Selasa, 31 Maret 2009

FDA issues pistachio warning

FDA issues pistachio warning
A California processor is recalling 2 million pounds of the nuts, which may be tainted with salmonella. Federal food safety officials warned Monday that consumers should stop eating all foods containing pistachios while they determine the source of a possible salmonella contamination.


Plant Inspection Sheds Light On Pistachio Scare

The salmonella scare that prompted a blanket federal warning against eating pistachios may have erupted because contaminated raw nuts got mixed with roasted nuts during processing, the company at the center of the nationwide recall said Tuesday.


Local jazz artists in-residence at the Kennedy Center
Two Triangle jazz musicians have been up in Washington, D.C., recently to participate in a highly prestigious gig, Betty Carter's Jazz Ahead residency at the Kennedy Center.
Supreme Court ends Philip Morris appeal of $79.5M award
The Supreme Court on Tuesday threw out a cigarette maker's appeal of a $79.5 million award to a smoker's widow, likely signaling the end of a 10-year legal fight over the large payout.


SOUTH AFRICA: Implementation, Not Money the Obstacle to Scaling Up HIV Treatment
DURBAN, Mar 31 (IPS)The money to scale up HIV treatment is there, but implementation of programmes to curb the pandemic is a problem, health experts said at the opening of the Fourth South African AIDS Conference in Durban.

Senin, 30 Maret 2009

Eat This Instead: Brown Rice vs. Grain Medley

How doctors resolve disagreements
Even today, too often medical practitioners refuse to challenge one another. I was more than a little concerned about Pete, age 11. His mother had brought him to see me one Friday afternoon; he was limping and complaining about a few days of bad ankle pain.


Fierce Buzz Cut Helps Editor Face Cancer

Dana Jennings, editor for the New York Times, has prostate cancer. He blogs about his experiences with the disease. In a recent entry, he writes about the buzz cut he adopted pre-surgery, "a visible bulwark against the tide of emasculating side effects" caused by treatment.


She loses 125 pounds and gains fans
Losing 125 pounds has gotten Tamara Harbison, a Morrisville waitress, accolades and a trip to New York City.
Eat This Instead: Brown Rice vs. Grain Medley
When you're buying Uncle Ben's 90-second rice packs, it pays to read the fine print. The Whole Grain Brown version has just a trace of sodium, but if you go for the medley of brown and wild rice, which says in small type on the package that it's "perfectly seasoned with herbs and spices," you'll end up with 730 milligrams sodium per cup.


RIGHTS: Cuba Launches Anti-Homophobia Campaign
HAVANA, Mar 30 (IPS)You could hear a pin drop and uncomfortable glances went round the room when the moderator of the debate invited contributions from the floor. A law student finally broke the silence, appealing for education to be a two-way street, so that homosexuals can "help us to accept them."

Minggu, 29 Maret 2009

Electronic Medical Records A Charged Debate

Electronic Medical Records A Charged Debate

Many health care professionals agree the switch to electronic records will help lower health care, but there is growing skepticism among doctors, administrators and computer specialists who say the costs of implementing a comprehensive tracking system will outweigh any cost-saving benefits.


Tip Sheet: The latest in beauty and fashion
This spring's Birkenstocks are still practical, still full of arch support, still lightweight. But the Birko-Flor Gizah thongs have some new patent leather colors.
Army medicine: Untested in battle
New procedures were rushed into theaters of war without rigorous review New procedures were rushed into theaters of war without rigorous review


Sabtu, 28 Maret 2009

Cleaning the natural way

Agave syrup's benefits are in debate
The sweetener's profile is rising, but the agave plant contains a range of fructose levels, calling into question any healthful gains over other alternatives. A sweetener made from the juice of a Mexican cactus is an increasingly common ingredient in bottled teas, energy drinks, nutrition bars and desserts from health food stores.


The Three Mile Island Disaster, Revisited

Jacki Lyden marks the 30-year anniversary of the accident at Pennsylvania's Three Mile Island nuclear power plant with a look back at NPR's coverage.


Cleaning the natural way
Think green when you spring clean. From good old cleaning concoctions -- such as grandma's paste of baking soda and water -- to new, sleek lines of green cleaners in big-box stores, green is truly the color of spring.
Hospitals' financial deals turn into liabilities
Low interest rates turn protective 'swaps' into losses The complex financial arrangements that recently caused huge paper losses at Maryland's largest hospitals have been commonly used for years to protect them against big interest rate increases when they sell bonds to pay for construction projects and the like.


RIGHTS-BENIN: Support for Women Facing Violence
COTONOU, Mar 28 (IPS)Judges and gynaecologists in Benin have undergone training on the interpretation of forensic evidence in cases of violence against women, as well as in investigative procedures when dealing with rape cases.

Jumat, 27 Maret 2009

Dairies Strive To Go Green: Turning Waste To Watts

Cows are big, they eat a lot, and, well, they produce a lot of manure. All this waste can have a negative impact on water and the environment, and some industrial dairies are working to make their facilities greener. Enter the digestor: It's a system that captures the methane from cow manure and turns it into electricity for the power grid.


Rapping the movie of his life
Cesar Comanche is getting old. Even though he's a spry 32, the Jacksonville-born, Raleigh-based MC realizes that, in the hip-hop world, he's something of an old fogey.
Groups find common ground on health care overhaul
Groups representing consumers, businesses, insurers, doctors, nurses and hospitals said Friday they have reached agreement on how they would like to see the nation's health care system overhauled.


