Monday, January 30, 2006

National and International News



Shopping centre where 11-year-old bought heroin for £10 a bag - The Guardian 30/01/06

Until yesterday few people outside south Glasgow had ever heard of the Pollok Centre. A rundown shopping mall bounded by housing schemes on one side and derelict wasteland on the other, it boasts a Tesco but little else to tempt the shopper.

Heroin addict, 11, collapses at school - The Times 30/01/06





Hewitt plans £4bn switch from hospitals to new-style clinics - The Guardian 30/01/06

A big switch of NHS resources out of hospitals into GP health centres and German-style polyclinics will be proposed today in a white paper from the health secretary, Patricia Hewitt.

Move to push NHS into community - BBC Health News 30/01/06





Arthritis drug may cut breast cancer risk - The Times 30/01/06

CONTROVERSIAL arthritis drugs have the unexpected benefit of greatly cutting the risk of breast cancer, a new trial indicates.





Statin hope for form of arthritis - BBC Health News 30/01/06

Cholesterol-lowering statin drugs used to combat heart disease may also help people with rheumatoid arthritis, research suggests.





Obesity can be caught from a virus, scientist says - The Times 30/01/06

A SHARP increase in the number of Britons who are severely overweight may be the result of a virus that allows people to “catch” obesity, controversial research suggests.





Labour's fitness regime an exercise in 'hype' - The Times 30/01/06

GOVERNMENT plans to improve the health of the nation through more exercise and better diet are “spin and hype”, according to the chief executive of LA Fitness, the nationwide chain of fitness centres.





Surgeons fear for anatomy skills as number of donated bodies falls - The Guardian 30/01/06

The government's top medical adviser has written to all doctors in England urging them to encourage patients to leave their bodies to medical training and research because there is a shortage.





Parents' marriage choice may lead to autism - The Telegraph 30/01/06

The recent rise in autism may have been driven by the tendency of like-minded engineers, physicists, mathematicians and other "systemizers" to marry each other, according to a Cambridge University professor.





Crackdown on food marketing call - BBC Health News 30/01/06

Governments must do more to protect children from food marketing in the fight against obesity, an expert says.





New powers over death considered - BBC Health News 30/01/06

Ministers are considering plans to let adults appoint someone who could block life-sustaining treatment if they were too ill to do so themselves.





RCN Response To BBC Survey Of NHS Deficits, UK - Medical News Today 30/01/06

Dr Beverly Malone, General Secretary of the Royal College of Nursing, said: “The Government dismissed our claim that NHS deficits are now beyond £1 billion.





JAMA Study Assesses Impact Of Women's Health And Cancer Rights Act - Medical News Today 30/01/06

"Use of Breast Reconstruction After Mastectomy Following the Women's Health and Cancer Rights Act," Journal of the American Medical Association: The report, by Amy Alderman of the Health Services Research and Development and Surgical Service at the VA Ann Arbor Health Care System and colleagues, evaluates the impact of the Women's Health and Cancer Rights Act. The act, which was implemented in 1999, requires insurance providers to cover breast reconstructive surgery after mastectomy and in 2001 added regulations that penalize noncompliant insurers.





BMJ Paper Blows The Lid On The Tobacco Industry's Ventilation Myth - Medical News Today 30/01/06

Commenting today [Friday 27 January] on the BMJ's paper ‘British American Tobacco's air filtration scheme'*, the BMA's Head of Science and Ethics, Dr Vivienne Nathanson, said that it showed that ventilation systems do not protect the public from second-hand smoke and that the only way to do this was to introduce a comprehensive ban on smoking in ALL enclosed public places.





Cheshire and Mersey News


City acts to curb school-age obesity - Daily Post 30/01/06

AROUND half of Liverpool's 11-year-old children are overweight and in urgent need of help, education officials said last night.




Staff anger over ward closure - Daily Post 30/01/06

STAFF last night reacted with shock and anger at plans to close a rehab ward for elderly patients in Ellesmere Port.




Extra medics for university - Daily Post 30/01/06

ALMOST 100 more doctors and dentists are to be awarded degrees in Liverpool as part of a multi-million pound deal to help solve NHS shortages.

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National and International News



Health panel: How can I beat post-natal depression? - The Observer 29/01/06

A mother who experienced terrible depression after the birth of her first child is now hoping for a second. How can she escape the misery of PND? Our panel of experts offer advice


Dispute led clone expert to quit - The Observer 29/01/06

Stem cell professor reveals to Antony Barnett that he disagreed with premature publicity given to scientific breakthroughs


Plan to cut outpatient numbers by 1m - The Observer 29/01/06

A million fewer patients could be seen by hospital specialists under new government plans and instead will be cared for nearer their homes.

Flying surgeons to offer local ops - The Sunday Times 29/01/06
Consultants 'must deign to leave their hospitals' - The Telegraph 29/01/06


S&M: How to teach hubby tricks in bed? - The Observer 29/01/06

'I've only had sex with two men, and they are best mates. I'd like to teach my husband a few tricks in bed, but I'm scared he'll realise I learnt these with his friend'


What's in your basket? - The Observer 29/01/06

The actress Emma Thompson's predilection for tea and spuds leaves her a bit short on greens and omega-3, reckons Dr John Briffa


Danny and his NHS lifesavers - The Observer 29/01/06

Today, we tell the inspirational story of how Danny Biddle, one of the victims of the 7 July bombings, was saved by an extraordinary team of specialists working at St Mary's Hospital in west London. Not only did they bring him back from the brink of death several times, but they then saw him through the harrowing struggle to come to terms with losing his legs. Night after night, nurses sat by his bed to reassure him as he relived the terrible events of that day.

Miracle workers who rebuilt Danny's life - The Observer 29/01/06


The true price we pay for Alzheimer's - The Observer 29/01/06

Your excellent feature 'The cost of Alzheimer's' (last week) highlighted the distressing impact of this disease on sufferers and their families and also brought to attention the iniquitous arrangements which compel thousands of dementia sufferers to pay for their own care.


Women demand tougher laws to curb abortions - The Observer 29/01/06

A majority of women in Britain want the abortion laws to be tightened to make it harder, or impossible, for them to terminate a pregnancy.



NHS 'MoTs' to give early warning of illnesses - The Guardian 28/01/06

All British people will be offered an NHS "MoT" in which they will be told how likely they are to develop certain diseases and illnesses based on tests taken at five stages during their lives.

Health MoT for everyone and private GPs in shops - The Times 28/01/06
Hewitt's new cure: a health MoT plus trainer - The Telegraph 28/01/06
Mixed reception to Hewitt's health 'MoTs' - The Telegraph 28/01/06
New Labour is bad for the nation's health - The Telegraph 28/01/06
Health MoTs will be offered to everyone - Daily Mail 28/01/06
People to be offered 'health MoT' - BBC Health News 28/01/06


Free fruit and veg scheme for young pupils hits problems - The Guardian 28/01/06

The government's programme to promote fruit and vegetables in schools has been hit by a freeze on health spending and by an official evaluation that suggests it has made little significant impact on children's consumption.


Jon Ronson talks to the Thornes, dubbed 'the fattest family in Britain' - The Guardian 28/01/06

The Thornes were dubbed 'the fattest family in Britain'. Now, having lost 100 stone between them, they describe how lonely it is to live in a family in which everyone shares the same problem


Seven ways to boost your metabolism - The Guardian 28/01/06

A vigorous session at the gym isn't the only way to burn energy. Sam Murphy on how to get science on your side


That's better - The Guardian 28/01/06

It's a month when there's always someone in the house who is under the weather. And Matthew Fort knows only one way to treat the poorly: with culinary medicine


Gates pledges $900m to fight against TB - The Guardian 28/01/06

A plan to cut deaths from tuberculosis by 14 million over the next 10 years was launched yesterday at the World Economic Forum in Davos with a pledge of $900m (£507m) from the Microsoft boss Bill Gates and exhortations for the world to try harder from the chancellor, Gordon Brown.

Gates cash kick-starts $31 bln TB funding drive - Reuters 28/01/06


Lucy Atkins on how can you protect your children from the damaging effects of divorce - The Guardian 28/01/06

Is it possible to protect your children from the damaging effects of divorce? Three British families struggling to cope with marriage breakdown travelled to Texas to visit a specialist 'divorce coach'. The results, says Lucy Atkins, were remarkable


Emma Mitchell: Remedy for allergy - The Guardian 28/01/06

All my life I have suffered from 'allergic' reactions to many things, but the local allergy clinic recently told me I had not allergies but 'hypersensitivity'. What is this, and are there homeopathic remedies?


Anne Karpf: Rights and wrongs of teenage abortion - The Guardian 28/01/06

It looked as if we were squaring up for a very old fight when, last year, Sue Axon first challenged the Department of Health's guidelines that allow under-16-years-olds to be given confidential advice about sexual matters. In the left corner the liberals, defending confidentiality as essential to avoid thousands more unwanted pregnancies. In the right corner the conservatives, claiming their parental rights were being usurped by professionals. For me it seemed like no contest: I hadn't marched for the liberalisation of abortion so many times only to have it whisked away from the most vulnerable all these years later. Now that Axon has lost, I still cleave to the same position and yet some of the glib certainties have ebbed away. Perhaps it's just a sign of middle-age to see beyond the slogans: today I subscribe less to "free abortion on demand" than "life's a bitch".


Inhaler could replace needles for diabetics - The Times 28/01/06

AN INSULIN inhaler that could replace injections for some people with diabetes has been approved by European drug-licensing authorities.

Diabetes inhaler given approval - BBC Health News 27/01/06


'I help terminally ill patients to kill themselves. If I go to prison, so be it' - The Independent 29/01/06

Doctor struck off for giving advice on suicide vows to go further in promoting his cause


The figures do add up to a healthier Britain - The Sunday Times 29/01/06

I CERTAINLY accept that we have not solved all this country’s problems. But I don’t recognise the one-sided account of our record painted by David Smith (How the wheels came off UK plc, Focus, last week).


NHS patients pay cash for superior care - The Sunday Times 29/01/06

NATIONAL Health Service patients are paying for enhanced levels of care and operations that are no longer available free at hospitals across England. The superior treatment for fee-paying NHS patients has been criticised as creating a two-tier health service and privatisation by stealth.


Top crisp maker crunches fat levels - The Sunday Times 29/01/06

WALKERS, the manufacturer of Britain’s bestselling crisps, is to cut saturated fats in its products by more than 70% amid rising concerns about the health risks from snack foods high in salt and fat


In your face: the secrets of healthy living - The Sunday Times 29/01/06

YOUR face really is your fortune. If you are married, of a higher social class and have fewer than four children, then you probably look younger than you actually are.


Swallows & Amazons bid to liven up children - The Sunday Times 29/01/06

THE government’s children’s commissioner is to campaign for youngsters to relearn how to take risks by following the example of Arthur Ransome’s pre-war novel Swallows and Amazons.


An extra €500m should be spent on elderly care, says think tank - The Sunday Times 29/01/06

THE Irish government needs to spend an extra €500m to meet its own targets on increased care for the elderly, according to a report to be published tomorrow.


Harney delays hospital project - The Sunday Times 29/01/06

THE health minister is at the centre of a row over the future of Temple Street Children’s hospital in Dublin after 20 medical consultants said that its planned redevelopment on a site beside the Mater hospital has been “sabotaged”.


Magic mushrooms banned in Ireland after man's death - The Sunday Times 29/01/06

THE sale of magic mushrooms is to be banned in Ireland, following a lobbying campaign by the family of a man who died after eating the drug.


Stem cell man ‘faces job bar’ - The Sunday Times 29/01/06

A BELFAST man who spent his life savings on stem cell treatment in Ukraine claims he is now penniless because his former employer won’t give him back his job.



