Wednesday, May 31, 2006

Contents

Click on content link below to go to the news from that section: this will open a web page if you receive this by email




National News


'Menu' of private clinics in big push to widen choice for NHS patients - The Guardian 31/05/06

Patients will be given the right to free treatment in private clinics and foundation hospitals anywhere in England as part of a major extension of choice to be announced today, the Guardian has learned.

Patient surgery choice extended - BBC Health News 31/05/06





Computer plan for NHS two years late and three times the cost - The Telegraph 31/05/06

The core of a £20 billion scheme to computerise the NHS is at least two and a half years behind schedule.





Smoker poll reveals roll-ups myth - BBC Health News 30/05/06

One in four smokers thinks hand-rolled tobacco poses less risk to health than manufactured cigarettes, a study says.





NHS 'failing' disabled children - BBC Health News 30/05/06

The NHS is failing to provide adequate wheelchairs for disabled children, a report by two charities says.





GP's 'forgery for slimming pills' - BBC Health News 30/05/06

A family GP faked prescriptions for slimming drugs to sell to his private patients, a medical tribunal has heard.





'Easy fit' pump for heart disease - BBC Health News 30/05/06

Scientists have developed a mechanical heart pump that can be fitted without invasive surgery.





HIV infections 'may have peaked' - BBC News 31/05/06

The rate at which people are infected with HIV may have peaked in the late 1990s, according to a UNAids report.





International News


Aids pandemic spreading to every corner of globe, says UN - The Guardian 31/05/06

Twenty five years after the first Aids cases were reported, there is no sign of a halt to the pandemic which is likely to spread to every corner of the globe, the head of the United Nations' Aids agency has said.





A New Awakening For Sleep Research - Medical News Today 31/05/06

The IST project SENSATION is an ambitious project of 46 partners from 20 different countries, addressing sensing of physiological parameters, core computation, medical and industrial research.





MR Spectroscopy Significantly Reduces Need For Breast Biopsy - Medical News Today 31/05/06

In a study featured in the June issue of Radiology, researchers found that imaging suspicious breast lesions with magnetic resonance (MR) spectroscopy reduced the need for biopsy by 58 percent.





New Approach Allows Closer Look At Smoker Lungs - Medical News Today 31/05/06

Aided by a powerful imaging technique, scientists have discovered they can detect smoking-related lung damage in healthy smokers who otherwise display none of the telltale signs of tobacco use.





New Potential Drug Target In Tuberculosis - Medical News Today 31/05/06

Tuberculosis remains one of the deadliest threats to public health.





New Protein Target May Advance Design Of HIV And Cancer Drugs - Medical News Today 31/05/06

Using small molecules containing platinum, Virginia Commonwealth University Massey Cancer Center researchers have created a process to inhibit a class of proteins important in HIV and cancer.





Trial Success For Diabetic Nerve Therapy - Medical News Today 31/05/06

A potentially ground-breaking treatment for nerve damage caused by diabetes has shown promising results in preclinical and early patient trials.





Hypnotherapy Improves Quality Of Life For People With Irritable Bowel Syndrome - Medical News Today 31/05/06

Patients with Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS) who took part in hypnotherapy sessions reported reduced symptoms and improved quality of life, according to research published in the June issue of Journal of Clinical Nursing.





Overcoming A Genetic Defect - Medical News Today 31/05/06

The European Union has approved a grant of about € 2.4 million to a team of European scientists, led by the Kiel biochemist Professor Paul Saftig, to carry out research on the rare hereditary disease alpha-mannosidosis.





Research Suggests Cause Of Neurodegeneration In Huntington's Disease - Medical News Today 31/05/06

The severe neurodegeneration associated with Huntington's disease may result from molecular mutations that block the transport of nutrients within cells.





Scientists Celebrate Stem Cell Business Success - Medical News Today 31/05/06

British scientists are embarking on a major international stem cell business collaboration, which will bring them a step closer to developing new patient therapies.





UNAIDS Report On The Global AIDS Epidemic 30 May 2006 - Terrence Higgins Trust Response - Medical News Today 31/05/06

This report shows that although big improvements have been made in access to prevention and treatment for HIV globally, the epidemic is still outstripping our response.