Kamis, 26 Maret 2009

Herring School For Safer Sex

Doctors groups allege WellPoint's collusion cost them millions
A federal lawsuit accuses the owner of Anthem Blue Cross of fixing prices for 'out-of-network' procedures. Anthem Blue Cross of California parent WellPoint Inc. colluded with database firm Ingenix to fix prices in a multistate scheme to underpay doctors for so-called out-of-network medical care, physician organizations contended in a lawsuit filed Wednesday.


Herring School For Safer Sex

Hidden below the deep, dark ocean, millions of herring come together in a nightly ritual migration in order to mate. It happens within minutes: Small groups of fish cluster and coalesce, forming groups as large as a half-billion. The swarm behaves as one, navigating the dangerous ocean en masse to get to the mating site.


Raleigh band on high-charting album
Alesana's next album probably won't emerge until 2010, but the Raleigh screamo band still just notched a pretty impressive chart milestone.
Study looks at injuries caused by pets


SOUTH AFRICA: Activists Lament Lack of HIV/TB Co-Treatment
CE TOWN, Mar 26 (IPS)Despite repeated calls for integrated HIV and tuberculosis (TB) health services from medical experts and AIDS activists, most of South Africa’s public health facilities continue to treat the diseases independently. Co-infection presents a major risk to the lives of people living with HIV.

Rabu, 25 Maret 2009

Electronic Medical Record Change Not Easy

Health insurers offer shift on premiums
A proposal from major companies to stop charging sick people more for coverage comes with conditions. The country's leading health insurers Tuesday offered to end their long-standing practice of charging sick customers higher premiums, a significant concession in the face of mounting criticism of the industry in Washington.


Electronic Medical Record Change Not Easy

President Barack Obama is making a major push for electronic medical records. But in a new study, Dr. Ashish Jha of Harvard University's School of Public Health finds 90 percent of the hospitals he surveyed have no electronic records. Jha discusses why it may be difficult to convert.


Metallica's tour is coming to Charlotte
Yes, Metallica's tour is indeed coming to North Carolina -- but the closest it will get is Charlotte's Time Warner Cable Arena on Oct. 18.
City tuberculosis rate hits historic low
Two-century record tied to TB control effort Baltimore has recorded the lowest rate of tuberculosis since it began keeping track of infection rates nearly two centuries ago, city officials said Tuesday.


HEALTH-PAKISTAN: Spacing Births for Mother and Child
KARACHI, Mar 25 (IPS)Health experts in Pakistan are now concentrating on getting women from all strata of society to space births.

Selasa, 24 Maret 2009

Baltimore tuberculosis rate drops to lowest level in 200 years

Dying for some red meat? You may be
Eating steak, pork and burgers increases the chances of dying prematurely, according to a large federal study that one scientist calls a 'slam-dunk.' Eating red meat increases the chances of dying prematurely, according to a large federal study offering powerful new evidence that a diet that regularly includes steaks, burgers and pork chops is hazardous to your health.


EPA Puts Mountaintop Mining Projects On Hold

In a move that took the coal industry by surprise, the Environmental Protection Agency put hundreds of mountaintop coal-mining permits on hold Tuesday to evaluate the projects' impact on streams and wetlands.


Coming to Durham: India Arie
New to the DPAC schedule is the very fine R&B singer/songwriter India Arie, in a show on May 10, which just happens to be Mother's Day.
Baltimore tuberculosis rate drops to lowest level in 200 years
The city health department reported 32 cases in 2008 Baltimore has the lowest number of tuberculosis cases since it began keeping track of infection rates nearly 200 years ago, city officials said Tuesday.


HEALTH: HIV/TB Convergence Sparks Calls for New Strategy
UNITED NATIONS, Mar 24 (IPS)On World Tuberculosis Day Tuesday, the World Health Organisation (WHO) released a report showing that new surveillance techniques and more complete country reports reveal the incidence of tuberculosis (TB) co-infection with HIV to be almost double what was previously thought.

Senin, 23 Maret 2009

Judge Orders FDA To Let 17-Year-Olds Use Pill

When early screening carries risks
Recent studies find that American men are getting prostate cancer tests and treatments they do not need, with side effects such as incontinence and impotence. Radio talk show host Don Imus has plenty of company in his recent prostate cancer diagnosis: The disease strikes 1 in 6 American men.


Judge Orders FDA To Let 17-Year-Olds Use Pill

The Food and Drug Administration let politics cloud its judgment when it denied teenage girls over-the-counter access to the Plan B morning-after pill, judge says.


Crook's Corner chef makes final cut for Beard award
Chef Bill Smith of Crook's Corner in Chapel Hill is a final nominee for a James Beard Foundation Award, the Oscars of the culinary world.
Study: Lots of red meat raises risk of death from heart disease, cancer
The largest study of its kind finds that older Americans who eat large amounts of red meat and processed meats face a greater risk of death from heart disease and cancer.


SOUTHERN AFRICA: Politicians Fail to Address HIV
LUSAKA, MAR 23 (IPS)Parliamentarians across the Southern African Development Community (SADC) have failed to put HIV on the political agenda.

Minggu, 22 Maret 2009

Refresh your style

Skater squats kick up cardio workout
Use the skater squat to kick your cardio activity up a notch. It's a challenging, intense and fun way to vary your workout and help you avoid boredom.


Intervening With Teen Drinking

Dr. Gail D'Onofrio is a healthcare professional who conducts alcohol interventions, or "wake-up calls," for underage drinkers. She tells host Liane Hansen about the increasing number of preteens and teenagers who are showing up in hospitals with alcohol poisoning and other symptoms of binge drinking.