An experimental course may help middle-class marijuana smokers trying to quit. John Naish gets the inside dope


Haunted by her past - The Times 28/01/06

Jane Horrocks thinks she inherited her obsessive genes from a line of tough women. Her ancestry is so important that she contacts the ‘other side’ via a spirit guide called Alan, she tells John Naish


All in the line of beauty - The Times 28/01/06

Extreme cold can wreck your complexion but when Hannah Betts joined a team of Polar explorers to test a new skin-protection formula she jumped in feet first


Self-help for women? It’s a scream - The Times 28/01/06

A weekend in the country getting in touch with her inner woman didn’t sound scary, but when Genevieve Fox heard the group wail, it was time to run


Do it like this, not like that - The Times 28/01/06

The control freak may be the boss at work, accustomed to telling others what to do, and them doing it without delay. And this attitude may extend to his family life. Or he may dream of being the boss and act out his fantasy at home. Women can be control freaks too but, in my experience, they tend to be men.


Lunchtime fix: CACI Electro-Cellulite Massager - The Times 28/01/06

Experts say that most anti-cellulite treatments are as effective as snake oil, but that hasn’t stopped cosmetics companies coming up with more ingenious methods to zap our fat. The CACI Electro-Cellulite Massager is a treatment that claims to send small currents of electricity into problem areas to “break down” cellulite. It is supposed to firm legs, lift buttocks and tackle dimply thighs, all in only 40 minutes.


Dr Copperfield: inside the mind of a GP - The Times 28/01/06

The Department for Culture, Media and Sport recently published a list of “Icons of Englishness”, including the Routemaster bus, Stonehenge and a decent cup of tea. Researchers from YouGov determined last year that our inalienable right to free speech, our world-renowned system of justice and the monarchy were things that made us proud to be British.


Bodylicious: anti-scar treatment - The Times 28/01/06

Alessandra Steinherr, the beauty director of Cosmopolitan magazine, chooses the best products to smooth and soften the appearance of scars.


Junk medicine: scientific peer review - The Times 28/01/06

The disgrace of Woo Suk Hwang, the South Korean cloning pioneer who faked his data, had already placed the integrity of medical science and its peer-reviewed journals under close scrutiny. Both are reeling again this week from another scandal. On Monday, Jon Sudboe, of the Norwegian Radium Hospital, confessed to fabricating a study of mouth cancer, published last year in The Lancet.


Sex matters with Dr Thomas Stuttaford and Suzi Godson - The Times 28/01/06

My once sexually adventurous wife of over ten years now utterly rejects my advances. She will not say why. What on earth should I do?


She doesn’t want to drink - The Times 28/01/06

My daughter is 4 and I am concerned that she is not drinking enough. She needs a lot of persuasion to have half a cup of juice with breakfast, does not drink school milk and often comes home with her lunch drink unopened? How can I encourage her to drink more during the day?


What's up, doc? checking your reflexes - The Times 28/01/06

Why bother? The doctor is tapping a tendon in your knee. This causes a slight but sudden stretch of your thigh muscle, which sends an automatic signal — via nerves and spinal cord — ordering the muscle to contract.


Get over it: being a pessimist - The Times 28/01/06

My partner complains that I always look on the down side of life. How can I be more optimistic?


It works for me: biosthetic aromatherapy - The Times 28/01/06

In search for a cure for baldness, one City boy discovered ‘biosthetics’. It performed miracles, he tells Emma Mahony


Home remedy: peppermint tea for indigestion - The Times 28/01/06

Can peppermint tea settle your stomach if you’ve overeaten?


Eco-worrier: Fairtrade fruit - The Times 28/01/06

Should I buy my bananas only from the Windward Islands?


Learning to think small - The Times 28/01/06

Can you teach a mum who’s never seen raw garlic to cook healthy food for kids in just two hours?


Not the beetroot of all evil - The Times 28/01/06

“But what can I do with them?” I heard someone ask at our local farmers’ market, as he picked up a bunch of earthy, dark-red beetroots. I usually have my hands too full to feel any desire to stop, but this was easy.


Change one thing: running the marathon - The Times 28/01/06

When David Aaronovitch tried to kickstart his running regimen, he was first told to stop ...


Not just anybody: Kathleen Turner - The Times 28/01/06

How the fit and fabulous stay that way. Actress Kathleen Turner, 51, used to drink to numb her arthritis; these days she’s addicted to the gym


'I don't know the science behind my miracle cure - and I don't care' - The Telegraph 29/01/06

Stem cell therapy holds the promise of being the ultimate cure for everything that can go wrong with the body. The hope is that one day, it will be possible to use stem cells to regrow and replace any diseased or failing organ. From Alzheimer's Disease to Parkinson's, from heart attacks to muscle or brain collapse - stem cells could, theoretically, be used to cure them all.


Police help kerb-crawl men hide crimes - The Telegraph 29/01/06

Men arrested for kerb-crawling are being helped to conceal their behaviour from their wives in a "re-education" scheme backed by the Home Office.


One in five dentists ready to leave NHS - The Telegraph 29/01/06

Thousands of dentists are poised to leave the National Health Service in protest at the Government's new work contract, prompting the worst crisis in the profession since NHS services began nearly 60 years ago.


Watchdog warns of risks in IVF embryo testing - The Telegraph 29/01/06

The safety of genetic testing on IVF embryos will be questioned in a report by the watchdog Human Genetics Commission.


Meet the Divorce Coach - The Telegraph 29/01/06

You have finally realised that you don't really suit mustard-coloured culottes. You've learned how to clean your kitchen's most hidden crevices; stopped your children from turning completely feral; taken drastic steps to improve your sex life and got your weight down to a manageable 27 stone.


'It was the worst night of my life' - The Telegraph 28/01/06

A new report claims that fathers who attend caesarean births are doing more harm than good. But do they want to be there, or are they just responding to pressure from society, asks Christina Hopkinson



And they said I should let one of my triplets die - Daily Mail 27/01/06

Every time Claire Orgill looks at her healthy, happy triplets, she gives thanks that she ignored the doctors' advice.


Want to quit smoking? Do it suddenly - Daily Mail 27/01/06

Many smokers gear up for months to try and kick their habit, making meticulous plans to ease them off the nicotine.


Cancer woman's Herceptin protest - BBC Health News 29/01/06

A 45-year-old mother with breast cancer says she will protest at the Welsh assembly until a Herceptin "postcode lottery" for women is over.


Hewitt against abortion changes - BBC Health News 29/01/06

Health Secretary Patricia Hewitt has said she is not in favour of introducing tougher UK abortion laws.


Poor-area GPs 'deserve more pay' - BBC Health News 29/01/06

GPs should be paid more for working in deprived areas to help tackle health inequalities, a think tank has said.


Chimp antibodies 'fight smallpox' - BBC Health News 29/01/06

Antibodies derived from chimpanzees may help treat smallpox and the potentially deadly side effects caused by the existing vaccine, US scientists say.


Hope of liver cancer blood test - BBC Health News 29/01/06

Scientists hope new technology will help them develop a blood test to improve early diagnosis of liver cancer in high risk groups.


Trial to test asthma salt theory - BBC Health News 28/01/06

Scientists are to test the hypothesis that eating less salt can help people with asthma control their symptoms.


Clues to cause of long-term pain - BBC Health News 28/01/06

Undamaged nerve fibres - not those that are injured - may cause long-term chronic pain, research suggests.


'MRSA risk' patients on baby ward - BBC Health News 27/01/06

Health campaigners are demanding an inquiry after patients thought to be a high MRSA risk were placed in a Surrey hospital's maternity ward.


Cancer battle woman in remission - BBC Health News 27/01/06

Barbara Clark, the nurse who fought to receive the drug Herceptin on the NHS, is in remission from breast cancer.


Vaginal Oestrogen May Stop New Breast Cancer Drugs Working, Say UK Specialists - Medical News Today 28/01/06

Breast cancer specialists from one of the UK's leading cancer centres cautioned doctors today (Thursday 26 January) of the risks in prescribing vaginal oestrogen to breast cancer patients being treated with the new aromatase inhibiting drugs, anastrozole, letrozole and exemestane[1].


PAC Report: Macmillan Cancer Relief Says Now It's Time To Focus On Patients Not Just Targets - Medical News Today 28/01/06

Macmillan Cancer Relief called for a new National Cancer Plan to dramatically improve the patient's experience throughout the cancer journey in light of the Public Accounts Committee report "The NHS Cancer Plan" today.


Eisai Establishes European Strategic Business Hub In The UK - Medical News Today 28/01/06

Tokyo, Japan (JCN Newswire) - Eisai Europe Ltd. (Headquarter: London, President: Yutaka Tsuchiya), a regional headquarter in Europe and a subsidiary of Eisai Co., Ltd. (Headquarter: Tokyo, President and CEO: Haruo Naito) concluded the Heads of Terms with Arlington Securities Ltd. in the UK on land sales and the development to establish a strategic business hub in Europe.


More Patients To Get Access To Cutting-Edge Medical Therapies Under New Health Research Strategy, UK - Medical News Today 28/01/06

UK Health Minister, Jane Kennedy today announced a new health research strategy aimed at giving patients better access to ground-breaking new medicines and treatments, and supporting researchers carrying out health and social care research throughout England.


Prostate Cancer Device Market Set To Triple In Asia And Latin America - Medical News Today 28/01/06

The next five years will herald massive growth for minimally invasive prostate cancer devices in several emerging markets, with high intensity focused ultrasound (HIFU) technology leading the way. By 2010, the Asian and Latin American markets for brachytherapy seeds, cryoablation, and HIFU devices will gross over $25 million in revenue-more than 3 times the market value in 2005.


Future Science Group Signs With Ingenta For Delivery Of Electronic Journals - Medical News Today 28/01/06

Future Science Group has reached an agreement with Ingenta, the global research gateway, to provide electronic access to over 20 review journals published under their imprints Future Drugs and Future Medicine.


Penn To Test New Thermal Energy Procedure To Reduce Asthmatic Symptoms - Medical News Today 28/01/06

New Procedure May Revolutionize Traditional Asthma Care By Lessoning Smooth Muscle Tissue in the Airway.


Updated Index To Methamphetamine Research Literature - Medical News Today 28/01/06

The New York State Department of Health has posted a new version of "A Key to Methamphetamine-Related Literature" on its web site


New Pathway Could Present An Intervention Point For Cancer Treatment - Medical News Today 27/01/06

A new cellular pathway leads to destruction of a protein that promotes growth of breast, prostate and similar cancers and could provide a new avenue through which to pursue treatment of such diseases, said a researcher at Baylor College of Medicine.


Computer Systems Assisting Orthopaedic Surgeons - Medical News Today 27/01/06

EUREKA project E! 2288 MEDAC is helping orthopaedic surgeons to document clinical cases and analyse compiled patient data.


Non-surgical Therapy That Destroys Tumors But Leaves Healthy Surrounding Tissue - Medical News Today 27/01/06

Nonsurgical cancer therapy that destroys tumors but leaves healthy surrounding tissue intact could be available at every hospital if research reported this week in the journal Nature eventually comes to fruition.


BRCA1 Gene Found To Inhibit Two Sex Hormones, Not Just One - Medical News Today 27/01/06

Could help explain why women who have mutations in their BRCA1 gene are susceptible to 'hormone-dependent' cancers including breast, endometrial and cervical cancers.


Study Implicates Defective Synapse Generator In Onset Of Alzheimer's - Finding Links Age-related Brain Disease To Down Syndrome - Medical News Today 27/01/06

A new UCLA/Veterans Affairs study implicates defects in the machinery that creates connections between brain cells as responsible for the onset of Alzheimer disease.


UNC Scientists Discover 'gatekeeper' Protein In Blood Clotting - Medical News Today 27/01/06

New research from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill School of Medicine has identified a protein that may control blood clotting by keeping blood platelets from sticking together.