Cheshire and Merseyside News


Ambulance in crash on way to accident - Daily Post 31/05/06

AN AMBULANCE hit a car on its way to help a schoolboy, who suffered serious injuries when he was knocked down in Liverpool last night.





Cumbria and Lancashire News


Patient Missed Off Op List - Lancashire Evening Telegraph 31/05/06

A PATIENT had to wait eight months for surgery because an NHS bungle meant he was not added the waiting list.





Nhs Call Staff Boost - Lancashire Evening Telegraph 31/05/06

SEVEN more staff have been taken on at an East Lancashire NHS call centre after complaints from patients that they were unable to get through.

Tuesday, May 30, 2006

Contents

Click on content link below to go to the news from that section: this will open a web page if you receive this by email




National News

Breast cancer study finds fewer doses of radiotherapy effective - The Guardian 30/05/06

Giving breast cancer patients fewer but larger doses of radiotherapy may be as safe and effective as smaller, more frequent doses, according to research published today.

Fewer, larger radiation doses may help fight breast cancer - The Independent 30/05/06
Radiotherapy change can cut hospital visits - The Telegraph 30/05/06
Shorter, 'kinder' radiotherapy for breast cancer patients - Daily Mail 30/05/06
Fewer dose hope for breast cancer - BBC Health News 29/05/06

Prison service fatally flawed, says top judge - The Guardian 30/05/06

Wide-ranging criticism by lord chief justice adds to Home Office pressure

Call for cut in jail population - The Independent 30/05/06


Wider support still needed - The Guardian 30/05/06

The nation that inspired a worldwide modern hospice movement still woefully underfunds hospice care. Yesterday some short-term relief for children's hospices was announced by the health department. They faced a particular problem because a £48m lottery grant for children's palliative care - both at home and in hospices - is due to run out. Even with this funding stream, there was only one hospice bed for every six children in need of residential care. Hence the emergency approach which the association of children's hospices made to the prime minister 10 days ago. Hospices provide much wider help than just support in the last few days of life. They are an invaluable source of guidance and relief for families caring for terminally ill children. But numbering just 38 - with five more planned - hospices can only offer help to a minority of the 20,000 families with terminally ill children.


Prisoner handcuffed to hospital bed after losing leg - The Guardian 30/05/06

A remand prisoner recovering in hospital after surgery to remove one of his legs lies handcuffed to his bed, his lawyer claimed yesterday. Carl Shepherd, 35, from Northern Moor, Manchester, suffered head and leg injuries when arrested for burglary and was transferred from Manchester prison to hospital, where his left leg was amputated below the knee to prevent the spread of septicaemia.


Sexual health is the message - The Guardian 30/05/06

How can schools reduce the incidence of chlamydia in youngsters? By offering a screening programme


How to tell if you are a problem researcher - The Guardian 30/05/06

Over the last few years I have slipped into the dangerous and disturbing world of addiction. Not, you understand, that I have become a secret opium eater, or even succumbed to the joys of the sport of kings. Instead, I have been indulging in the sport of moral and political philosophers: being a busy-body. Indeed, I fear I may have become a busy-body sans frontières. Various forms of committee work have led me to spend time thinking about problem and compulsive gambling, drug addiction, alcohol abuse and tobacco dependence. I haven't done sex or shopping yet, but no doubt the time will come.


Open spaces - The Guardian 30/05/06

Ideas on how best to use our school buildings are buzzing around like children in a free tuck shop. Education bosses are bandying about words like "hub" and "community space" and "flexible environment". Two years ago, the government launched a multi-billion-pound rebuilding project and today, under the extended schools initiative, governors are being encouraged to examine how they can open up their buildings to the community.


'1,000 beds to go in NHS crisis' - The Guardian 29/05/06

The NHS will lose more than 1000 hospital beds over the coming year, shadow health secretary Andrew Lansley has predicted.


Admissions halted after hostage-taking and assaults at unit for dangerous prisoners - The Guardian 29/05/06

A pioneering high-security hospital unit designed for some of the most dangerous prisoners has been closed to admissions following a series of disturbances including hostage-taking and assaults on staff.