Refresh your style
Fiona is smart, accomplished and upbeat; you can't tell from this outfit. The black slacks and black-and-white top are serviceable but humdrum.
Students craft their own cafeteria offerings
Students in Md. schools look to make newly nutritious meals taste better Students in Md. schools look to make newly nutritious meals taste better


Sabtu, 21 Maret 2009

Manage your memories

When early screening carries risks
Recent studies find that American men are getting prostate cancer tests and treatments they do not need, with side effects such as incontinence and impotence. Radio talk show host Don Imus has plenty of company in his recent prostate cancer diagnosis: The disease strikes 1 in 6 American men.


My Life As A Human Guinea Pig

David Ewing Duncan decided to subject himself to more than 200 physical and mental tests — not just for fun, but to write a book about his experience. It's called Experimental Man. Duncan talks with host Jacki Lyden about how close we are to a future where tests can predict our precise risk for developing illness.


Manage your memories
It's time to gather all those photos and convert them to digital. Here's some help.
Q&A: Women’s Special Water Needs Find Voice
ISTANBUL, Mar 21 (IPS)Climate change and corrupt practices are considered root causes for a potential water crisis of global proportions, leading to scarcity where water is needed most and flooding where it is needed the least.

Jumat, 20 Maret 2009

Stem cell funding, tuition freeze favored

The gravity-defying bike ride
For the 'ultimate' spin, bike riders hone their skills on the steeply banked ADT Event Center Velodrome in Carson. Speeding across a hill of wooden planks as steep as a black-diamond ski run, I pedal a bike with no brakes.


'Remarkable Creatures' Behind Darwin's Discoveries

Charles Darwin didn't come to his theory of evolution alone. Sean B. Carroll, biologist and author of Remarkable Creatures, describes the naturalists that contributed to Darwin's discoveries. Field ecologist D. Bruce Means explains the work of modern-day naturalists.


Tough to know what to make of Â'Knowing'
It appears that Â"KnowingÂ" is another one of those films that has me at a loss for words — and, as always, not in a good way.
Stem cell funding, tuition freeze favored
House panel votes to protect them from budget cuts House panel votes to protect them from budget cuts


ENVIRONMENT-CHILE: Nobody Is Predicting Cleaner Air for Santiago
SANTIAGO, Mar 20 (Tierramérica)Olivia González has been a schoolteacher for 30 years in Cerro Navia, one of the districts in the Chilean capital with the highest concentration of air pollution between April and August. A first-hand witness to its effects on health, she is pessimistic about the air she'll breathe this coming southern hemisphere winter.

Kamis, 19 Maret 2009

A Hair Mystery: Curly Hair Gone Straight

Studies cast doubt on prostate cancer screenings
The tests rarely save lives, researchers say, and treatment can cause more harm than the potential tumor. Whether to screen men for prostate cancer has been a controversial topic for at least 20 years. Many clinicians have believed that finding a tumor early and cutting it out is the best possible way to treat prostate cancer, just as it is for most tumors.


A Hair Mystery: Curly Hair Gone Straight

Some people have straight hair and want curly hair. Others have curls and iron them out. But for a few people, their hair actually changes shape and texture on its own — and not just because of the weather.


'Fiddler' comes to life, in best stage tradition
All in all, "Fiddler on the Roof" in the touring incarnation at the Durham Performing Arts Center, is a well-crafted production with evocative lighting, engaging choreography and generally superior singing and acting.
Victims of brain injuries like Natasha Richardson's can often seem OK
Natasha Richardson died from epidural hematoma, autopsy finds Natasha Richardson died from epidural hematoma, autopsy finds


ENVIRONMENT: Coping in a World of "Peak Water"
UNITED NATIONS, Mar 19 (IPS)As more than 20,000 people meet in Istanbul for a major week-long conference on future management of the world's water supplies, women's groups are working to ensure that policy decisions about this critical natural resource take their concerns into account.

Rabu, 18 Maret 2009

POLITICS-US: Marijuana Legalisation Creates Buzz

National Union of Healthcare Workers gets its first members
A new Oakland-based union -- the product of a brutal fight between the elected leaders of healthcare workers in Northern California and their superiors in Washington -- announced Tuesday that it had gained its first members.


U.S. Births In 2007 Break Baby-Boom-Era Record

More babies were born in the United States in 2007 than any year in the nation's history — and a wedding band made increasingly little difference in the matter. The 4,317,119 births, reported by federal researchers Wednesday, topped a record first set in 1957 at the height of the baby boom.


'Fiddler' on stage beats the screen version
This "Fiddler" is a textbook demonstration of how and why musical theater is musical theater. And that's in no small part because the leading man is the same man who won a Golden Globe for the movie role.
No End in Sight for Peanut Product Recalls

ABC News' Lisa Stark reports: They keep appearing in my e-mail inbox -- more recall notices linked to the salmonella outbreak blamed on peanut products.

It's certainly unusual to have additional recalls more than two months after the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention first traced the salmonella outbreak to contaminated peanut butter made by the Peanut Corporation of America.

Yet the recall continues to expand with no end in sight. The Food and Drug Administration told me today that 3,491 products made by 275 different companies have been recalled. The companies range from big names like Kellogg's to small firms that few have heard of.

The recall now covers peanuts and peanut products from two PCA plants (one in Georgia, the other in Texas). In tracing where those products have gone, the FDA has contacted more than 14,000 firms along the distribution chain. PCA would sell to one company, that firm would sell to another company that would then sell to another company. You get the idea.