DNA-wrapped Carbon Nanotubes Serve As Sensors In Living Cells - Medical News Today 27/01/06

Single-walled carbon nanotubes wrapped with DNA can be placed inside living cells and detect trace amounts of harmful contaminants using near infrared light, report researchers at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. Their discovery opens the door to new types of optical sensors and biomarkers that exploit the unique properties of nanoparticles in living systems.


Bird Flu Virus Has Unique Gene Not Found In Human Flu Virus - Medical News Today 27/01/06

According to scientists at St. Jude Children's Research Hospital, Memphis, USA, all bird flu viruses they have investigated have a unique gene not found in human flu viruses. This unique gene may play a major role in making the H5N1 bird flu virus strain so virulent (potent, powerful).


Brain Damaged Girl Improves, Her Eyes Follow Sounds - Medical News Today 27/01/06

Haleigh Poutre, who sustained severe brain injuries as a result of attacks by her stepfather and adoptive mother and was nearly removed from life support not that very long ago is now in a rehabilitation center.


Passive Smoking Raises Breast Cancer Risk For Under 50s - Medical News Today 27/01/06

According to the California's Office of Environmental Health Hazard Assessment, passive smoking (second hand smoke) raises the risk of developing breast cancer for women under 50 by 68% to 120%. Post-menopausal women, say the researchers, do not have a greater risk from passive smoking.


Hewitt Launches Manual To Help Guide NHS Through Reform Process, UK - Medical News Today 27/01/06

New guidance includes plans to get the NHS back in the black. The next steps in creating a patient-led NHS were outlined today by Health Secretary Patricia Hewitt.


Estimated Number Of HIV-Positive People In China Is 650,000, According To Report By China's Health Ministry, WHO, UNAIDS - Medical News Today 27/01/06

The number of HIV-positive people in China is an estimated 650,000 in 2005, 30% lower than the country's previous estimate, according to a report released on Wednesday by China's Ministry of Health, the World Health Organization and UNAIDS, Reuters reports (Reuters, 1/25). According to the report, 2003 estimates said that the number of HIV-positive people in China was 840,000, but current estimates say that 650,000 HIV-positive people live in the country, and 75,000 of those people have developed AIDS. The report also estimates that in 2005 there were 70,000 new cases of HIV and 25,000 AIDS-related deaths. The country's current HIV/AIDS prevalence is approximately 0.05%, the report says (China's Ministry of Health/WHO/UNAIDS, "2005 Update on the HIV/AIDS Epidemic and Response in China," 1/24). In some areas of Henan and the far-western border of Yunnan and Xinjiang, HIV prevalence among pregnant women is more than 1%, Reuters reports (Reuters, 1/25). Of the total number of HIV/AIDS cases in China, 80% are associated with injection drug use and commercial sex work, the Wall Street Journal reports (Oster, Wall Street Journal, 1/25). According to the Kyodo News, the new case load estimates have reduced the United Nation's prediction of the number of HIV-positive people that will be living in China by 2010 from 10 million to approximately 1.5 million (Kyodo News, 1/25). Wang Longde, China's vice minister of health, said the current case-load estimates are lower because China conducted a survey in 2004 that found the number of people who contracted HIV through illegal blood sales was lower than previously predicted in 2003 (Xinhuanet, 1/25). According to experts, another reason for the lower estimates could be the country's improved data collection capabilities (Reuters, 1/24).


European Donors In Discussions To Provide Funding For Programs Suspended By The Global Fund In Myanmar - Medical News Today 27/01/06

A group that includes the European Commission, Australia, Britain, the Netherlands, Norway and Sweden is planning to replace funding that the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria was providing in Myanmar, unnamed diplomats said on Tuesday, AFP/Yahoo! News reports (AFP/Yahoo! News, 1/24). The Global Fund in August 2005 announced a suspension of its grants to Myanmar, citing travel and other restrictions implemented by the country's government that impede the delivery of medical supplies and services. The fund in 2004 pledged to spend $98 million over five years to fight the three diseases in the country. ECHO, the European Commission's humanitarian aid department, last month pledged about $18 million in funding aimed at helping vulnerable populations in Myanmar and refugees living along the country's border with Thailand (Kaiser Daily HIV/AIDS Report, 1/3). The European diplomats said the new donor group held talks on Jan. 19 with the Myanmarese government about providing funding to fight the diseases, and they also have had talks with the opposition political party in the country, as well as not-for-profit groups, according to AFP/Yahoo! News. The donor group wants to create a new system for funding health programs that uses procedures, created by the Global Fund, that aim to prevent funding from supporting the country's military-led government and allow health care workers to travel freely throughout Myanmar, according to AFP/Yahoo! News. A U.N. official on Tuesday said the U.N. Development Programme has secured funding so that Global Fund programs in the country can continue until July in an effort to "allo[w] a smooth handover when the new donors take over," AFP/Yahoo! News reports (AFP/Yahoo! News, 1/24).


Scientists Uncover 3-D Structure Of HIV, Study Says - Medical News Today 27/01/06

Scientists have uncovered the 3-D structure of HIV, according to a study published in the Jan. 10 edition of the journal Structure, BBC News reports. Because strains of HIV vary in size and shape, scientists have found it difficult to understand its structure, the study says. Stephen Fuller, a professor at Oxford University's Wellcome Trust Centre for Human Genetics, and colleagues took several images of the virus from different angles. The team took about 100 images of 70 individual viruses and compared them using a computer program. The researchers found that the cone-shaped core of HIV is as wide as the viral membrane, and the virus has spikes on the outside that it uses when attaching to CD4+ T cells. In addition, the study finds that HIV differs from most viruses in that its membrane, rather than its internal structure, defines its size, a feature that limits the way the virus can assemble. "Identifying how the virus grows will allow us to address the formation of this important pathogen and how it accommodates its variability," Fuller said, adding that the finding could lead to the development of more effective therapies to treat HIV (BBC News, 1/24).


African Americans Face Higher Risk Of Lung Cancer Than Other Races, Study Says - Medical News Today 27/01/06

African Americans who smoke face a higher risk of developing lung cancer than smokers of other races, indicating that genes "might help explain the racial differences long seen in the disease," according to a study in Thursday's New England Journal of Medicine, the AP/Detroit Free Press reports (Chang, AP/Detroit Free Press, 1/26). In the largest study on the topic to date, researchers from the University of Southern California and the University of Hawaii followed 183,000 study participants over an eight-year period beginning in 1993. Over the course of the study, 1,979 enrollees developed lung cancer. Among African-American men who smoked, there were 264 cases of lung cancer per 100,000 individuals, compared with 264 cases among native Hawaiian men, 158 cases among white men, 121 cases among Japanese-American men and 79 cases among Latino men. The study, which did not include other ethnic groups, found that women overall had lower incidences of lung cancer, but ethnic disparities generally "followed the same pattern," the Wall Street Journal reports (Bulkeley, Wall Street Journal, 1/26). Overall, whites who smoked up to one pack of cigarettes daily had a 43% to 55% lower risk of developing lung cancer than blacks who smoked the same amount. Latinos and Japanese Americans were 60% to 80% less likely than blacks to develop lung cancer if they smoked up to a pack a day, according to the study (AP/Detroit Free Press, 1/26). The disparities -- which persisted even after researchers considered factors such as diet, socioeconomic status and occupation -- disappeared among participants who were the heaviest smokers, likely because the damage caused by smoking at that level overwhelmed other factors, according to lead author Christopher Haiman, an assistant professor at the Keck School of Medicine at USC.


IAVI President Berkley To Advocate For Doubling HIV/AIDS Vaccine Research Funding At World Economic Forum - Medical News Today 27/01/06

International AIDS Vaccine Initiative President Seth Berkley ahead of the World Economic Forum Annual Meeting 2006 this week in Davos, Switzerland, said he plans to advocate for a doubling of commitments from policymakers and other participants at the forum for HIV/AIDS vaccine research to at least $1.2 billion annually, Reuters reports (Hirschler, Reuters, 1/25). IAVI estimates that about $682 million is spent annually on HIV/AIDS vaccine research and development, with about $100 million coming from the private sector (Kaiser Daily HIV/AIDS Report, 1/3). Berkley said the potential bird flu epidemic has highlighed the problems that result from not taking a long-term approach to vaccine development based on economic incentives for private companies. "The whole system for vaccines is not aligned properly," Berkley said, adding, "We have to find better ways to accelerate research, finance research and to create incentives for pharmaceutical companies." He said the Group of Eight industrialized nations has expressed support for making HIV/AIDS vaccine research a priority at six different meetings -- including the 2005 meeting in Gleneagles, Scotland -- but implementation of promises remains an important obligation, Reuters reports (Reuters, 1/25).


Patients And Staff To Benefit From Funding Programme To Improve End-Of-Life Care, UK - Medical News Today 27/01/06

The NHS needs to pay more attention to dying patients and their relatives by improving the places where they are looked after.


Understanding Tumor-host Interactions, Five European Labs Cooperate - Medical News Today 27/01/06

An EU funded Specific Targeted Research Project (STREP) entitled "Tumor-Host Genomics" has been launched at the University of Helsinki, Finland. The Tumor-Host Genomics project links together the resources of five European leading-edge laboratories studying major signaling pathways in mesenchymal and hematopoietic cells, forming a concerted effort to understand tumor-host interactions, and to identify novel therapeutic targets.


Stem Cell Therapy For Parkinson's Disease - Medical News Today 27/01/06

High hopes have been pinned on the prospects of using stem cells to eventually be able to replace diseased or dead cells with new, healthy ones. In order to do this, the stem cells must be programmed to form cells with the exact speciality needed for the treatment of patients.


Role Of The Nervous System In Regulating Stem Cells Discovered - Medical News Today 27/01/06

Study led by Mount Sinai School of Medicine may provide new hope for cancer patients and others with compromised immune systems.


BiovaxID™ Yields 89 Percent Survival In Patients With Aggressive Non-Hodgkins - Medical News Today 27/01/06

Accentia Biopharmaceuticals, Inc. (NASDAQ: ABPI) and its subsidiary, Biovest International, Inc. (OTCBB:BVTI), report follow-up data to a Phase 2 trial conducted by the National Cancer Institute (NCI) that shows Biovest's BiovaxID yielded an 89% survival rate in mantle cell lymphoma patients. The median follow-up was 3.8 years. Historically, patients with this type of lymphoma only have had a 50% chance of surviving 3 years and 20% chance of surviving 5 years. BiovaxID, an investigational personalized anti-cancer vaccine, stimulates the immune system to seek out and destroy tumor cells. The data were published in a recent edition of Nature Medicine (Nat Med.2005; 11(9):986-91).


Bird Flu Poses Threat To International Security, Illinois Scholar Says - Medical News Today 27/01/06

In the past, when government leaders, policymakers and scholars have turned their attention to peace and security issues, the talk invariably has focused on war, arms control or anti-terrorism strategies. But Julian Palmore believes it's time to expand the scope of the conversation.


Three Neuronal Growth Factors May Be Key To Understanding Alcohol's Effects - Medical News Today 27/01/06

Growth factors are a large and diverse group of polypeptides critical for the development of the central nervous system. A symposium at the June 2005 annual meeting of the Research Society on Alcoholism in Santa Barbara, California focused on three growth factors - insulin, brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF), and glial cell-derived neurotrophic factor (GDNF) - that may also play an important role in the regulation of the behavioral effects of alcohol. Symposium proceedings are published in the February issue of Alcoholism: Clinical & Experimental Research.


Daughters Of Alcoholics - Medical News Today 27/01/06

During the last decade, most of the research on genetic and environmental variables relevant to children of alcoholics has focused on the sons of alcoholics. In contrast, symposium participants at the annual meeting of the Research Society on Alcoholism in Santa Barbara, California in June 2005 focused on moderators of risk for alcoholism and other psychopathologies among daughters of alcoholics. Proceedings are published in the February issue of Alcoholism: Clinical & Experimental Research.


