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Do it with Distinction UO Professional Distinctions For full information visit our website https://uodistinctions.uoregon.edu phone 541-346-3902 or e-mail uodistinctions@cas.uoregon.edu program by the Q College of Arts and Sciences, and the CareerCenter "r""anK lawi k More universities require student health insurance BY JOHN SEEWER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS TOLEDO, Ohio — A growing num ber of public universities are requir ing that students have health insur ance before they step into the classroom, a move aimed at saving the uninsured from huge bills and college hospitals from getting stuck with the cost. Most public universities still leave the decision up to students, who can buy into a school’s student health care plan or obtain their own insur ance. However, surveys from insurers and schools indicate that anywhere from 10 percent to 30 percent do not have insurance. Most are still covered under their parents’ plans. College officials are also finding that some students are forced to drop out when faced with the med ical expenses. “What makes it a tough decision is the potential added costs,” said Jim Mitchell, director of student health services at Montana State University, which has required insurance for nearly 20 years. “But there’s com pelling reasons to do it.” More schools have started mandat ing the coverage in the past four years. Hospitals no longer absorb the costs because of increasing health care expenses. The University of Connecticut, Ohio State University and all 10 schools within the University of Cali fornia system now require health in surance. The University of Utah is looking into it. Others, including Old Dominion, Kent State University and South Dakota’s board of regents, have de cided against the idea. Costs vary from campus to campus — undergraduates at UCLA paid $558 for a full year; the price is $1,211 this year at the University of Toledo, where insurance is required. Yet, some schools have resisted mandatory coverage, fearing extra costs will push students to other col leges. Still, others worry students al ready are burdened with huge loans and rising tuition. “We may be pricing students out of college,” said Alex Wright, presi dent of the student government at Bowling Oreen Mate University. The costs to unin sured students can be staggering when they’re hospitalized. For example, a stu dent at Old Dominion University in Norfolk, Va„ had $100,000 in medical bills stemming from injuries in a car accident, said Jenny Foss, director of stu dent health services. “Students can take care of their car repairs, but they may not be able to take care of their injuries,” she said. In extreme cases, the student is forced to declare bankruptcy. Allowing students to decide whether they want health insurance can dilute a school’s health plan when few buy into it. Often, Foss said, it’s mainly students with health problems who purchase cov erage, driving up the number of claims and costs. Old Dominion discontinued its health insurance plan a year ago — only 400 of its 20,000 students were using it. That’s despite a school sur vey that showed about 4,000 stu dents had no health coverage. Glenn Egelman, director of stu dent health at Bowling Green, noted that something as common as ap pendicitis could result in a big med ical bill. “It can happen to anyone, at any time, and it can definitely happen to young people,” he said. “We see stu dents who have to leave school be cause of something that can’t be predicted. Students without coverage also think they can get what they need at cam pus health centers, which often offer free, but limited, care. “It’s a safety net, but it’s a net with a lot of holes in it,” Egelman said. Nearly all private colleges make health coverage mandatory, com pared with about 25 percent of pub lic colleges, said Stephen Beckley, who runs a Colorado-based consult ing firm that assists schools with student health programs. Unpaid medical bills were a prob lem at Ohio State’s medical center before the school changed its policy three years ago. In one year, the school found uninsured students owed $600,000, said Ted Grace, di rector of student health services. “It made it very easy to make that decision,” he said. INSURANCE DISPUTE THE UNINSURED: Surveys from insurers and schools indicate anywhere from 10 percent to 30 percent of students do not have medical coverage or that most are still under their parents’ plans. THE DEBATE: Some universities have resisted mandatory coverage, fearing extra costs will push students to other colleges. Still, others worry students already are burdened with huge loans and rising tuition. Bush administration slashes scientific research funding BY PAUL RECER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS WASHINGTON, D.C. — The voice of science is being stifled in the Bush administration, with fewer scientists heard in policy discussions and mon ey for research and advanced training being cut, according to panelists at a national science meeting. Speakers at the national meeting of the American Association for the Ad vancement of Science expressed con cern Sunday that some scientists in key federal agencies are being ig nored or even pressured to change study conclusions that don’t support policy positions. The speakers also said that Bush’s proposed 2005 federal budget is slashing spending for basic research and reducing investments in educa tion designed to produce the nation’s future scientists. There also was concern that in creased restrictions and require ments for obtaining visas is dimin ishing the flow to the U.S. of foreign-born science students who have long been a major part of the American research community. Rosina Bierbaum, dean of the Uni versity of Michigan School of Natural Resources and Environment, said the Bush administration has cut scien tists out of some of the policy-mak ing processes, particularly on envi ronmental issues. “In previous administrations, scien tists were always at the table when reg ulations were being developed,” she said. “Science never had the last voice, but it had a voice.”, Issues on global warming, for in stance, that achieved a firm scientific consensus in earlier years are now be ing questioned by Bush policy makers. Proven, widely accepted research is being ignored or disputed, she said. Government policy papers issued prior to the Bush year's moved be yond questioning the validity of glob al warming science and addressed ways of confronting or dealing with climate change. Under Bush, said Bierbaum, the questioning of the proven science has become more important than finding ways to cope with climate change. One result of such actions, said Neal Frank of Rice University, a former director of the National Sci ence Foundation, is that “we don’t really have a policy right now to deal with what everybody agrees is a serious problem.” Among scientists, said Frank, “there is quite a consensus in place that the Earth is warming and that humans are responsible for a consid erable part of that” through the burn ing of fossil fuels. And the science is clear, he said, that without action to control fossil fuel use, the warming will get worse and there will be climate events that “our species has not experienced before.” Asked for comment, White House spokesman Ken Lisaius said, “The president makes policy decisions based on what the best policies for the country are, not politics. People who suggest otherwise are ill-informed.” Kurt Gottfried of Cornell Univer sity and tjie Union of Concerned Scientists said a survey of scientists in the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service found that about 42 percent feel pressured to not report publicly any findings that do not agree with Bush policies on endangered species. He said almost a third of the Fish and Wildlife researchers said they were even pressured not to express with in the agency any views in conflict with the Bush policies. “This administration has dis tanced itself from scientific informa tion,” said Gottfried. He said this is part of a larger effort to let politics dominate pure science. He said scientists in the Environ mental Protection Agency have been pressured to change their re search to keep it consistent with the Bush political position on environ mental issues. Because of such actions, he said, it has become more difficult for fed eral agencies to attract and retain top scientific talent. This becomes a critical issue, said Gottfried, be cause about 35 percent of EPA sci entists will retire soon and the Bush administration can “mold the staff” of the agency through the hiring process. Federal spending for research and development is significantly reduced under the proposed 2005 Bush budg et, the speakers said. “Overall the R&D budget is bad news,” said Bierbaum. She said the National Science Foun dation funds for graduate students and for kindergarten through high school pduqation has been slaisjiec}. ,