The FDA's Michael Herndon says: "This is a very active and dynamic situation." The recalled products, including peanut butter and peanut paste, are "common ingredients in cookies, crackers, cereal, candy, ice cream, pet treats and other foods.”

This is one of the largest food recalls ever. It's even high on the radar screen of the president, given first daughter Sasha's passion for peanut-butter-and-jelly sandwiches. President Obama used his most recent radio address to announce the formation of a group that will advise him on how to upgrade our food-safety laws, adding, "No parent should have to worry their child is going to get sick from their lunch. "

And today, Georgia is on tap to become the first state to tighten food-safety laws after the salmonella fiasco. The Georgia House and Senate have unanimously passed legislation that would require food processors to tell the state if tests turn up any food contamination. That information must be turned over within 24 hours.

This comes after federal investigators found that the Blakely, Ga., PCA plant knowingly shipped peanut products that had tested positive for salmonella. PCA was under no obligation to share those test results with state or federal regulators.

The Georgia law would also require the state to establish requirements for regular food testing, and processing plants would be required to draw up a Food-safety plan. The bill now goes to Gov. Sonny Perdue. His spokesman said the governor hasn't seen the bill yet, but there's every indication he will sign it. The bill passed unanimously.

That rare event underscores how strongly Georgia lawmakers feel about closing food-safety loopholes after an epidemic that has dramatically reduced demand for peanut products. Georgia produces 45 percent of the nation's peanuts.

This weekend, the city at the center of the controversy will try to move on from all the bad publicity. Blakely will hold a "Peanut Proud" expo, which the local paper, the Early County News, describes as "a special event to educate consumers that peanuts and peanut butter are safe, nutritious and trustworthy."

Still, the CDC says as of Monday the outbreak has sickened 691 people and may have caused nine deaths. The one bit of good news: There have been no reported new illnesses since Feb. 24. The concern, though, is that peanut butter has such a long shelf life and that some of these products could be in kitchen pantries for quite some time. Congress will once again take up this issue Thursday and will hear from the CEO of Kellogg and two other companies that bought products from PCA.


Study: Young blacks more prone to heart failure than whites
Young African-Americans are 20 times as likely as whites to develop heart failure, according to a new study released Wednesday. The deadly illness strikes 1 in every 100 blacks under the age of 50.


POLITICS-US: Marijuana Legalisation Creates Buzz
WASHINGTON, Mar 18 (IPS)Due perhaps in part to the country's economic woes, but also a major shift in political culture, discussion of marijuana legalisation has risen to a level of openness and prominence previously unseen in the United States.

Selasa, 17 Maret 2009

Reports: Health Care For Potential Deportees Poor

San Mateo County to pay $6.8-million settlement over hospital billing
A whistle-blower accused the county of overbilling the federal government and committing Medicare and Medicaid fraud. San Mateo County will pay $6.8 million to settle an accusation that its county hospital overbilled the federal government and committed Medicare and Medicaid fraud.


Reports: Health Care For Potential Deportees Poor

Two new reports call on federal immigration authorities to address a lack of adequate health care for detainees. With some 400,000 people held by immigration authorities last year alone, stories abound of health care inadequacies — sometimes with fatal consequences.


George Jones is coming this way
New to the outdoor-concert schedule for Cary's Booth Amphitheatre is George Jones, the iconic living legend himself.
Q&A: Why Not Wages for "Women's Work"?
UNITED NATIONS, Mar 17 (IPS)Caring for children, ailing relatives and neighbours, cooking and cleaningall of it feels like "work," but without the regular paycheque.

Senin, 16 Maret 2009

Don Imus says he has prostate cancer

Terminally ill patients, caregivers feel lost connection with doctors
Once a patient becomes terminally ill, relationships between patients, their caregivers and their primary doctors can change. Now a study offers an unusual glimpse of what patients and their doctors are thinking as the end of life approaches -- and it shows that patients sometimes feel abandoned.


HIV/AIDS Numbers Rise In Washington, D.C.

A new report finds that 3 percent of D.C. residents have HIV or AIDS — a 22-percent increase since 2006. Shannon Hader, the HIV-AIDS administration director for the District of Columbia, offers her insights.


Don Imus says he has prostate cancer
Don Imus has prostate cancerand confidence in a full recovery.
Researchers may have cure for life-threatening peanut allergies
A handful of children once severely allergic to peanuts now can munch them without worry. Scientists retrained their bodies to tolerate peanuts by feeding them tiny amounts of the very food that endangered them.


ENVIRONMENT-PAKISTAN: Save the Indus Plead Delta Folk
KETI BANDAR, Sindh , Mar 16 (IPS)"There was a time when we used to cast our nets into the river [Indus] and haul in no less than 400 to 500 ‘palla’ fish at one go," says 70-year-old Hamzo Jat.

Minggu, 15 Maret 2009

Experiment Takes A Bite Out Of Peanut Allergies

A handful of children once severely allergic to peanuts now can eat them without worry. Scientists have retrained their immune systems so they're allergy-free.


Yountville aiming high
Quiet seemed to emanate from every corner of the small Napa Valley town of Yountville. My husband and I had ditched the car a day earlier and now strolled down Washington Street, watching as other visitors stood 12 deep outside the Bouchon bakery, dined al fresco on the patio of Bistro Jeanty and ducked into tasting rooms.
HIV and AIDS cases rise 22 percent in D.C.
At least 3 percent of residents in the nation's capital are living with HIV or AIDS, and every mode of transmission is on the rise, according to a report to be released Monday by D.C. health officials.