Crystal persuasion - The Guardian 29/05/06

Several doctors have criticised alternative therapies, but sometimes maybe they do work


Hay fever drugs boom as pollen counts and profits go sky high - The Guardian 29/05/06

For the country's 12 million hay fever sufferers, it could be the low point of the year. According to one forecast, the hay fever season will be at its worst at precisely 6.02pm today when pollen released high into the atmosphere in the morning returns to the ground, catching people out before they have started taking their pills, liquids, sprays and eyedrops.

Pollen surge that could get right up your nose - The Times 27/05/06
Sneezy season made easy - The Times 27/05/06


The rot starts here - The Observer 28/05/06

Scottish children have the worst teeth in Britain. Over the last 20 years, their sugar intake has doubled. One in three of its 12-year-olds is now overweight. But can the blame really be laid at the door of sugary sweets? Award-winning writer Alex Renton on a tale of poverty and decay


What's in your basket? - The Observer 28/05/06

Jerry Hall, the model-turned-actress and mother of four, is a stickler for home cooking and three meals a day


Can't cook, won't cook - The Observer 28/05/06

Food isn't petrol - it matters what we fill up on. And it'll take more than a few celebrity chefs to get the nation eating well


Dilemma: Is biodegradable all it's cracked up to be? - The Observer 28/05/06

It may not give you a totally green bill of health, but it's still best to go biodegradable - and start in nappies, says Lucy Siegle


Our little obsessions laid bare - The Observer 28/05/06

With the advent of the internet, a terrible beauty was born. And I don't just mean that site with the dairymaids and the enthusiastic donkey. Information has spread across the world; so have paranoia and conspiracy theories. Lonely, single people can find each other and forge new bonds; so can sinister groups with murderous intent. Disadvantaged yet visionary unemployed people can launch businesses for little cost and potential fortunes; so can paedo-porn suppliers.


Nursery illness blamed on rare strain of E. coli - The Observer 28/05/06

A rare strain of E. coli O157 is behind the infection outbreak linked to a children's nursery in Dunfermline, Fife, experts confirmed yesterday.


Violent crime: the shocking truth - The Observer 28/05/06

It was the study Labour used for a devastating attack on spiralling rates of crime during the Tory Nineties. Now, a decade on from his acclaimed account, David Rose reveals that violence is getting worse and the chances of criminals being caught are lower than ever

Crime rate soars as criminals walk free - The Observer 28/05/06


Burger bars replace NHS coffee shops - The Observer 28/05/06

Trusts to ditch volunteers for fast-food income

Hospital cafes offer more than tea and sympathy - The Observer 28/05/06


Sunshine is good for you (again) - The Observer 28/05/06

After years of telling us not to spend too long outdoors on sunny days for fear of cancer, doctors and researchers now admit that following their advice can lead to vitamin D deficiency


Professor in drug study fraud claim - The Observer 28/05/06

Psychiatrist says that he will fight charges of misconduct and defrauding the NHS


This pernicious mix of big business and busybodies - The Observer 28/05/06

The National Identity Register, when linked to other databases, will give the state unlimited powers to spy on us


Seven ways to a healthy heart - The Guardian 27/05/06

Making sure the beats go on is not quite as hard as you might think, says Peta Bee. So there's no reason not to act


Making a difference after hours - The Guardian 27/05/06

Entrepreneurs aren't renowned for having a conscience. But there's a new business sector that doesn't base success exclusively on profit. Hazel Davis meets three people who launched social enterprises while holding down a day job


Emma Mitchell: Green solutions for your hair care - The Guardian 27/05/06

I suffer from an itchy, dry scalp. I've tried several shampoos, but none has helped. When I was young, my mother washed my hair in green soft soap: is there a product like it today?


Imagine my surprise - The Guardian 27/05/06

The sorrow for hypochondriacs is that when they're finally proved right, they're in no position to say "I told you so". That's why no one wants to be one. But with the health of the nation uppermost in minds as various as David Cameron's, Skippy's, and a group of Britain's leading doctors', it was hard not to worry obsessively.