Peptide vaccines raise concern in animal study
- Reuters 27/01/06

Findings from an animal study indicate that inoculation with so-called peptide vaccines can have lethal consequences.


Patients may see scary lights during eye surgery - Reuters 27/01/06

Patients who are awake while undergoing surgery on the gel-like vitreous inside the eye often report seeing frightening lights, similar to what is experienced by cataract surgery patients, a new study shows. As a result, many patients say they would opt for general anesthesia the next time around, despite the greater risk.


Antidepressants may affect immune system - Reuters 27/01/06

Antidepressants like Prozac and Zoloft, which affect a brain chemical called serotonin, may also influence the body's immune system, new research suggests.


Women with type 1 diabetes have low bone density - Reuters 27/01/06

Bone mineral density (BMD) in premenopausal women with type1 diabetes, also referred to as juvenile, diabetes, is 3 percent to 8 percent lower than in women without diabetes, investigators at the University of Pittsburgh report.


US senator cites bird flu to oppose China exports - Reuters 27/01/06

China should not be allowed to process and ship poultry meat for sale in the United States due to the risk of bird flu, the Democratic leader of the Senate Agriculture Committee said on Friday.


DHEA may reduce depression symptoms in HIV patients - Reuters 27/01/06

The dietary supplement DHEA seems to relieve the symptoms of minor depression in patients infected with HIV, the virus that causes AIDS, according to a new report.


Cheshire and Mersey News


Hospital trust chief to quit after 16 years - Daily Post 27/01/06

THE chief executive of Wirral Hospital Trust is to quit this summer after 16 - sometimes controversial - years in the job.


Elderly home help costs may go up by 70% - Chester Chronicle 27/01/06

HOME help charges for some older people could rise by more than 70% if cuts in local services get the go-ahead.


Tell us about cancer mix-up - Warrington Guardian 27/01/06

ARE you one of the 17 women with breast cancer wrongly given the all-clear by a radiologist at hospitals in Greater Manchester?


Experts warn we must cut down on salt - Warrington Guardian 27/01/06

HEALTH experts are urging people to reduce their salt intake as part of National Salt Awareness Week, which starts this Sunday.


Cumbria and Lancashire News


Walker airlifted to hospital - Lancashire Evening Telegraph 27/01/06

A BURNLEY woman was airlifted to hospital after breaking a leg in a fall while out walking in the Lake District.


Home birth made easy by the baby unit - Lancashire Evening Telegraph 27/01/06

LITTLE Beatrix Taggart may have been born at home - but her parents are supporting the Bolton Evening News campaign in support of the Royal Bolton Hospital's baby unit.


`Yes' to parking plan? - Lancashire Evening Telegraph 27/01/06

CONTROVERSIAL plans to transform part of Rakehead Recreation Ground into a car park for Burnley General Hospital are due to get the green light next week.


Greater Manchester News


Cancer campaigner gets the all-clear - Bolton Evening News 27/01/06

CANCER patient Bob Norburn has been given the all-clear by doctors.


Public meeting will demand services are retained - Bury Times 27/01/06

A PUBLIC meeting is to be held at Bury Town Hall next month to demand Fairfield Hospital's maternity department and special care baby unit is kept open.


This is cancer scandal doc - Manchester Evening News 27/01/06

THIS is the first picture of the doctor at the centre of the breast cancer scandal.

Error radiologist suspended - Bury Times 27/01/06

Monday, January 23, 2006

National and International News



U-turn lets Alzheimer's drugs be used by NHS - The Guardian 23/01/06

People with moderate Alzheimer's disease are to be given drugs for their condition on the NHS following a campaign by patients, carers and pharmaceutical companies which has led to a U-turn in the official guidance.

Guidance rules out early treatment for Alzheimer's - The Times 23/01/06

Alzheimer's drugs to be available to NHS patients - The Independent 23/01/06

Alzheimer's drugs policy reviewed - BBC Health News 23/01/06




Euthanasia's euphemism - Daily Telegraph 23/01/06

It tells you something when an organisation has to refer to itself by a euphemism. The Voluntary Euthanasia Society now plans to call itself Dignity in Dying. Well, who among us does not want to die with dignity? Every hospital, hospice and care home does its best to ease our transit to that undiscovered country from whose bourn no traveller returns.

Diane Pretty widower named patron - BBC Health News 23/01/06




High court to rule on parental consent for abortions - The Guardian 23/01/06

The high court will today decide whether girls under the age of 16 should be allowed to terminate a pregnancy without their parents' consent.

Abortion law judgement expected - BBC Health News 23/01/06





NHS told: put money before medicine - The Guardian 23/01/06

Patricia Hewitt, the health secretary, will call for the end of the "handout culture" in the NHS this week and demand that financial management be put ahead of clinical objectives. Under the new financial regime, health trusts will sink or swim on their ability to attract patients under a system of payment by results that threatens the income of poor performers.

Patients to look after themselves to save the NHS cash - The Times 23/01/06





Babies may be given flu jab to save the lives of adults - The Times 23/01/06

HEALTH experts are considering plans to offer the influenza jab to all children under 2.





Cash for councils and GPs to erase sick-note culture - The Times 23/01/06

CITY leaders will be told tomorrow that they can earn cash dividends to cut their council tax by helping the Government to get more long-term benefit claimants back to work





Total ban 'would encourage up to 700,000 smokers to kick the habit' - The Independent 23/01/06

Almost 700,000 smokers would kick the habit within the first year of a total ban on smoking in public places being introduced, research suggests.





Meadow appeals against GMC bar - The Independent 23/01/06

Professor Sir Roy Meadow will begin a High Court challenge tomorrow against a decision by the General Medical Council to strike him off.





Asian Britons seek discount plastic surgery in Pakistan - The Independent 23/01/06

A growing number of well-educated, British-born Asian women in their 20s are combining annual visits to relatives in Pakistan with cut-price, nip-and-tuck operations, surgeons say.





'Miracle' cures shown to work - The Independent 23/01/06

Dcotors have found statistical evidence that alternative treatments such as special diets, herbal potions and faith healing can cure apparently terminal illness, but they remain unsure about the reasons.





Malaria develops in immune system - BBC Health News 23/01/06

Malaria parasites develop in the lymph nodes of the immune system, researchers have discovered.





Therapy for fatal nerve disease - BBC Health News 23/01/06

A simple ventilator and face mask could extend the life of motor neurone disease patients, research suggests





How The Brain Makes A Whole Out Of Parts - Medical News Today 23/01/06

When a human looks at a number, letter or other shape, neurons in various areas of the brain's visual center respond to different components of that shape, almost instantaneously fitting them together like a puzzle to create an image that the individual then "sees" and understands, researchers at The Johns Hopkins University report.





Number Of Infants Dying As They Sleep On Sofa With Parent Rises - Medical News Today 23/01/06

The number of sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS) cases that occur when a parent sleeps with their infant on a sofa has increased in recent years, according to a paper published online today (Wednesday January 18, 2006) by The Lancet. The authors strongly recommend that parents avoid this sleeping environment.





How Good Are Vioxx Type Drugs? Sometimes The Best Option For Arthritis - Medical News Today 23/01/06

Scientists believe that despite the current concerns around anti-inflammatory drugs like Vioxx, they may still be the best option for treating some forms of arthritis.





New Program Puts The Brakes On Depression Roundabout - Medical News Today 23/01/06

A University of Queensland researcher is offering people with depression a new, free program that is confidential and accessible to people across Australia, including those in remote areas.





Repetition Improves Medical Students' Woeful Lack Of Stethoscope Skills - Medical News Today 23/01/06

Repetition appears to be key in improving medical students' woeful lack of stethoscope skills, a handicap that often continues into patient practice. A new study in the January issue of the American Journal of Medicine shows that when medical students listened to heart sounds up to 500 times, they significantly honed their ability to identify specific problems such as a heart murmur or heart failure.





Effective And Cheap Treatment For Cystic Fibrosis Lung Disease - Medical News Today 23/01/06

Working half a world away from each other, two teams of medical scientists have identified what they believe is a simple, effective and inexpensive treatment to reduce lung problems associated with cystic fibrosis, the leading fatal genetic illness among whites. The new therapy, identified through studies supported chiefly by the Cystic Fibrosis Foundation and the National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute, also appears to be safe and easy to take.





Heart Attack Risk-detection Technology Developed At UH - Medical News Today 23/01/06

A breakthrough in computational medicine is helping one University of Houston professor pave the way to uncover a ticking "time-bomb" in the heart





Half Of Active Children Pursue Non-traditional Physical Activities - Medical News Today 23/01/06

A transportation engineer at The University of Texas at Austin has performed one of the most comprehensive surveys of physical activity in children and found that about as many kids stay active by peddling their bikes to a friend's house or walking around a neighborhood as do others by participating in organized athletics.





People Who Buy Wine Have Healthier Diets Than People Who Buy Beer - Medical News Today 23/01/06

People who buy wine also buy healthier food and therefore have healthier diets than people who buy beer, finds a study published online by the BMJ today.





Mobile Phones And Brain Tumours, No Link Found, BMJ - Medical News Today 23/01/06

Mobile phones are not associated with an increased risk of the most common type of brain tumour, finds the first UK study of the relationship between mobile phone use and risk of glioma. The results are published online by the BMJ (British Medical Journal).





Patients Want As Much Info As Their GP In Post-consultation Letters - Medical News Today 23/01/06

Over half of surveyed patients want to see the letters sent to their general practitioner following hospital consultations. A study published today in the open access journal BMC Medicine shows that patients would prefer to receive the same information as their general practitioner (GP) following an outpatient consultation, rather than a letter written especially for them.





UK MPs Should Consider Health For All When They Vote On A Smoking Ban - Medical News Today 23/01/06

Members of Parliament across all parties should consider health for all when they vote on a complete smoking ban, states an editorial in this week's issue of The Lancet.





Shingles, Epidural Injection Does Not Reduce Long-term Pain - Medical News Today 23/01/06

A single epidural injection of steroids and local anaesthetics is not effective for the prevention of long-term pain in shingles, according to a study published in this week's issue of The Lancet.





Funds Needed To Scale Up Global Efforts To Control Avian Influenza - Medical News Today 23/01/06

Global control efforts--and the funds to support them--need to be scaled up now to address the current failures in halting avian influenza, states an editorial in this week's issue of The Lancet.





Vitamin D Signals To Prevent Bone Loss During Osteoporosis - Medical News Today 23/01/06

The risk of bone fracture resulting from falls increases as we age due to bone loss and osteoporosis. Physicians have routinely prescribed vitamin D and vitamin D-related drugs to retard bone loss, but until now, little was known about the specific targets of vitamin D in bone.





Honeybees May Transmit Viruses To Their Offspring - Medical News Today 23/01/06

Researchers from the U.S. Department of Agriculture report what may be the first evidence of queen honeybees transmitting viruses to their offspring. They report their findings in the January 2006 issue of the journal Applied and Environmental Microbiology.





Slugs May Spread E. Coli To Salad Vegetables - Medical News Today 23/01/06

A new study suggests that slugs have the potential to transmit E. coli to salad vegetables. Researchers from the University of Aberdeen, United Kingdom, report their findings in the January 2006 issue of the journal Applied and Environmental Microbiology.





Epstein-Barr Virus Found In Breast Cancer Tissue May Impact Efficiency Of Treatment - Medical News Today 23/01/06

Epstein-Barr virus has been detected in breast cancer tissue and tumor cells and may impact the efficiency of chemotherapeutic drug treatment say researchers from France and Japan. They report their findings in the January 2006 issue of the Journal of Virology.