Sabtu, 14 Maret 2009

Yerba mate tea: Drink in moderation
Even as the antioxidant-filled drink catches on, researchers sound a note of caution: People who consume a lot of the tea may have higher risk of certain cancers. Teas from across the globe are becoming more and more popular in the U.S. One relative newcomer, yerba mate, is attracting fans for its allegedly jitter-free caffeine boost and high antioxidant content.


Former NYC Health Chief Picked To Lead FDA

Obama names former New York City Health Commissioner Margaret Hamburg to lead the troubled Food and Drug Administration. An experienced public health leader, Hamburg is credited with raising agency morale and funds while at the NYC health department, and tackling HIV and tuberculosis epidemics.


Top Drawer
The Western North Carolina Orchid Society will host its annual show and sale at the N.C. Arboretum in Asheville on March 28.
Obama selects city health official Sharfstein for FDA post
Baltimore health commissioner will serve as deputy commissioner President Barack Obama has tapped city health commissioner Dr. Joshua M. Sharfstein to be deputy commissioner of the Food and Drug Administration.


Jumat, 13 Maret 2009

A stem cell battle along state lines
Conservatives who oppose the use of embryonic cells will lobby at the national level too. Faced with a new federal policy that opens the door for more embryonic stem cell research, conservatives have geared up for a political battle at the national and state levels that goes to the core of their beliefs about the sanctity of human life.


Physicists Hunt For Hidden Particles

Scientists using Fermilab's Tevatron particle accelerator report findings on the makeup of matter. Updates include the sighting of a single top quark and progress in the hunt for one of the holy grails of physics — the Higgs boson. Fermilab's Heidi Schellman describes the news.


'Che' loves the man a bit too much
Nearly four and a half hours long, spanning more than a decade and reconstructing a pair of brutal insurgencies, "Che" surely deserves the overworked, frequently misapplied name of epic.
BRAZIL: Child Rape Case Revives Debate on Abortion
RIO DE JANEIRO, Mar 13 (IPS)The case of a nine-year-old girl who was raped and impregnated by her stepfather has revived the debate in Brazil on sexual violence, the need to reform the abortion law, and the shortcomings of the health system when it comes to dealing with the few cases in which abortion is legal.

Kamis, 12 Maret 2009

Howard County health workers laid off

Low-level ozone exposure found to be lethal over time
An 18-year study shows an increased annual risk of death from respiratory illnesses, depending on the pollution level. It goes beyond studies that linked brief ozone spikes to short-term effects. Ozone pollution is a killer, increasing the yearly risk of death from respiratory diseases by 40% to 50% in heavily polluted cities like Los Angeles and Riverside and by about 25% throughout the rest of the country, researchers reported today.


Space Station Crew In Near Miss With Space Junk

The crew of the international space station survived a close call with space junk Thursday. The three crew members took refuge for 11 minutes in the Soyuz escape capsule and then were told to go back into the space station. Officials were worried about a possible collision with a piece of space junk.


U2 show for Raleigh confirmed, sort of
Here's the latest word from Live Nation about U2's American tour. Raleigh still doesn't have an official specific date, but at least it's on the list.
Howard County health workers laid off
Howard County's health department has begun layoffs that may total 15 workers by June 30, as officials say slumping income tax and real estate revenues push a projected county budget shortfall toward $10 million in the current fiscal year.


CARIBBEAN: Culture of Sexual Coercion Exposes Women to HIV
PORT OF SPAIN, Trinidad, Mar 12 (IPS)The fight against widespread sexual violence in the Caribbean has been joined by a high-profile new women’s coalition that warns it could be a major reason for the spread of HIV among women and girls in the region.

Rabu, 11 Maret 2009

Surrogacy, in the line of duty for military wives

Surrogacy, in the line of duty for military wives
Surrogacy is a natural fit for military wives, with their solid support networks, premium medical care and strong dispositions. For some it's easy money; for others it's a way to help unlucky couples. Angel Howard, 32, lay motionless on an examining table in a La Jolla fertility clinic last Mother's Day, her delicate features bathed in the blue-gray glow of an ultrasound screen as she watched a doctor try to impregnate her with someone else's embryos.


Obama To Tap Ex-New York Health Official To FDA

Former New York City Health Commissioner Margaret "Peggy" Hamburg is expected to be President Barack Obama's nominee to head the Food and Drug Administration. Hamburg is currently with the Nuclear Threat Initiative in Washington.


A dip any business would love
Virginia Ingram is one of a dozen Capstrat employees in the company's kitchen for the monthly dip club lunch. One Friday a month, each Dip Club member brings in a homemade dip -- from Israeli fondue to spinach-feta hummus.
Report: Baltimore's Sharfstein tapped for FDA post
City health commissioner would be FDA's deputy commissioner, according to Wall Street Journal report The White House reportedly has tapped Baltimore Health Commissioner Dr. Joshua M. Sharfstein to be deputy commissioner of the Food and Drug Administration.


Selasa, 10 Maret 2009

Inheriting Infections: Can Genes Make You Sick?

Autism patients in California are dealt insurance setback
The Department of Managed Health Care declines to require carriers to pay for applied behavior analysis, an expensive therapy that insurers contend is an educational service, not medicine. California regulators said Monday that insurers must provide speech, occupational and physical therapies to their autistic members but rejected pleas to require insurers to cover the cost of behavior therapy that aims to help patients live in society.