Forty years of miracle cures. Now it's homeopathy's turn - The Guardian 27/05/06

'I hope you get cancer and then look in the mirror." That is a pretty representative sample from the Bad Science mailbag last week, so I shan't be writing about mobile phone masts again until you all calm down. But it's in the backlash that you can find the truth. This week some fabulous elderly scientists came out loudly against homeopathy on the NHS.

Bottom line is that it works, says homeopathic chief - The Guardian 27/05/06
Find the balance - The Times 27/05/06
Because you gotta have faith - The Times 27/05/06

Study to look at impact of cervical cancer on men - The Independent 30/05/06

The largest study of the effects of cervical cancer is to examine its impact on men.


A cure for Stress? - The Independent 28/05/06

It started as a hi-tech relaxation technique for burnt-out executives. Now everyone from schoolchildren to sports stars are discovering the seemingly miraculous benefits of Heartmath. Jerome Burne investigates

Specialist nurses face the axe - The Times 30/05/06

THE axe is falling on specialist nurses as their high salaries attract the eye of trust managers keen to cut costs.


No jobs for new doctors - The Times 30/05/06

HUNDREDS of graduates will leave medical school next year with no prospect of finding work as a doctor.


Health bosses in demand - The Times 30/05/06

NHS managers, maligned in some quarters for an apparent ability to suck up scarce resources with their clipboards and paperclips, are in demand — by local government.


What could be making my hands swell and my limbs go numb? - The Times 30/05/06

I am 36, a mother of three, and find that my hands swell when I get hot and my arms go numb if I lie on them when I sleep. When I sit on the floor my legs go numb and start tingling. Can you help?


Abortions at home for 10,000 - The Times 29/05/06

A RECORD 10,000 women had an abortion in their own home last year, according to new figures.

Treatment by tablet offers women the safer option - The Times 29/05/06
Bedroom abortions - The Times 29/05/06
Abortion pill use doubles in 12 months - The Telegraph 29/05/06
Home abortions 'hit record high' - BBC Health News 29/05/06
History of the abortion pill - Daily Mail 29/05/06
Number of women taking suspect abortion pill doubles - Daily Mail 29/05/06


Passengers turned away as virus outbreak hits liner - The Times 29/05/06

HUNDREDS of passengers waiting to embark on a cruise were turned away last night after the ship they were due to sail in was seized by officials investigating a virus outbreak.

Virus-hit cruise ship detained at Harwich - The Telegraph 29/05/06
Fjords cruise cancelled after outbreak of vomiting disease - The Guardian 30/05/06
Refunds offered after virus breaks out on cruise ship - The Independent 30/05/06
500 holidays lost as liner hit by bug is kept in port - The Telegraph 30/05/06


Babies are aborted over an extra finger or club foot - The Times 29/05/06

MORE than 20 women have had abortions in advanced pregnancy because scans revealed that their unborn children had club feet.

Babies with club feet aborted
- The Sunday Times 28/05/06
Babies aborted for not being perfect - Daily Mail 28/05/06


Schools caterers refuse to bid for healthier lunches - The Times 29/05/06

PLANS to ban junk food from school lunches are under threat because some local authorities are unable to find a contractor willing to provide healthier meals.


The shameful new rules on Alzheimer's - The Times 29/05/06

Limiting these drugs will hurt millions of families

Anger as Alzheimer's drugs ruled too expensive - The Independent 27/05/06
Curb on Alzheimer's drugs - The Telegraph 27/05/06
Alzheimer's drugs policy outrage - BBC Health News 26/05/06
Update On NICE Guidance On The Use Of Drugs To Treat Alzheimer's Disease, UK - Medical News Today 28/05/06


I've turned so angry and bitter that I need help - The Times 29/05/06

I feel as if my personality has been stripped away and I am floundering in a sea of depression and anger. In the past two or three years I have become an angry, bitter person, always mentally criticising everything — even photos of people in newspapers or someone I’ll drive past on the motorway.