Indigenous Amazonians Display Core Understanding Of Geometry - Medical News Today 23/01/06

Findings suggest basic geometrical knowledge is a universal constituent of the human mind. Researchers in France and at Harvard University have found that isolated indigenous peoples deep in the Amazon readily grasp basic concepts of geometry such as points, lines, parallelism and right angles, and can use distance, angle and other relationships in maps to locate hidden objects.





Low-level Heat Wrap Therapy Safely Reduces Low Back Pain And Improves Mobility In The Workplace - Medical News Today 23/01/06

The use of continuous low-level heat wrap therapy (CLHT) significantly reduces acute low back pain and related disability and improves occupational performance of employees in physically demanding jobs suffering from acute low back pain, according to a Johns Hopkins study published in the December 2005 issue of The Journal of Occupational and Environmental Medicine.





Less Risky Treatment For Depression, Seizures - Wireless Device Is Implanted In The Neck - Medical News Today 23/01/06

Researchers from the University of Pittsburgh, with the help of a team of Pittsburgh high school science teachers, have developed a wireless device that is implanted in the neck to fight depression and epileptic seizures.





Heart-healthy Compound In Chocolate Identified - Medical News Today 23/01/06

In a multifaceted study involving the Kuna Indians of Panama, an international team of scientists has pinpointed a chemical compound that is, in part, responsible, for the heart-healthy benefits of certain cocoas and some chocolate products.





Stopping The Clock: Genetics Of Tumor Latency In Skin Cancer - Medical News Today 23/01/06

Dr. Anthony E. Oro and colleagues (Stanford University) have identified two key Gli protein degradation signals that directly affect tumor latency in a mouse model of human skin cancer.





Popular Antidepressants May Also Affect Human Immune System - Medical News Today 23/01/06

Drugs that treat depression by manipulating the neurotransmitter serotonin in the brain may also affect the user's immune system in ways that are not yet understood, say scientists from Georgetown University Medical Center and a Canadian research institute.





Nuclear Medicine Imaging Allows Prediction Of Breast Cancer Patients' Response To Hormonal Treatment - Medical News Today 23/01/06

January's Journal of Nuclear Medicine offers report on innovative, accurate imaging technique developed by Belgian and Italian researchers.





Metabolic Syndrome Identified As Risk Factor For Kidney-pancreas Transplant Patients - Medical News Today 23/01/06

A three-year multi-center study of kidney-pancreas transplant recipients has identified a new risk factor for impaired kidney function, which may help physicians refine their treatment strategies.





Current Interpretation Of Data Protection Law Hampers Medical Research, UK - Medical News Today 23/01/06

Overly strict interpretation of the data protection law is hampering epidemiological research (the study of the causes, distribution, and control of disease in populations), argue researchers in this week's BMJ.






Cumbria and Lancashire News


Health shake-up - Leyland Guardian 23/01/06

PEOPLE in South Ribble are being urged to have their say on a major shake up of health care.




Pilot boosts paramedics - Chorley Guardian 23/01/06

AN INITIATIVE to get first aid volunteers to work alongside paramedics is to be piloted in Chorley.

National and International News



We must care about Alzheimer's - The Observer 22/01/06

Alzheimer's is a devastating disease for which there is no cure. But drugs can help to delay the onset of the memory loss and personality changes which come with the condition. These drugs have lifted treatment out of the dark ages, transforming the possibilities for doctors to offer patients and carers relief against a bleak future. Now, as we report today, the government's licensing body, the National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence (Nice), has concluded, following a 10-month investigation, that they should be prescribed on the NHS for people in the earlier stages of the disease.

Alzheimer sufferers win 60m drug fight - The Observer 22/01/06
Why my father deserves to have his lost voice back - The Observer 22/01/06
'I have to be strong for mum, I can't give up' - The Observer 22/01/06


GPs paid to send sick back to work - The Observer 22/01/06

Doctors to work with employment advisers to help the long-term ill move off state benefits

GPs may be rewarded for getting patients to work - The Independent 22/01/06
Doctors set to get bonuses if they cut sicknotes - The Sunday Times 22/01/06
Doctors told to clamp down on sick notes - The Telegraph 22/01/06
Benefit rewards for doctors - The Telegraph 22/01/06


Desperate British Asians fly to India to abort baby girls - The Observer 22/01/06

Women refused terminations on the NHS are joining the millions of Indians who have surgery to uphold a sons-only tradition. Dan McDougall reports from Delhi


Blair warned on 'rush for nuclear'
- The Observer 22/01/06

Peter Hain sounds the alert on hidden costs as Number 10 gears up to combat energy shortage



Jill Insley: Ofcom to the rescue of NHS patients - almost
- The Observer 22/01/06

Cash is delighted by Ofcom's decision to recommend that all aspects of the installation and operation of hospital telephone and television services should be reviewed by the Department of Health.


Trust chemicals, beware of nature - The Observer 22/01/06

From make-up to medicine, scientists warn that people are wrong to think natural must be best


Sex: Britain's quiet revolution - The Observer 22/01/06

Do we care about being faithful? Are we happy with our sex lives and relaxed about how others behave? The results of a MORI poll for The Observer show that Britain is gradually becoming a more tolerant society. Denis Campbell reports

No sex please until we're at least 17 years old, we're British - The Observer 22/01/06


Health panel: How can I increase my potency? - The Observer 22/01/06

After trying for three years to start a family, a reader writes about his concerns over his lack of success. Can he boost his fertility? Our panel of experts give their opinions


50 best spas - The Observer 22/01/06

With so many spa holidays to choose from, finding the right one for you can be a daunting task. Should you opt for Ayurveda in India, thalassotherapy in Thailand or new age therapy in New Mexico? Spa veteran Nicole Mowbray selects some of the best retreats to suit every need and every budget


Nigel's edible alphabet - The Observer 22/01/06

Food M is for meat, organic and wild. P is for pomegranate, bright and beguiling ... In the third slice of his food guide, Nigel Slater caps a revival in earthy ingredients

Eat yourself fitter - The Independent 22/01/06


'After just an hour of coaching, you walk away knowing exactly what you want and believing you can do it' - The Observer 22/01/06

Exponents make big claims for life coaching, insisting it can improve everything from your career to your health and your parenting skills. Sceptics think it's just the latest over-priced, under-regulated, pseudo-scientific sop for the angst-ridden me generation. Anna Moore investigates a controversial boom industry


NHS shakeup at the top in bid to get a grip on spending - The Guardian 21/01/06

A thorough shakeup of the top ranks of NHS management was announced yesterday in an attempt to tighten control after an accident-prone period of policy mishaps and financial instability.


Can you handle it? Being sacked
- The Guardian 21/01/06

"There was an interesting case recently in which a senior employee within an NHS trust who was dismissed because of his personality had his claim for unfair dismissal rejected," recalls Hayes. "His negative attitude managed to upset a number of colleagues. The court found this was a substantial enough reason for the dismissal to stand."


In Iraq, life expectancy is 67. Minutes from Glasgow city centre, it's 54 - The Guardian 21/01/06

In deprived inner city area of Calton, the chance of surviving to old age is lowest in UK


Feel the burn - The Guardian 21/01/06

Being 'stressed' is not cause for complaint, it's a sign our brains are working


'I will put my baby's picture on my laptop and make his cry the ring on my mobile' - The Guardian 21/01/06

John Simpson on becoming a father again at the age of 61


Joanna Hall: Weigh to go - The Guardian 21/01/06

Why is it that, when I manage to get to the gym or pool most days and feel that I have pushed myself quite hard, I weigh more than when I am not able to exercise properly for a couple of weeks?


Prostate problems - The Guardian 21/01/06

I have an enlarged prostate gland and suffer from a persistent urinary infection. Herbal buchu seemed to work for a while, but no longer. What else can I try?


Shorts: Twisted sisters - The Guardian 21/01/06

Kim Cattrall, Teri Hatcher and Madonna have all recently been singing the praises of Gyrotonic, invented by Hungarian dancer Juliu Horvath. Not being a fan of contraption-based workouts (especially hugely expensive ones), I hadn't given the system a try. But then I found out that a) originally, the workout was done simply sitting on a stool and b) Gyrokinesis classes (for that is what they are called) are becoming increasingly widespread.


Seven pointers to a perfect smile - The Guardian 21/01/06

There's more to keeping your pearly whites precisely that than a bit of brushing and the odd visit to a dentist. Jacqui Ripley advises on dental dos and don'ts


Doctor couple struck off for neglecting elderly in their care - The Guardian 21/01/06

Two doctors who failed to seek specialist medical care for elderly patients in their nursing home, even when they were gravely ill and dying, were struck off by the General Medical Council yesterday.


Next generation of nuclear reactors may be fast tracked - The Guardian 21/01/06

The nuclear industry is pushing ministers to approve sweeping changes to the way atomic power stations are approved in an attempt to fast-track a new generation of reactors.


Can PFI climb up off its sickbed? After the Bart's brouhaha, what's next for the axe? - The Independent 22/01/06

Just a few weeks ago, all was going swimmingly. Along with its sister hospital the Royal London, the cardiac and cancer specialist St Bartholomew's was to be overhauled through an ambitious 1.15bn private finance initiative (PFI) scheme.


Nip 'n' tuck: your wallet won't look as lovely as you - The Independent 22/01/06

Britain is going crazy for cosmetic surgery, but some of the loan deals are far from gorgeous


If your suntan oil can change the sex of fish, what can do it to you? - The Independent 22/01/06

The stuff is not only on our skin: it's in our tap water and lunches too


50 ways to get fit - The Independent 22/01/06

Whether it's boot-camp pilates or space-age trainers, text-message workouts or trendy Roman spas, our experts pick the exercise essentials for 2006


Toddlers targeted for flu jab - The Independent 22/01/06

Every two-year-old in Britain could be given a flu jab under plans being drawn up by health officials, The Independent on Sunday has learnt.

Babies may get flu jabs to cut epidemics - The Sunday Times 22/01/06
Flu jab considered for under-twos - BBC Health News 22/01/06


Stem cells: Cell-u-like - The Independent 22/01/06

For families who want to try to safeguard their baby's future, the latest thing is a 1,500 set of stem cells. Danielle Gusmaroli reports


Acupuncture does combat pain, study finds - The Independent 21/01/06

Ever since Westerners started using acupuncture to treat their aches and pains, a debate has raged as to whether the ancient Chinese medicine really did work.

Acupuncture 'deactivates brain' - BBC Health News 21/01/06


A brief history of brothels - The Independent 21/01/06

The first bordellos were in the temples of Babylon, while in Ancient Greece they were run by the state. As the Government announces the latest attempt to control prostitution, Paul Vallely romps through the colourful story of the whorehouse

A matter of money - The Times 21/01/06


Legal blow for jailed baby-death parents - The Sunday Times 22/01/06

DOZENS of parents imprisoned for killing their children will be denied a chance to challenge their convictions, in a ruling set to reignite the debate over the validity of shaken baby syndrome.


Focus: Selling the sex the middle class way - The Sunday Times 22/01/06

Ministers want to crack down on street prostitution but are they missing a trick? It’s the middle classes, says Richard Woods, who are dressing up vice as something glamorous


A simple way to better schools: don’t treat them like hospitals - The Sunday Times 22/01/06

Go to your room and write out 100 times: a school is not a hospital, a hospital is not a school. Whitehall is a zoo in a fog. Its inhabitants cannot tell camels from kangaroos. Schools, hospitals, trusts, foundations, private finance initiative contracts, partnerships, contestabilities are all the same animals. Life is money and gongs.


Children's champions demand a total ban on smacking - The Times 21/01/06

THE Government’s four children’s commissioners have demanded a total ban on the smacking of children.


Turkey says neighbours are covering up bird flu - The Times 21/01/06

The number of unsold eggs at a wholesale shop in Istanbul, right, reached 100 million after the outbreak of avian flu as Turkey accused neighbouring countries of covering up similar infections. The country has reported possible H5N1 outbreaks in areas close to its borders with Armenia, Iran, Iraq, Syria and Georgia.