Inheriting Infections: Can Genes Make You Sick?

Here's a radical concept: Our genes could determine which infectious diseases we are susceptible to. Some scientists say this could explain why some people infected with a microbe develop the disease and others show no symptoms.


A positive sign: More parents saying 'yes' to 'no'
While walking through one of my favorite discount stores the other day, I happened upon a scene that gave me hope for America's future. It was change I could believe in, for sure.
Md. lawmakers want to fine drivers who smoke with kids in car
Drivers in Maryland couldn't smoke in their cars or allow their passengers to smoke if young children are riding in the vehicle, under legislation proposed by a Montgomery County lawmaker.


Q&A: Water Crisis Could Affect Billions
UNITED NATIONS, Mar 10 (IPS)The United Nations has warned that about half the world's populationover three billion people by today's countmay suffer water shortages by the year 2025.

Senin, 09 Maret 2009

Some Worry Colorado's Gas Boom Could Go Bust

Balance exercise helps arms, abs, buttocks and thighs
This exercise combines movements to target your arm, abdominal, buttock and thigh muscles all at once. Don't be surprised if one leg is harder to balance on than the other -- we all have a more dominant side. That's why it's important to train them equally.


Some Worry Colorado's Gas Boom Could Go Bust

High prices and a push from the Bush White House to open public land to drilling fueled a natural gas boom in Colorado's Rocky Mountains in recent years. Now that prices are lower — and the state is considering strict new industry regulations — drilling has dropped off dramatically and the local economy is suffering.


'Amazing Race' contestants have ties to Raleigh
If you've been watching CBS' travelogue reality competition "The Amazing Race" on Sunday nights, you've no doubt seen the show's first deaf contestant, Luke Adams, 22, competing with his mother, Margie.
Calendar
Events, screenings, support groups and more programs Blood drive Community College of Baltimore County, Catonsville campus, 800 S. Rolling Road / The American Red Cross will hold a blood drive 9 a.m.-3 p.m. tomorrow and Wednesday in Room 100 of the K Building. Call 443-840-4322.


HEALTH-NIGERIA: Govt Struggling to Guarantee Safety of Medicines
LAGOS, Mar 9 (IPS)In 2008, as many as a thousand children were hospitalised with diarrhoea and vomiting after taking "My Pikin" teething syrup. At least 84 children are known to have died.

Minggu, 08 Maret 2009

Distant worlds with historical twists
Revelations await readers who enter the distant worlds explored in four new works of fiction from other countries and cultures.
NASA's cost overruns soar, too
NASA can land a spacecraft on a peanut-shaped asteroid 150 million miles away, but it doesn't come close to hitting a budget target for building its spacecraft, according to congressional auditors. NASA's top officials know it and even joke about it.


Sabtu, 07 Maret 2009

More about the COBRA subsidy
One thing is clear, only those who lost their jobs between Sept. 1, 2008, and Dec. 31, 2009, are eligible. After last week’s column on the insurance subsidy included in President Obama's stimulus package, we received quite a lot of mail asking more questions. That's understandable. The details are complicated.


Kindle's New Voice Is Almost Human

The latest version of Amazon's electronic book reader features the latest in text-to-speech technology. Could a dystopian future where NPR hosts are replaced by soulless robots soon be upon us?


She's weaving her way through life
After Susan Laswell made her first basket at a Girl Scout camp at age 9, she was ready for more.
Obama to lift stem cell research restrictions
President Barack Obama plans to lift key restrictions Monday on federal funding of embryonic stem cell research, reversing one of the most-debated domestic policies of his predecessor, according to administration sources.


Jumat, 06 Maret 2009

Dr. Tim: Inside the White House Forum on Health Care

Science of time: What makes our internal clock tick
Neuroscientists are exploring how brain and body make sense of our most ephemeral resource. In warp-speed modern America, time has become one of our most precious resources. We manage it, and we expend it carefully. ¶ Ironic, then, that a resource as precious as seconds, minutes and hours is so poorly understood and so routinely misestimated by modern humans -- by 15% to 25% in either direction, depending on the individual and the acuity of his or her time perception. But understanding our ability to perceive time -- and to use time to make sense of our world -- is one of the newest and most sweeping frontiers of neuroscience. ¶ Says UCLA neuroscientist Dean Buonomano: "In order to understand the nature of the human mind, we must unravel the mystery of how the brain tells time, in both normal and pathological states." ¶ Against that backdrop, the temporally challenged have become more scientifically relevant than ever. Neuroscientists have come to recognize that patients with devastating brain disorders such as Parkinson's and Huntington's diseases greatly underestimate the passage of time. Poor timing is a hallmark in several psychiatric conditions, including schizophrenia, autism and attention deficit disorder. Many of about 5,500 soldiers returning from Iraq and Afghanistan with traumatic brain injury will find that faulty timing is one of the invisible wounds that follow them into civilian life. And researchers have confirmed that as we reach senior status, our internal clock grows increasingly unreliable.


Obama To Reverse Limits On Stem Cell Research

President Barack Obama is expected to reverse Bush-era restrictions on federal funding of embryonic stem cell research. Obama is expected to announce the move Monday, freeing up federal funds for research on those stem cell lines created after Aug. 9, 2001.


Taste this
The doner kebab is sometimes described as Turkish gyro, and that description is more or less accurate in theory.
Dr. Tim: Inside the White House Forum on Health Care
ABC News’ medical editor Dr. Tim Johnson reports: Thursday I attended the White House Forum on Health Care. Below are some of my observations on this interesting and important event.

