Showing posts with label percent. Show all posts
Showing posts with label percent. Show all posts

Monday, December 6, 2010

WHO: 20 to 40 percent of money spent on health wasted, more funds needed to be wasted

Health care systems worldwide are wasting up to 40 percent of their funds, but more money is needed to boost their capabilities, according to a new report from the World Health Organization.

In an analysis of how countries pay for health and what they get in return, the United Nations agency concluded that despite these losses even more funds need to be invested in health care.

This article by AP reporter Maria Cheng on the WHO’s newly released 2010 World Health Report explores some of the biggest inefficiencies in global health spending.

Of the approximately $5.3 trillion the world spends on health care every year, about $300 billion disappears in mistakes or corruption, according to European Health care Fraud and Corruption Network, quoted in the report. Up to a quarter of the money governments are supposedly using to buy drugs are somehow lost along the way, costing developed countries up to $23 billion a year, the report said.

WHO says some countries pay almost double what they should for drugs and that, and that at least half of the medical equipment in poor countries is unusable. Much of the medical equipment donated to developing countries is also useless, it said.

“In some countries, almost 80 percent of health care equipment comes from international donors or foreign governments, much of it remaining idle,” the report says.

It said most of the medical equipment shipped to the Gaza strip after 2009 simply sat in warehouses.

The AP article also quotes Bill who points out the irony of asking donors for more money when it’s clear so much better use could be made of the funds already spent:

“How do you make an impassioned plea for spending more money when we’re wasting so much?” asked William Easterly, a foreign aid expert at New York University.

He said much of the problem in developing countries is that while donors have spent billions on things like drugs, vaccines and malaria bednets, little has been spent on the health workers needed to distribute them.

“Medicines and vaccines don’t administer themselves,” Easterly said.

He also criticized U.N. agencies and major donors like the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, who have mostly avoided investing in health systems, preferring instead to build separate programs for illnesses like malaria, polio and AIDS.

“That is like doing aerial bombing at 35,000 feet without knowing what you’re hitting on the ground,” Easterly said. “But investing in medicines for AIDS and malaria makes for much better publicity than investing in health systems.”

Read the whole article here.

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Tuesday, November 30, 2010

Medtronic 2Q profit falls 35 percent on costs

MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — Medtronic’s fiscal second-quarter profit fell 35 percent as legal and other costs outpaced weak gains in medical device sales, but adjusted results met Wall Street expectations.

The medical device maker, based in Minneapolis, says profit fell to $566 million, or 52 cents per share, from $868 million, or 78 cents per share, during the same period a year ago. Revenue rose less than 2 percent to $3.9 billion from $3.84 billion.

The rise in sales was not enough to offset a 16 percent boost in expenses, driven by legal costs.

Excluding charges, Medtronic Inc. said it earned 82 cents per share. Analysts polled by Thomson Reuters expect earnings per share of 81 cents on revenue of $3.9 billion.

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Sunday, November 14, 2010

PC maker Lenovo’s quarterly profit up 45 percent

BEIJING (AP) — Lenovo Group, the world’s fourth-largest personal computer maker, said Wednesday its latest quarterly profit rose 45 percent on strong sales in China and other emerging markets.

Profit for the three months ended Sept. 30 was $77 million, or 81 cents per share, up from $53 million a year earlier, the company announced. Global sales rose 41 percent over a year earlier to $5.8 billion.

“We had another quarter of solid growth across all geographies,” said chief financial office Wong Wai Ming in a conference call with reporters.

Sales in Lenovo’s home China market rose 32 percent over a year earlier to $2.6 billion, accounting for 46 percent of global revenues. It said market share in China rose 2.3 percentage points to 28.8 percent.

In other emerging markets, PC shipments rose 185 percent in Russia over a year earlier, 68 percent in Latin America and 60 percent in India, according to Lenovo, which has headquarters in Beijing and in Research Triangle Park, North Carolina.

Sales in the United States and other developed markets also began to recover as spending by corporate customers picked up. Lenovo said its global market share rose 1.9 point to 10.4 percent.

“We have good momentum to keep growing, especially outside China,” said CEO Yang Yuanqing.

Lenovo acquired IBM Corp.’s PC unit in 2005 and expanded into wireless computing this year, launching its Lephone smart phone and two Web-linked portable computers.

Lenovo said its mobile unit had sales of $217 million in its first full quarter of operations. The company has announced plans with two Chinese state-owned phone carriers, China Telecom Ltd. and China Unicom Ltd., and with South Korea’s SK Telecom to distribute smart phones.

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Lenovo Group: www.lenovo.com

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Wednesday, November 3, 2010

Humana’s 3rd-quarter earnings rise 30 percent

NEW YORK (AP) — Humana Inc.’s third-quarter net income climbed 30 percent partly on higher than expected medicals claims as Medicare Advantage enrollment rose.

The health insurer also boosted its full-year earnings guidance on Monday.

Humana is the second largest provider of Medicare Advantage plans, trailing only UnitedHealth Group Inc.

Humana earned $393.2 million, or $2.32 per share, for the three months ended Sept. 30. That’s up from $301.5 million, or $1.78 per share, a year earlier.

Revenue rose 9 percent to $8.42 billion.

Analyst forecast earnings of $1.66 per share on revenue of $8.46 billion.

Humana now expects 2010 earnings between $6.40 and $6.50 per share. Analysts predict $6.42 per share.

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Friday, October 15, 2010

GE 3Q profit drops 18 percent

NEW YORK (AP) — General Electric Co. says its third-quarter income fell 18 percent because of lower equipment sales and a loss from a Japanese division that it’s selling.

The industrial and financial giant, which makes everything from refrigerators to power plant equipment, on Friday reported net income of $2.06 billion, or 18 cents per share for the quarter ended Sept. 30. That compares with earnings of $2.49 billion, or 23 cents per share, a year ago. Revenue slipped 5 percent to $35.9 billion.

Excluding the loss from its Japan consumer finance business, GE earned 29 cents per share, 2 cents above Wall Street estimates. Revenue fell short, however, of the estimate of $37.6 billion.

GE expects revenues in its industrial division to be flat in the final three months of the year.

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