa, Calif.) Press Democrat reports:
What follows is a
cycle that is a way of life in the secretive world of undocumented
residents who have easy access to vehicles, but no access to gaining a
license to drive.
The car is impounded for 30 days, bringing
fees that often exceed its value. Now abandoned, it goes back on the
market, often to be purchased by another illegal immigrant who returns
to the road with the cheap vehicle, no license and often no insurance.
It
is a system that makes financial winners of tow truck operators and
used car lots, but takes a toll on law enforcement, puts legal drivers
at risk from uninsured motorists and is ineffective at solving the
problem of illegal drivers.
It is a microcosm of the national
debate now before Congress over whether to penalize or recognize
illegal immigrants and illustrates California's contradictory struggle
with illegal immigration: The state has satisfied political sentiment
by denying driver's licenses to undocumented immigrants, but has put
few roadblocks in place to keep them from getting cars essential for
the low-wage jobs that help fuel the state's economy.
The story says:
In many cases,
undocumented immigrants do not go through with the registration. Police
say that a large number of unlicensed drivers they pull over are
driving cars registered in someone else's name.
For those who do register, a growing number
of insurance companies are insuring illegal immigrants who present
out-of-state or Mexican driver's licenses.
ITIN: A Way for Immigrants to Get Documentation
Another interesting
story is about
immigrants who, despite being undocumented, still pay U.S. federal taxes. They
have obtained ITINs, a federal tax number that gives them an official
status as a taxpayer, even though they are not legal residents, as far as the
government is concerned.
The Santa Fe New Mexican newspaper reported:
A decade ago, the IRS set up a system to issue tax-identification numbers to foreigners required to pay U.S. taxes. Though the system was originally designed for people living abroad who had investments in the United States, it quickly came to be used by undocumented workers who aren't eligible for Social Security numbers.
Last
year 1.4 million people filed tax returns using an Individual Tax
Identification Number, or ITIN. That was an increase of 40 percent over
the previous year, according to the IRS. In 2003, the most recent year
for which data was available, more than 7,600 people in New Mexico requested an ITIN.
The Pork List
Citizens Against Government Waste
is out with its 2006 Porker Awards. It will be up to somebody else to
decide which of their targets are a waste of money and which ones are useful
public service projects.
The "2006 Pig Book" identified 9,963 projects in
the 11 appropriations bills that constitute the discretionary
portion of the federal budget for fiscal 2006, costing taxpayers $29 billion.
A "pork" project is a line-item in an appropriations bill
that designates tax dollars for a specific purpose in
circumvention of established budgetary procedures. To
qualify as pork, a project must meet one of seven criteria.
Complete Pork Database: Search all 9,963 projects by keyword, state, or appropriations bill.
We are always looking for your great ideas. Send Al a few sentences and hot links.
Editor's Note: Al's Morning Meeting is a compendium
of ideas, edited story excerpts and other materials from a variety of
Web sites, as well as original concepts and analysis. When the
information comes directly from another source, it will be attributed
and a link will be provided whenever possible. The column is
fact-checked, but depends upon the accuracy and integrity of the
original sources cited. Errors and inaccuracies found will be corrected.
With more medical students enrolled than ever before the question...