1. As an "event," it was enormously successful, particularly in attracting the full range of special interest groups and politicians who will play key roles in the debate over health care reform. As President Obama said, it was the "hot ticket" in town, larger than even the financial summit.

2. For me, the most impressive segment was the last event, the unscripted Q and A session with the president. Since this is a subject I know fairly well, I was very impressed with the president's knowledge, with how quickly he connected the dots between questions, key information and ideas. I was even more impressed with his "emotional intelligence" in handling the various questioners, quickly understanding any hidden messages and speaking immediately to their concerns in a thoughtful way.

3. The president -- rightly in my view -- kept hammering at the cost-control issue. He is clearly determined to promote reform on the basis of the current financial crisis, which I think is a smart move strategically -- i.e., reaching out to people and politicians who might not be on the "moral bandwagon" but who will listen to economic arguments. He already has the support of the former but needs the support of the latter to get a bill passed.

4. One key moment was the exchange between Sen. Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa, and the president. Grassley brought up the sensitive subject of a "public option," i.e., the "Medicare-like" program that Obama promoted during his campaign. The president responded very diplomatically by saying he understood the concern and that the views of those opposed would be carefully considered, but he never said flatly they wouldn't propose it. This issue is the great fear of the private health insurance industry; it knows it can't compete against the government in overhead and administrative costs. One expert I talked with today said he thinks this will be a key bargaining chip for the administration, that they might be willing to give it up in exchange for other significant concessions by conservatives. But other liberal groups still insist it is a line in the sand that must not be crossed.

5. Everyone I have talked to this week believes now that there will be plans brought to the floors of the House and Senate before the August break. Whether anything can get passed is, of course, another question.

6. Finally, on a personal note, it was thrilling to see "Sir Edward" Kennedy enter the East Room with the president. He still speaks with authority on the subject, and I hope his voice will be heard during this coming debate.
Obama to lift ban on funding of embryonic stem cell research
President will sign executive order on Monday, senior administration official says President Barack Obama is expected to sign an executive order on Monday reversing restrictions on federal funding of embryonic stem cell research.


IRAQ: Medical Care At Last, At a Price
BAGHDAD, Mar 6 (IPS)Prompt medical care is at last on offer in Iraq, for those who can find the dollars for it.

Kamis, 05 Maret 2009

Fantasia to reprise role in 'The Color Purple'

Scientists create stem cells purged of carcinogens used in process
Researchers report that they have turned skin cells from patients into iPS cells free of the cancer-causing viruses and genes needed to create them. iPS cells are key in regenerative medicine. Borrowing a biological cut-and-paste trick from bacteria, scientists have created the first personalized stem cells for patients that are free of the cancer-causing viruses and genes needed to make them, according to a study released today by the journal Cell.


Web Chat: Why We Snore And How To Stop It

You know who you are. Or maybe you sleep next to one. About 20 percent of adults snore. And it gets worse — by age 60, nearly half of all adults snore. The good news is that there are lots of ways to silence that roar. Drs. Sonya Malekzadeh and Judith Owens answer your questions.


Fantasia to reprise role in 'The Color Purple'
"American Idol" winner Fantasia Barrino will reprise her lead role of Celie in the first North American touring production of "The Color Purple" when the Broadway musical opens in Washington.
Obama tries to start conversation on health care
The nation can't afford to wait for the economy to recover before tackling out-of-control medical costs, President Barack Obama is telling some of the most powerful players in the health care reform debate.


Rabu, 04 Maret 2009

Using Magnets To Disorient Crocodiles

Using Magnets To Disorient Crocodiles

In Florida, wildlife officials are experimenting with a way to keep crocodiles away from people. When crocodiles take up a little too close to people, officials will relocate the reptiles. But the crocs use an internal-navigation system to return. Florida officials are now attaching magnets to the heads of crocs to jam the signal. Lindsey Hord, a biologist with the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission, discusses the results.


Put your food budget on a diet
Now may be the time to put your grocery cart on a Depression diet.
Health Policy Experts Mull Impact of Wyeth Ruling
By AUDREY GRAYSON, ABC News Medical Unit

The U.S. Supreme Court ruled today against the drugmaker Wyeth, holding that pharmaceutical companies can be held liable for harm from medicines that carry warnings approved by federal regulators.

In a 6-3 vote, the high court affirmed a Vermont supreme court ruling that upheld a $7 million damages award to a guitarist, Diana Levine, who had to have her arm amputated after she was improperly injected with Wyeth's anti-nausea drug Phenergan as part of treatment for a migraine.

Health policy experts overwhelmingly agreed that the ruling represents an enormous victory for consumers.

“This is an enormously important ruling to protect the American people from the excesses of the drug industry,” said Dr. John Abramson, clinical instructor at Harvard University Medical School and a consultant to plaintiffs’ attorneys in litigation involving the drug industry.

The current system for drug labeling depends most heavily on research funded by the drug makers themselves. Many experts argue that this current system is deeply flawed.

“As we have seen in far too many cases, companies hide or explain away data about dangerous drugs, sometimes even from the FDA itself,” said Merrill Goozner, director of the Integrity in Science Project at the Center for Science in the Public Interest in Washington, D.C.

Dr. Aaron Kesselheim, a professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School, said another obstacle to properly identifying drug risks is that “the FDA does not have the resources to fully monitor the uses and outcomes of all approved drugs.”

But the Supreme Court decision appears to suggest that drug companies should identify the risks of the drugs they manufacture.