'Bird flu secrecy' angers Turkey - BBC Health News 20/01/06
On a wing and a prayer - The Times 21/01/06
'Bird Flu' Infections In Humans Prompt New Investigation At Saint Louis University - Medical News Today 20/01/06


In a different vein - The Times 21/01/06

IT IS every needle-phobe’s nightmare: the nurse or doctor merrily saying, “Oh, I can’t seem to find a vein,” while they repeatedly poke a hypodermic into your flesh.

Portable 'vein Finder' For Faster, More Accurate Injections Developed - Medical News Today 20/01/06


Saying goodbye to the props - The Times 21/01/06

It took five years, but Andy Ward eventually learnt how to leave the ‘safe’ world of his disability


Dr Copperfield: inside the mind of a GP - The Times 21/01/06

“So, doctor, is my blood pressure OK? And what about my cholesterol level?” Ah. There was a time when such questions were easy to answer — normal/abnormal, black/white. Not any more. Unless your readings are off the scale, we’re into shades of grey. And two recent news stories render those shades fuzzier than ever.


Are you having a laugh? - The Times 21/01/06

It sounds like poking fun but it’s called provocative therapy. Catriona Wrottesley reports


Take out the competition - The Times 21/01/06

Jane Fearnley-Whittingstall on happy families. This week: the tactless grandmother


Lunchtime fix: floatation therapy - The Times 21/01/06

It’s cold and a January wind is blowing. What could be better than a snug hour or so floating in warm water? And according to the blurb, the experience should transport me to another, deeper level normally obtained only by years of meditation. A shortcut to serenity? Bring it on.


Focus on a clearer picture - The Times 21/01/06

My seven-year-old granddaughter has begun to complain of blurred vision occasionally when she looks at the blackboard and reads music. The other day she also told her mother that she, too, appeared blurred. Her mother started having migraines at the same age and I am wondering if this could be the start of the same condition. Blood tests and optician tests were all n ormal. Should my granddaughter see a paediatrician?


Junk medicine: patent data protection - The Times 21/01/06

The information in medical records is properly regarded as highly sensitive. When a patient shares details of a mental illness or sexually transmitted infection with a doctor, it is in the expectation that these are not for public display. Confidentiality is axiomatic to responsible medicine and legislation such as the Data Protection Act (DPA), which restricts access to personal files, is necessary and desirable. But it also has unwelcome consequences that are harming the public.


A-Z of relationships: W is for wobble - The Times 21/01/06

What counts as a wobble? We so often hear of relationship discord, splits, tiffs and trial separations. But how do we know the difference between a mere wobble and a sign


Get over it: heavy workload - The Times 21/01/06

My current workload is exhausting. What can I do?


Celtic comfort - The Times 21/01/06

Staying at a top Irish spa, John Naish was caught between the wild rocks and a hard place to leave


Sex matters with Dr Thomas Stuttaford and Suzi Godson - The Times 21/01/06

I'm worried that my hip replacement will not bear my husband's weight during sex, even though he is slight. Is the end of our sex life?


I’m beginning to see the light - The Times 21/01/06

Physicist and TV presenter Kathy Sykes tells John Naish how researching a new series on alternative medicine changed her attitude — and her life


It works for me: hot treatment for cold sores - The Times 21/01/06

A GP, with help from electrical engineering, gave his daughter’s misery the red light, says Celia Dodd


Home remedies: honey and onion cough cure - The Times 21/01/06

Chop an onion finely, put it with a tablespoon of clear honey in a screw-top jar and leave overnight. In the morning, drinking a teaspoonful of the juice produced will ease a cough.


Eco-worrier: wine bottle tops - The Times 21/01/06

I have vowed to think more ecologically about my wine consumption this year. Should I choose cork, screw tops or plastic tops?


For goodness sake, embrace the turnip - The Times 21/01/06

A diet of health scares about meat has made veg the main attraction at top restaurants, discovers Fiona Sims


Just say no to morning muffins - The Times 21/01/06

Greed or hunger? Knowing which was which has made Sarah Vine slimmer, trimmer — and happier


Italians know how to dress for the winter - The Times 21/01/06

The Italian film director Federico Fellini famously once said: “Life is a combination of magic and pasta” — and I’m inclined to agree. While the magic might take a little longer to conjure, a bowl of pasta can be made in minutes, making it the perfect antidote to a cold winter’s night when the body cries out for starchy, easy-to- swallow comfort food.


Fun on the dry run - The Times 21/01/06

Artificial slopes are great places to find your ski-legs or to hone your snowboard skills


Not just anybody: Rupert Pennefather - The Times 21/01/06

Royal Ballet star Rupert Pennefather, 24, still smokes — but music helps him rise to the occasion



France investigates possible human bird flu case
- The Telegraph 22/01/06

France is investigating a possible case of bird flu in a woman who recently visited Turkey, the French health ministry has said.

France tests woman for bird flu
- BBC Health News 22/01/06


Threat to bowel cancer screening - The Telegraph 22/01/06

A national screening programme to help to reduce deaths from bowel cancer is set to become a casualty of the deepening financial crisis facing the National Health Service.


Babies face year in care due to court delays - The Telegraph 22/01/06

Babies are remaining in care for more than a year before it is decided whether they should be returned to their parents or put up for adoption.


Experts sceptical as thousands rush to buy anti-bird flu kits - The Telegraph 22/01/06

Scientists describe them as "a total waste of time and money" but that does not appear to have dissuaded thousands of Britons from rushing to stockpile biohazard suits and surgical masks to protect against bird flu.


Two-tier NHS care for pregnant women ready to pay 4,000 - The Telegraph 21/01/06

Pregnant women are being offered vastly improved maternity care at a leading NHS hospital if they can afford to pay 4,000 for the privilege.


Fury as euthanasia group puts dignity in new name - The Telegraph 21/01/06

Plans by the Voluntary Euthanasia Society to rename itself Dignity in Dying came under bitter attack last night.


Feel fabulous with Team Telegraph day 10: sixties plus - The Telegraph 20/01/06

With retirement looming, you must prepare now for how you will fill all this extra time and keep yourself stimulated, not only in the outside world but also in your inner world, writes Max Tomlinson

Looks for life: sixties plus - The Telegraph 20/01/06


Botched operations gynaecologist arrested - The Telegraph 20/01/06

A disgraced gynaecologist who was struck off after botching operations has been arrested by police.


Special ambulances for beefy Brits - Daily Mail 20/01/06

A new ambulance especially designed to carry heavier patients has been launched by St John Ambulance.


The cool way to work out - Daily Mail 20/01/06

It's engaging television and is set to do for ice skating what Strictly Come Dancing has done for ballroom dancing - inspired thousands of people across the country to take up the hobby. Here, Erin Kelly - a huge fan of Dancing On Ice - slips on her skates for her first lesson


Mind over matter could cure back pain - Daily Mail 20/01/06

Mental exercises could be just as effective as physically working the muscles to ease back pain, researchers have suggested. Their work could bring relief to the thousands of chronic back pain sufferers in the UK.


Mobile phones 'don't raise brain cancer risk' - Daily Mail 20/01/06

Using a mobile phone is not linked to an increased risk of brain cancer, researchers have said. The largest study of its kind found no association between mobile use and the most common type of brain tumours.


Salty spray could treat cystic fibrosis - Daily Mail 19/01/06

People with cystic fibrosis may soon be treated with a salt water spray to ease their condition after a study found it to be highly effective.

Treatment Shows Long-term Benefits For Cystic Fibrosis Patients - Medical News Today 21/01/06


Elderberries 'may combat bird flu' - Daily Mail 19/01/06

An extract from black elderberries could be used to combat the bird flu virus, new research has suggested.


Dirt 'may hold clue' to superbugs - BBC Health News 22/01/06

Studying bacteria in the soil may provide key clues to understanding how so-called superbugs develop resistance to antibiotics, research suggests.


Allergy cell holds treatment hope - BBC Health News 22/01/06

Scientists say they have discovered precisely how a cell involved in allergy is made, which may help with finding new preventive treatments.


Killer breast cancer therapy hope - BBC Health News 21/01/06

Researchers have pinpointed the chemistry behind the development of a particularly aggressive form of breast cancer.


Oily fish makes 'babies brainier' - BBC Health News 20/01/06

Eating oily fish and seeds in pregnancy can boost children's future brain power and social skills, research suggests.


Parents sue over 'junk food' ads - BBC Health News 20/01/06

Consumer groups in the US are suing cereal maker Kellogg's and children's TV network Nickelodeon in a bid to stop them showing adverts for sugary foods.


New Brain Area Identified That Responds To Leptin In Regulating Body Weight And Energy Expenditure - Medical News Today 22/01/06

Researchers have identified a new area of the brain that responds to the fat hormone leptin in regulating body weight and energy expenditure. They said that the region seems to be particularly important in enabling the body to resist weight gain from a high-fat diet. Their discovery, they said, indicates that leptin acts on more brain areas than previously believed, to regulate body weight.


Demonstrating How Taste Response Is Hard-wired Into The Brain - Medical News Today 22/01/06

Instantly reacting to the sweet lure of chocolate or the bitter taste of strychnine would seem to demand that such behavioral responses be so innate as to be hard-wired into the brain. Indeed, in studies with the easily manipulable fruit fly Drosophila, Kristin Scott and colleagues reported in the January 19, 2006, issue of Neuron experiments demonstrating just such a hard-wired circuitry.


Another Gene Linked To Degenerative Blindness - Medical News Today 22/01/06

Researchers have labored for decades to understand blindness-inducing neurodegenerative diseases such as age-related macular degeneration (AMD) and retinitis pigmentosa (RP).


Nursing Professor Calls For Steps To Close The Reality Gap Between Education And Practice - Medical News Today 22/01/06

The nursing profession should be deeply concerned that the reality gap between education and practice identified three decades ago still remains today, according to a commentary in the latest Journal of Advanced Nursing.


SCOTUS Correct To Uphold Oregon Physician-Assisted Suicide Law, Op-Ed Says - Medical News Today 22/01/06

The Supreme Court was "right" to uphold Oregon's physician-assisted suicide law on Tuesday because -- while "legalizing physician-assisted suicide is a mistake" -- it is an issue "that should be debated by the people and their representatives" and not decided by "federal courts and bureaucrats," E.J. Dionne, a columnist for the Washington Post, writes in an opinion piece. Assisted suicide "is the wrong answer to the right questions" about whether the medical industry should improve efforts to alleviate pain and suffering in those with terminal illnesses and whether "our high-tech medical system" should "do as much as it can to allow people to die with dignity," Dionne says, adding that the answer is "[o]bviously, yes." So far, he adds, most states have sought to address these questions "through measures short of assisted suicide," but the dissenting justices in the Supreme Court's ruling "would claim the right to impose" their opposition to the practice on Oregon. By contrast, the majority decision "is a model of judicial modesty," based on a "careful look at the language of the Controlled Substances Act," Dionne writes. He concludes, "As it happens, assisted suicide is one issue on which my beliefs coincide with those of many conservatives. But I want my view to prevail through persuasion in the democratic process, not because an attorney general and sympathetic judges impose it on every state in the Union" (Dionne, Washington Post, 1/20).


Growth Hormone, Obesity Can Trigger Sleep Apnea In Some Kids - Medical News Today 22/01/06

Growth hormone helps hundreds of children with a rare disorder that causes them to gorge on food, but for some, starting treatment can worsen a dangerous nighttime breathing problem, University of Florida researchers have found.