When art is in the right place - The Times 29/05/06

The Children's Laureate is energising the lives of elderly psychiatric patients with joyful, humorous paintings


Urban Worrier - The Times 29/05/06

Feel my pain. Better yet, see it! Made the mistake of going into the office the other day. My boss gave me a funny look. “Are you sure you’re supposed to be here?” she asked. She was not expressing uncertainty over whether I was still employed by the company but, touchingly, concern about my welfare. Possibly she had a point. I had caught a glimpse of my reflection on the way in and saw a man with all the ruddiness and healthful glow of Banquo’s ghost. The consultant had told me to take it easy while the kidney recovered from its dramatic reaction to the assault on the cuckoo stones. He had suggested that I work from home. But I was bored one day and decided to haunt my colleagues. Unfortunately, it seems that too many of them are afeared of the supernatural, so here I am working from home again.


Patients get right to elite treatment - The Sunday Times 28/05/06

PATIENTS will be encouraged to bypass their local NHS hospitals to be treated at elite foundation trusts and private treatment centres anywhere in England under reforms to be introduced by Patricia Hewitt, the health secretary, this week.


Sleeping pill that brought a coma victim back to life - The Times 27/05/06

A SLEEPING pill that triggered a period of consciousness in a comatose patient after being administered to calm a bout of restlessness is to be taken into full clinical trials, The Times has learnt.


Foreign criminals freed from psychiatric hospitals - The Times 27/05/06

POLICE are hunting for hundreds of foreign criminals who have been released from psychiatric hospitals without being considered for deportation, it was reported last night.


Doctor 'was looking after widow' - The Times 27/05/06

A consultant physician accused of tricking an 86-year-old widow out of her savings and valuable artwork told the General Medical Council that he was merely carrying out her husband’s dying wish.


Tipsy on tonic - The Times 27/05/06

FIGURE-conscious tipplers beware: slimline tonic and other diet mixers can leave you distinctly light-headed, Australian researchers claimed this week.


Game, set and in shape for more - The Times 27/05/06

Tennis champion Martina Navratilova is so passionate about keeping fit that she’s written a book about it. She tells Ginny Dougary about life as a bionic woman

Quiet on the court, please - The Times 27/05/06


Inside story: leprosy: my passage to India - The Times 27/05/06

How the quiet dignity of leprosy patients inspired Victoria Hislop


Agony and ecstasy: taking stock of the affair - The Times 27/05/06

'I'm certain my husband of 30 years is having an affair with another woman. I don't want to lose himl how can I entice him back into my arms?'


With this three-ring circus, I thee wed - The Times 27/05/06

From chocolate fountains to hen and stag weekends in Prague, the big day is costing us a fortune. We’d all be happier — and a lot richer— if we kept it simple, says Jane Fearnley-Whittingstall


Kids can really dig it - The Times 27/05/06

From snails to dirty nails, Emma Cook learns how to involve the children in an enjoyable plot


Gardening adventures for your little blossoms - The Times 27/05/06

GARDEN ORGANIC, RYTON GARDENS, WARWICKSHIRE These plush organic gardens, run by Garden Organic, the national charity for organic growing, are holding a week devoted to getting your sprogs into digging dirt. The children’s week, from Monday, has different activities every day, from making insect masks to sowing seeds and making compost. And every Wednesday throughout the summer Ryton Gardens runs tours for children, followed by a gardening activity.


Lunch-time fix: custom blend manicure - The Times 27/05/06

After years of gnawing my nails and chewing my cuticles, I’ve got the art of hiding my hideous hands down to a tee. So a manicure for chronic nail-biters sounded like something I had to try. The Custom Blend treatment gives you realistic falsies, the colour of your natural nails, which can’t be chewed or bitten off.


High on a hill - The Times 27/05/06

Rosie Millard discovers an Italian retreat that’s a breath of fresh air


Keeping ear bugs at bay - The Times 27/05/06

Last year my daughter, then aged 4, caught an ear infection while we were on holiday in Greece after swimming in a pool that was shared by several families. I am concerned that she may pick one up again, either from a pool or the sea. Have you any tips to prevent this?


What's up doc? Pressing on your ankles - The Times 27/05/06

Why bother? The doctor is testing you for “pitting oedema”. In other words, he is trying to establish whether any swelling of your ankles is due to an accumulation of fluid, or simply the result of your having fat legs.


Eco-worrier: shredded paper chase - The Times 27/05/06

I shred paper that contains personal information. How should I dispose of it?