“The Supreme Court ruling places the responsibility for drug safety directly where it should be -- on the drug makers themselves,” Abramson said. “And now, properly, they will be held responsible for failure to fulfill the obligation to adequately study the safety of their drugs and to adequately communicate the risks of which they are -- or should be -- aware.”

In instances when the FDA fails to properly monitor drug risks, the ruling guarantees that patients harmed by a drug may still obtain a hearing for their case in a state court.

“With this decision, when the FDA fails to take action on a drug risk and a patient is harmed by a drug, patients will still be able to get a hearing in state court,” said Dr. Bruce Lambert, director of the Center for Education and Research on Therapeutics at the University of Illinois at Chicago. “And if the evidence is in their favor, they will be able to get compensation and hold companies accountable.”

While all experts agreed that this ruling is a victory for consumers who are harmed by drugs that carry insufficient warning labels, Gregory Conko, a senior fellow at the Competitive Enterprise Institute in Washington, D.C., said that he doesn’t believe Wyeth or the FDA did anything wrong in this particular case.

“It would have been one thing if new evidence of risk had arisen since FDA approved the label, or if Wyeth were accused of hiding information from the FDA or misrepresenting the data it did provide,” Conko said. “But that is decidedly not the case here.”

Conko added that because Phenergan’s label explicitly warns in six different locations of the high probability of tissue damage if injected into artery, this specific case was not one of negligence on part of the Wyeth, but on the part of the physician’s assistant who injected the drug into Levine’s artery despite the clear warnings on the drug’s labeling.

“Thus, the Supreme Court could have and should have held in Wyeth's favor with a narrowly tailored opinion confined to the facts of this case,” Conko said.

“Here, instead, the court is essentially saying that it doesn't matter that [the] FDA thought [intravenous] administration of this drug was sufficiently safe,” he added. “As long as a sympathetic plaintiff can convince a jury of laymen that her injury could have been prevented if the physician's assistant never tried to administer the drug in such a way that actually would have been safe, then FDA's expert judgment is irrelevant.”
Peggy Murphy, 58, dies of breast cancer
Pa. woman took part in Hopkins drug trial Peggy Murphy, whose tireless fight against advanced breast cancer through traditional means and an experimental vaccine trial at Johns Hopkins was chronicled in a Baltimore Sun series last fall, died yesterday. She was 58.


Q&A: ' We Were Told To Go To The Mortuary'
NAIROBI, Mar 5 (IPS)Two understaffed and ill-equipped public clinics serving 600,000 people: it is in neighbourhoods like Dandora that the battle to reduce maternal mortality is won or lost.

Selasa, 03 Maret 2009

Bettye LaVette will perform at art museum

Inspectors found problems persisted at Pasadena psychiatric hospital
Government regulators have documented numerous failures in patient care at Las Encinas within the last year. Those seeking treatment at Aurora Las Encinas Hospital pass through manicured gardens on their way to a facility that costs as much as $1,400 a night. For the money, the private Pasadena psychiatric hospital promises world-renowned care and privacy, with a decades-long reputation for service to the rich and famous.


Surprise! Saturn Has Small Moon Hidden In Ring

Scientists have found a new moon, which measures about a third of a mile wide, hidden in one of Saturn's dazzling outer rings.


Bettye LaVette will perform at art museum
Sassy soul goddess Bettye LaVette will perform at the N.C. Museum of Art on July 10, according to Pollstar.
Snow shoveling is serious danger to the heart
Experts say risk of heart attack rises sharply for shoveler, especially one unused to exercise Shoveling snow can be hard on the heart.


BRAZIL: Happiness Is Promoting Health and Development in the Amazon
SANTARÉM, Brazil, Mar 3 (IPS)On his fourth trip to Brazil, Prince Charles plans to visit a project in the Amazon jungle that has cut infant mortality and illiteracy nearly in half by organising poor communities to get involved in their own development.

Senin, 02 Maret 2009

Cary camp registration starts today

The raw milk debate rages on
Though proponents of unpasteurized milk tout its health benefits, including boosting immunity, scientific evidence remains shaky. More and more consumers are forgoing standard milk in favor of "raw" milk, milk that's unpasteurized and unhomogenized, essentially straight from the udder of the cow.


Obama To Rescind Provider Conscience Regulation

The outgoing Bush administration issued a rule that protects healthcare workers who refuse to administer services or prescriptions that go against their beliefs. Abortions and contraceptive medications are at the heart of the ruling, which President Obama plans to withdraw.


Cary camp registration starts today
Early registration for Cary's summer camps starts today for Cary residents and later this month for everybody else.
Shoveling snow can be hard on the heart
Doctors urge caution for those who are older or sedentary It may not look like a lot to shovel out there, but that white stuff may be surprisingly heavy. And getting rid of it will surely be taxing on Marylanders, who haven't had much of anything to shovel for three years.


Minggu, 01 Maret 2009

Farmers Headed To Combat Zone

Armed with 4 tons of winter wheat and farming tools, members of the Kansas National Guard are preparing to deploy to Afghanistan. The Agribusiness Development team will help local farmers with their crops and livestock. Major Blaine Clowser, a member of the "combat farmer" team, talks about his pending trip.


Eve's tortured soul
Tossed from the Garden of Eden for a seemingly insignificant act -- eating a piece of fruit -- Eve is adrift.
A healthy subsidy
Eileen Ambrose: A new federal subsidy helps ease the burden for laid-off workers who must take on hefty COBRA payments. It will cut Severna Park resident Sigrid Kingsbury's tab by $336.