Preventive Hysterectomy, Removal Of Ovaries Can Prevent Cancer In Women With Lynch Syndrome, Study Says - Medical News Today 22/01/06

Preventive hysterectomy, which removes the uterus, or removal of the ovaries can prevent ovarian and endometrial cancer in women with Lynch syndrome, the genetic mutation known to cause colorectal cancer, according to a study published Thursday in the Jan. 19 edition of the New England Journal of Medicine, Reuters reports. Karen Lu of the University of Texas M.D. Anderson Cancer Center in Houston and colleagues found that women with Lynch syndrome also are at increased risk for certain gynecological cancers (Reuters, 1/18). Three hundred and fifteen women, all of whom had genetic mutations associated with Lynch syndrome, were assigned to different groups: 61 women who previously underwent a hysterectomy were matched with a control group of 210 women who had not undergone the surgery, and 47 women who previously underwent removal of the ovaries were matched with 223 who had not undergone the surgery. The study found that there were no occurrences of ovarian or endometrial cancer among the women who underwent either surgery, with 33% of the women in the control groups being diagnosed with endometrial cancer and 5% being diagnosed with ovarian cancer (Schmeler et al., New England Journal of Medicine, 1/19). "This provides definitive evidence for doing something proactively that will prevent some women from ever getting these cancers," Lu said, adding, "Until now, doctors have not been able to recommend preventive surgery." Lu recommended that women with Lynch syndrome consider the surgery beginning at age 35 (Ackerman, Houston Chronicle, 1/19).


Devastating Financial Toll Divorce Can Wreak On A Person's Wealth - Medical News Today 21/01/06

A new nationwide (USA) study provides some of the best evidence to date of the devastating financial toll divorce can wreak on a person's wealth.


New Study Examines Scope Of Online Breast Cancer Support Groups - Medical News Today 21/01/06

Stereotypes about who will use online support groups are wrong, according to research at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. The researchers found that age, income and education did not predict participation, although minorities were not as active as other users. The percentage of women with breast cancer participating in online support groups is significant and has been growing steadily over the past decade. This new research provides insights about the characteristics of women who are more likely to participate in these groups when barriers to computers and Internet access are removed.



Darkness Unveils Vital Metabolic Fuel Switch Between Sugar And Fat - Mediating Molecule Provides New Research Target For Diabetes, Obesity
- Medical News Today 21/01/06

Constant darkness throws a molecular switch in mammals that shifts the body's fuel consumption from glucose to fat and induces a state of torpor in mice, a research team led by scientists at The University of Texas Medical School at Houston reports in the Jan. 19 edition of Nature.


Tiny RNA Molecules Fine-tune The Brain's Synapses - A New Mechanism For Regulating Brain Function - Medical News Today 21/01/06

Non-coding regions of the genome - those that don't code for proteins - are now known to include important elements that regulate gene activity. Among those elements are microRNAs, tiny, recently discovered RNA molecules that suppress gene expression. Increasing evidence indicates a role for microRNAs in the developing nervous system, and researchers from Children's Hospital Boston now demonstrate that one microRNA affects the development of synapses - the points of communication between brain cells that underlie learning and memory. The findings appear in the January 19th issue of Nature.


Report Demonstrates Safety Of Nuclear Medicine Procedures - Medical News Today 21/01/06

US Pharmacopeia releases findings on nuclear medicine, radiological services, cardiac cath labs and intensive care units; Practice errors 'exceptionally low,' notes Society of Nuclear Medicine President Peter S. Conti.



Genetics Plays A Role In The Relapse Of Drug-seeking Behavior In Humans - Medical News Today 21/01/06

Inbred strains of rats differ in how aggressively they seek cocaine after a few weeks of use, researchers say.


Researchers At Barrow Neurological Institute Resolve 40-year Eye Movement, Visibility Controversy - Medical News Today 21/01/06

For more than 40 years, a scientific controversy has raged over whether microsaccades, rapid eye movements that occur when a person's gaze is fixated, are responsible for visibility.


Scientists Find Unusual Lung-cancer Tumor-suppressor Gene - Medical News Today 21/01/06

Researchers have identified a new and unusual tumor suppressor gene that may be important in cancers of the lung and head and neck. The study shows that restoring the inactivated gene can slow the growth of tumor cells.

Prophylactic Surgeries Prevent Two Gynecological Cancers In Women With Lynch Syndrome - Medical News Today 21/01/06

Women diagnosed with Lynch syndrome, a condition often associated with colon cancer, also are at high risk for endometrial and ovarian cancers - both of which can be eliminated by having a prophylactic hysterectomy and oophorectomy (removal of the ovaries), according to a study published by researchers from The University of Texas M. D. Anderson Cancer Center in the Jan. 19 New England Journal of Medicine.


Gene Therapy 'turns Off' Mutation Linked To Parkinson's Disease - Medical News Today 21/01/06

A group of Northwestern University researchers is developing a novel gene therapy aimed at selectively turning off one of the genes involved in the development of Parkinson's disease.


Four Antivirals Not Suitable For Routine Seasonal Influenza Control - Medical News Today 21/01/06

The commonly prescribed antiviral medications amantadine and rimantidine should not be used for seasonal or pandemic influenza control because they are ineffective and can cause adverse side-effects, according to a study published online today (Thursday January 19, 2006) by The Lancet. Another two antivirals--zanamivir and oseltamivir--should not routinely be used for seasonal influenza control and should only be used in a serious epidemic or pandemic alongside other public health measures, state the authors. The researchers also found no evidence that zanamivir (Relenza) and oseltamivir (Tamiflu) were effective against avian influenza.


Baltimore Sun Examines Obstetric Fistula In Sub-Saharan Africa, Southeast Asia - Medical News Today 21/01/06

The Baltimore Sun on Friday examined the problem of obstetric fistulas in parts of sub-Saharan Africa and Southeast Asia (Minaya, Baltimore Sun, 1/20). The condition develops when a fetus becomes lodged during labor in the narrow birth canal of a young woman, causing pressure that blocks blood to vital tissues and tearing holes in the bowel, urethra or both (Kaiser Daily Women's Health Policy Report, 9/28/05). In addition to the physical effects of fistulas, including infected sores on the legs and feet and nerve damage, women who suffer from obstetric fistulas often are left by their husbands and shunned by their families and communities because of the odor caused by the constant leakage of urine, according to the Sun. Obstetric fistulas can be prevented with caesarean-section deliveries, but women usually ask a relative or neighbor with no professional training to help them with the delivery because walking to a clinic -- which usually is a long distance from rural villages -- is not feasible, Kate Ramsey, a technical specialist at the U.N. Population Fund's Campaign to End Fistula, said. Surgery can repair fistulas, and the procedure costs about $300, but there is debate over the success rate of the procedure, according to the Sun. Physicians can repair a small fistula during a 1.5 hour surgery, but to repair a larger fistula and restore a woman's continence might require more than one surgery, according to Marcella Roenneburg, a doctor who has conducted surgical missions in the region. According to Ramsey, fistulas are a problem that is more efficient to prevent than to fix later (Baltimore Sun, 1/20).


Los Angeles Times Examines Drug Resistance In HIV-Positive People Who Have Undergone Monotherapy - Medical News Today 21/01/06

The Los Angeles Times on Thursday profiled HIV-positive patients who were treated in the early 1990s using monotherapy, or single-drug treatment, and who often are resistant to antiretroviral combination therapies because they previously have taken one of their components. Monotherapy -- which was used before combination therapy was initiated in 1996 -- gave HIV "only one obstacle to mutate past," and has created a "virtually insurmountable mutational challenge" for researchers to develop effective HIV/AIDS-related therapies, the Times reports. According to the Times, an estimated 40,000 HIV-positive "veterans of monotherapy" in the U.S. are "playing a fearsome waiting game" while researchers "repeatedly improvise with existing medications" to develop "salvage therapy," a "last resort" treatment for monotherapy patients. Salvage therapy "is a machine of many moving parts" because a patient's resistance to a certain drug often means that they are resistant to all other drugs in its class, according to the Times. HIV-positive patients with resistance await new combinations and new classes of drugs such as integrase inhibitors that might offer the chance of a viable treatment (Ricci, Los Angeles Times, 1/19).


U.S., Vietnam Health Ministry Sign 2006-2008 Action Plan For PEPFAR-Funded Programs - Medical News Today 21/01/06

U.S. and Vietnam's Ministry of Health officials on Wednesday signed an action plan for 2006 through 2008 for HIV/AIDS-related programs funded by the President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief, VietNamNet Bridge reports (Le, VietNamNet Bridge, 1/19). According to a joint press release issued by the U.S. Embassy in Hanoi, Vietnam, and the health ministry, Vietnam's PEPFAR-funded programs aim by 2008 to provide antiretroviral drugs to 22,000 HIV-positive people and to provide care for 110,000 people living with or affected by HIV/AIDS in the country (Xinhuanet, 1/18). PEPFAR is a five-year, $15 billion program that directs funding for HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis and malaria to 15 focus countries, including Vietnam (Kaiser Daily HIV/AIDS Report, 1/11). According to the health ministry, about 263,000 people are living with HIV/AIDS in the country but only 103,000 HIV/AIDS cases have been reported. The government aims to reduce the country's HIV/AIDS prevalence rate to below 0.3% by 2010 (Kaiser Daily HIV/AIDS Report, 1/11). According to VietNamNet Bridge, PEPFAR in 2005 provided $27 million to Vietnam for HIV/AIDS prevention and care programs (VietNamNet Bridge, 1/19).


U.S. Rep. Smith Urges African Nations To Promote Home Visits As HIV Control Strategy - Medical News Today 21/01/06

African countries should promote the use of home visits as a method of providing HIV testing and counseling services, Rep. Christopher Smith (R-N.J.) said on Wednesday, CQ HealthBeat reports. Smith, who chairs the Africa subcommittee of the House Committee on International Relations, said that African nations should follow a program implemented by Uganda under which teams of workers visit people's homes to administer HIV tests and provide follow-up counseling. Workers are trained to disclose HIV-positive results in such a way that spousal abuse does not occur, according to Smith. When dealing with couples in which only one person is HIV-positive, workers hand out condoms to ensure the HIV-negative person does not contract the virus, Smith said. He added that HIV-positive people also are prescribed antiretroviral drugs and educated on how to take them. In addition, they are given insecticide-treated nets to protect themselves from malaria and containers of water and a chlorine additive to prevent waterborne disease, according to Smith. Uganda's home visit system should serve as a model because it affords people privacy when receiving HIV tests and follow-up counseling, which eliminates the fear of stigmatization that keeps people from accessing such services at clinics, he said. According to Smith, the President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief recently has funded 100,000 home visits in Uganda and plans to fund an additional 250,000 visits in the next few months (Reichard, CQ HealthBeat, 1/18). PEPFAR is a five-year, $15 billion program that directs funding for HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis and malaria to 15 focus countries, including Uganda (Kaiser Daily HIV/AIDS Report, 1/11). PEPFAR is set to expire in 2008, Smith said, adding that its renewal should increase funding levels for home-visit programs and antiretroviral drug treatments, Smith said (CQ HealthBeat, 1/18).


Fund For HIV-Positive Libyan Children To Launch This Week - Medical News Today 21/01/06

A fund to support the HIV-positive Libyan children who allegedly were infected with the virus by five Bulgarian nurses and a Palestinian physician is expected to begin operations this week, Ivan Chomakov, the fund's Bulgarian representative, said on Wednesday, Reuters reports (Winfrey, Reuters, 1/18). The six health workers were sentenced to death by firing squad in May 2004 for allegedly infecting the children through contaminated blood products. Libyan Supreme Court President Ali al-Alus on Dec. 25, 2005, overturned the convictions two days after Bulgaria, Libya, the U.S. and the European Union agreed to establish a fund to support the HIV-positive Libyan children. The agreement did not mention the accused health workers, and Bulgarian officials said that the fund is part of an international effort to resolve the situation (Kaiser Daily HIV/AIDS Report, 1/17). Although Chomakov -- who also serves as mayor of Plovdiv, Bulgaria -- did not say how much money the fund will provide to support the children, he did say that it has secured between $309,000 and $370,800 to date. Chomakov added that the fund will provide only for medical care for the children and will not serve as compensation. Volunteers, including Bulgarian and E.U. representatives, are expected to meet with the families of the HIV-positive children this weekend to determine the details of the fund (Reuters, 1/18).