Is it true that ... chocolate causes acne? - The Times 27/05/06

You’d think that some of these old chestnuts would have been researched to within an inch of their lives by now. And you’d be wrong. Traditional teaching is that the supposed adverse effects of diet on acne are a myth. But this, in itself, may be a myth. Because the evidence that there’s no connection between diet and spots is based on two poor quality studies over 30 years ago.


Bun full of goodness? - The Times 27/05/06

Gourmet” burgers are all the rage with the metropolitan middle-class, but how do they stack up in terms of health against their fast-food rivals?


Meaty treat - The Times 27/05/06

Much as I love vegetarian food, there are moments, usually when I’m feeling tired, when I crave red meat


Are you macho, Nacho? - The Times 27/05/06

Only when it comes to horses, says the Argentine polo player and model Nacho Figueras, 29


Is this heart drug too much of a good thing? - The Telegraph 29/05/06

Statins are taken by two million people in Britain - now, a new study says millions more of us should be prescribed them. But medication is no substitute for a healthy lifestyle, says Barbara Lantin


Life in a wheelchair didn't seem so bad... - The Telegraph 29/05/06

Some 20,000 worth of conventional medicine didn't cure 76-year-old Philip Knightley's back pain. Alternative therapies did, though


Trust me, I'm a junior doctor: as with many things, it's a matter of timing - The Telegraph 29/05/06

Large mental asylums have almost disappeared since closures in the 1990s - but not quite, writes Max Pemberton


Your best ever body with Team Telegraph: day 1 - The Telegraph 29/05/06

Our team of experts has devised a five-day guide to diet, fitness, fashion and beauty so you can feel fabulous this summer

Your best ever body day 1: exercise - The Telegraph 29/05/06
Your best ever body day 1: beauty - The Telegraph 29/05/06
Your best ever body day 1: fashion - The Telegraph 29/05/06
Your best ever body day 1: food - The Telegraph 29/05/06


NHS hospitals are getting dirtier despite promises, claim patients
- The Telegraph 29/05/06

Standards of cleanliness in hospitals are falling despite Government promises to tackle dirty wards, a survey showed yesterday.


Third of final-year students visit GP - The Telegraph 29/05/06

One third of final-year degree students have visited their doctor and more than a fifth have sought help from a counsellor because of the stress of exams, according to a survey carried out last week.


'Silver surgery' takes off as over-61s have nip and tuck - The Telegraph 29/05/06

Nearly one person in 10 choosing to have cosmetic surgery in Britain is over 61 years of age, a leading private hospital group says today.

Silver surgery surges - Daily Mail 29/05/06


Hospitals cash in on ATM charges - The Telegraph 29/05/06

Sixty-three hospitals are making money whenever patients use on-site cash machines.


Nish Joshi's Q & A - The Telegraph 28/05/06

My 29-year-old son has just been diagnosed with Crohn's disease. His GP has started him on a course of steroids. He also has fissures. Please could you give me some advice I could pass on?


'Open wide...' Why big business is being invited to run GP surgeries - The Telegraph 28/05/06

Welcome to your new-look doctor's surgery. The one the Government says you deserve. The one without two-week waits for appointments, swamped phone lines, bored receptionists, greasy windows and broken furniture. In Dagenham, Essex, a run-down east London suburb, the future is unfolding.

Shortage of GPs set to turn chronic - The Sunday Times 28/05/06
Anger as NHS pays to recruit US medics - The Observer 28/05/06
NHS Agrees First Deal To Remedy Local GP Shortages - Medical News Today 28/05/06


Working 32 hours a week or more in pregnancy 'is as risky as smoking' - The Telegraph 28/05/06

Pregnant women who work more than 32 hours a week in stressful jobs risk the health of their unborn child, new research claims.


And, no joking, they're planning for a heatwave - The Telegraph 27/05/06

Plans for coping with a heatwave this summer have been announced by the Department of Health, just in case there is one.


New ager: Alexander Technique - The Telegraph 27/05/06

Judith Woods on relieving tension, boosting self-confidence and improving posture.


Get a life: tubes of toothpaste - The Telegraph 27/05/06

Part seven of self-help guru Nina Grunfeld's eight-step guide to better relationships.