Internal ‘skeleton' Of Cells Is Altered By Exposure To High Fat - Medical News Today 20/01/06

Investigating the harmful health effects of excess fat, researchers at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis have identified a protein that triggers death in mammalian cells overloaded with saturated fat.


Study Examines IGF1 Gene, HNPCC, And Colorectal Cancer Risk - Medical News Today 20/01/06

A new study has shown that having a low number of specific sequences of the IGF1 gene called CA-repeats is associated with an increased risk of colorectal cancer in people with the disorder hereditary nonpolyposis colorectal cancer (HNPCC).


Study Examines The Association Between Diabetes Mellitus And Risk Of Colorectal Cancer - Medical News Today 20/01/06

People with diabetes may have a higher risk of developing colorectal cancer, according to a new study.


Variation In IGF1 Gene Associated With Risk Of Prostate Cancer - Medical News Today 20/01/06

A new study suggests that genetic variation in the insulin-like growth factor 1 (IGF1) gene may be associated with the risk of prostate cancer.


Increasing Penetrance Of BRCA2 Increases Mutations Over Time, Study Shows - Medical News Today 20/01/06

The incidence of breast cancer before 70 years in Icelandic women who carry a specific mutation in the BRCA2 gene increased fourfold between 1920 and 2002, according to a new study.


Sex Hormones Not A Useful Predictor Of Breast Cancer Risk - Medical News Today 20/01/06

Sex hormone levels in the blood are not associated with the risk of developing breast cancer in postmenopausal women who are in high-risk groups, according to a new study.


HIV Infection Associated With Increased Risk Of High-Grade Cervical Squamous Intraepithelial Lesions (HSILs) - Medical News Today 20/01/06

Women infected with HIV types 1 and 2 may have a higher risk of HSIL than HIV-negative women, according to a new study in Senegalese women.


Chromosome May Harbor Autism Gene, Utah School Of Medicine - Medical News Today 20/01/06

Using technology that allows DNA from thousands of genes to be collected and surveyed on a 3 x 1½-inch chip, University of Utah medical researchers have confirmed that a region on a single chromosome probably harbors a gene that causes autism. The researchers at the U School of Medicine made the finding by tracing variations in the DNA of an extended Utah family that has a high occurrence of the disorder and whose members are descended from one couple.


Monitoring System Needed To Prevent Safety Hazard Of Problem Physicians - Medical News Today 20/01/06

Asserting that "physician performance failures are not rare and pose substantial threats to patient welfare and safety," experts in medical error are calling on state medical boards and healthcare organizations to institute a formal monitoring and prevention system for catching "problem doctors" before they do further harm.


Mutation That Protects Against HIV Infection May Raise Risk Of West Nile Virus Illness - Medical News Today 20/01/06

People who lack a cell surface protein called CCR5 are highly resistant to infection by HIV but may be at increased risk of developing West Nile virus (WNV) illness when exposed to the mosquito-borne virus, report researchers from the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), part of the National Institutes of Health (NIH). The study, by Philip M. Murphy, M.D., and colleagues, appears online today in The Journal of Experimental Medicine. The findings may have cautionary implications for physicians who are treating HIV-positive individuals with experimental CCR5-blocking drugs, say the scientists.


Working Memory Retains Visual Details Despite Distractions - Medical News Today 20/01/06

The ability to retain memory about the details of a natural scene is unaffected by the distraction of another activity and this information is retained in “working memory” according to a study recently published in JOURNAL OF VISION, an online, free access publication of the Association for Research in Vision and Ophthalmology (ARVO). These results reinforce the notion that humans maintain useful information about previous fixations in long-term working memory rather than the limited capacity of visual short-term memory (VSTM).


Meningitis Warning For Returnee Hajj Pilgrims - Medical News Today 20/01/06

Association of British Hujjaj (Pilgrims) UK (ABH) together with the Meningitis Research Foundation is reminding returnee Hajj pilgrims and their families of the symptoms of meningitis and septicaemia, as over the last few years there have been about 20 deaths in UK from these diseases following the Hajj.


Benefits Of Pilates, Evaluation By American Council On Exercise - Medical News Today 20/01/06

Check out the group fitness schedule at most health clubs and it's clear that Pilates is still one of the hottest trends in fitness. But is Pilates also a good calorie-burning workout? In an exclusive study, the American Council on Exercise (ACE), America's nonprofit fitness advocate, examined the calorie expenditure of an average Pilates Workout.


OTC weight drug seen unsafe for some -US FDA staff - Reuters 20/01/06

A proposed over-the-counter version of the diet drug Xenical may pose safety problems for some patients, U.S. Food and Drug Administration staff said in documents released on Friday.


Food health claims hard to understand: FTC staff - Reuters 21/01/06

The disease-reduction claims on a number of foods are confusing to consumers and could be improved with better wording or graphics, staff of a government agency that monitors deceptive advertising said.


Bird flu virus survives for days in droppings: WHO - Reuters 21/01/06

The H5N1 avian influenza virus can survive for more than a month in bird droppings in cold weather and for nearly a week even in hot summer temperatures, the World Health Organization said on Friday.


US drug plan frustrates patients, pharmacists - Reuters 20/01/06

Patients, pharmacists, physicians and state officials expressed extreme frustration over foul-ups with the new Medicare drug benefit on Friday, urging lawmakers to simplify a plan they called confusing and fraught with potentially life-threatening problems.


US says studying liver damage after Sanofi drug - Reuters 20/01/06

U.S. regulators said on Friday they were reviewing three cases of serious liver damage, including one that was fatal, that were reported after patients were treated with the Sanofi-Aventis antibiotic Ketek.

Breastfeeding may reduce risk of celiac disease - Reuters 20/01/06

Sufferers from celiac disease can't tolerate wheat and gluten in their diet, but people who were breastfed as babies seem to be less likely to develop the condition, a UK study shows.


Depot contraceptives boost weight in obese teens - Reuters 20/01/06

Obese adolescent girls are more likely to gain weight while using depot medroxyprogesterone contraceptives than those using oral contraceptives or no hormonal contraceptives, researchers report.


Blacks, whites affected differently by smoking - Reuters 20/01/06

Black U.S. teenagers get a much bigger hit of addictive nicotine from a cigarette than do their white classmates, researchers said on Friday.


USDA sends team to Japan after mad cow violation - Reuters 20/01/06

U.S. meat inspectors were dispatched to Japan to re-examine American beef shipments following a violation of mad cow rules and beef processors will be under stricter scrutiny, Agriculture Secretary Mike Johanns said on Friday.


'Statins' improve prostate cancer outcome - Reuters 20/01/06

Men who've been treated for prostate cancer and are taking one of the popular cholesterol-lowering 'statin' drugs (Lipitor and Zocor are examples) may be on to a good thing.


Cutting calories slows aging of heart - Reuters 20/01/06

Sticking to a low-calorie diet over the long term slows the decline in heart function that normally occurs with aging, according to a study in the Journal of the American College of Cardiology.


Past suicide attempt linked to seizure risk - Reuters 20/01/06

A history of major depression and a past suicide attempt seem to be tied to an increased risk of seizures and epilepsy, according to the findings of a population-based study conducted in Iceland.


Drug industry officials see room to improve safety - Reuters 20/01/06

The U.S. government's monitoring of drug side effects could be strengthened but does not need the major changes critics have advocated, industry officials told an expert panel on Thursday.


Tamiflu works against deadly bird flu strain: Roche - Reuters 20/01/06

Tamiflu, the drug which many governments have stockpiled to ward off a deadly bird flu pandemic, appears to be an effective treatment for the disease if administered early enough, its maker Roche Holding AG said.

Cheshire and Mersey News


Bedroom fire at hospital - Warrington Guardian 21/01/06

FIREFIGHTERS were called to a fire at Hollins Park Hospital in the early hours of Saturday.


Help at hand for bereaved children - Warrington Guardian 21/01/06

CHILDREN affected by grief can get support from the NCH Child Bereavement Service.


79 motorists died on county roads in 2005 - Chester Chronicle 20/01/06

ROAD deaths claimed 79 lives last year in Cheshire - a dozen more than in 2004.


Smear test delay fears - Chester Chronicle 20/01/06

CHESTER women are waiting up to three months for the return of smear test results - double the time recommended in NHS guidelines.


No ambulance anger after boy breaks arm - Southport Visiter 20/01/06

A TEENAGER who went to Southport Hospital in agony from a broken arm was sent home because there were no ambulances available - and was then told to make an appointment at Ormskirk Hospital a WEEK later.


Shock results of care home probe - Liverpool Echo 20/01/06

AN elite squad has investigated 71 cases of alleged abuse of old people in Merseyside care homes over the past 20 months.


Hospital campaigner says 'We're won a battle, but not the war' - Congleton Guardian 20/01/06

HOSPITAL campaign leader Mike Smith is asking Congleton people to make sure their voice is heard.

Cumbria and Lancashire News


'Foolish mistake' made by dead man's carer - Carlisle News & Star 21/01/06

THE director of an under-fire Carlisle care company has admitted a worker made a “foolish mistake” while looking after an elderly man who was found dead in his home on Christmas Day.


Hopes of new dental surgery - Lancashire Evening Telegraph 21/01/06

HEALTH bosses have welcomed news that a new dental surgery could be built in Great Harwood.


Morphine ruled out as cause of death - Lancashire Evening Telegraph 20/01/06

FEARS that an injection contributed to the death of an 80-year-old Blackburn woman were dispelled by an inquest.


Head 'won't fight phone mast plan' - Lancashire Evening Telegraph 20/01/06

THE headteacher of a special school has said he will not oppose plans for a nearby mobile phone mast - as long as the health of pupils is not affected.


Alcohol abuse's fatal legacy - Lancashire Evening Telegraph 20/01/06

A 63-YEAR-OLD Accrington man died as a result of a lifetime of alcohol abuse.


Help to shape health centre - Lancashire Evening Telegraph 20/01/06

PLANS for a new health centre in Accrington have been submitted to Hyndburn Council.


CJD deaths a statistical blip - Lancashire Evening Telegraph 20/01/06

AN Accrington woman was the third East Lancashire victim in the last 12 months of one-in-a-million mystery killer disease sporadic Creutzfeldt Jakob Disease, an inquest heard.


Warning after cocaine death - Lancashire Evening Telegraph 20/01/06

A 32-YEAR-OLD Rishton man died at home as a direct result of taking cocaine, an inquest heard.

Greater Manchester News


Welfare reforms unveiled - Manchester Evening News 22/01/06

A NEW welfare underclass will be created unless everyone is encouraged to work under reforms unveiled this week, Labour's favourite think-tank has warned.


Beds crisis as winter bugs bite - Bolton Evening News 21/01/06

BOSSES at the Royal Bolton Hospital have been forced to open extra beds to cope with the number of patients being admitted with winter illnesses.


Fears over care home crisis - Bolton Evening News 21/01/06

A SECRET plan which may lead to the closure of Bolton Council's last care home has been uncovered by the Bolton Evening News.


MP applauds decision on cannabis law - Bolton Evening News 21/01/06

BOLTON MP Brian Iddon has welcomed the Government's decision not to reclassify cannabis.


'Sharks' cash in on cancer concert - Manchester Evening News 20/01/06

CALLOUS internet ticket tout "sharks" are cashing in on a spectacular Manchester charity concert being staged to raise money to fight cancer.


Doctors saved lives of our twins - Bolton Evening News 20/01/06

I have filled in my 'Back the Baby Unit' campaign coupon and sent it back. My children and two grandsons were born at Bolton hospital.