Hospital was so scary I gave birth at home - Daily Mail 30/05/06

Actress Tamzin Malleson was determined that her baby would not be born in London, where she lives, but in her home Stroud.


Depressed or stressed? - Daily Mail 30/05/06

Judging by the statistics, you could be forgiven for thinking that we're a nation of depressives.


Fooled by fruit that's never out of season - Daily Mail 29/05/06

When it comes to fruit and vegetables, we are spoilt for choice.


Shouldn't we tax fatties? - Daily Mail 27/05/06

How many fat people have you seen today? Did the milkman waddle down your garden path on legs like giant kebabs?


Britons eating their way to a healthier lifestyle - Daily Mail 26/05/06

Britain's diet seems to be improving, with shoppers buying more fresh fruit and vegetables.


Joyrider crash boy's organs to be donated - Daily Mail 26/05/06

The mother of an eight-year-old boy who was knocked down and killed in a park by alleged joyriders made the heart-rending decision to donate his organs for transplant, she said today.

GPs dissatisfied with IT system - BBC Health News 30/05/06

A majority of doctors support a call for a review into the government's NHS computer project in England, a survey for BBC News suggests.


Child jab wait 'threatens lives' - BBC Health News 29/05/06

Children's lives will be put at risk because a vaccine for a potentially lethal disease is not being introduced this summer, campaigners have said.


Cancer children given Thalidomide - BBC Health News 29/05/06

Children suffering from brain tumours are being given Thalidomide, the morning sickness drug that caused birth defects in 10,000 babies 50 years ago.

Child cancer victims treated with thalidomide - Daily Mail 30/05/06


'My poor skin is ruining my wedding' - BBC Health News 27/05/06

Sally Eastland is hoping to get married next year - but is too scared to try on a dress.


Parents back child gene therapy - BBC Health News 27/05/06

The overwhelming majority of parents whose children have cystic fibrosis want gene therapy trials to go ahead, bypassing normal research guidelines.


Heart warning on African herb use - BBC Health News 27/05/06

Doctors have issued a warning about severe heart problems associated with chewing Khat leaves.

Khat Chewing Increases Risk Of Heart Attack, Warn Doctors - Medical News Today 27/05/06


Graphic images to deter smokers - BBC Health News 26/05/06

The public are being asked to choose a series of picture warnings to appear on cigarette packets from next year.

Graphic Warnings On Cigarette Labels Will Help Cut Tobacco Related Deaths - Medical News Today 27/05/06


Ease off NHS adviser, doctors say - BBC Health News 26/05/06

Campaigners, companies and politicians should stop pressurising the NHS advisory body, doctors say.


Kidney blunder surgeon suspended - BBC Health News 26/05/06

A surgeon who removed the wrong kidney from a woman has been suspended from the medical register for a year.


'Too many' women having Caesarean - BBC Health News 26/05/06

The number of women having Caesarean sections has not fallen, despite experts calling for rate to be cut.


Patients 'positive on hospitals' - BBC Health News 26/05/06

Hospital inpatients are broadly satisfied with their care, but do have concerns about cleanliness, lack of information and staffing, a poll says.


Britons report 'psychic powers' - BBC Health News 26/05/06

More than half of Britons believe in psychic powers such as mind-reading and premonitions, a survey suggests.

The SARS Virus Yields Up Its Secrets - Medical News Today 30/05/06

The SARS coronavirus that sparked a global panic three years ago uses a key coat protein, called S2, to gain entry into human host cells.


Decent NHS Care For Older People Still Too Patchy, UK - Medical News Today 30/05/06

Good, respectful NHS care for older people is still too patchy, argue senior members of the British Geriatrics Society in last week's BMJ.


Positive Influence Of Religion And Spirituality On Blood Pressure - Medical News Today 29/05/06

A study of more than five thousand African Americans found that individuals who were involved with or participated in religious activities had significantly lower blood pressure than those who were not, despite being more likely to be classified as hypertensive, having higher levels of body mass index (BMI), and lower levels of medication adherence.


UK Trained Mental Health Experts Create Resource Centre For Sri Lankan Tsunami Survivors In Columbo - Medical News Today 28/05/06

The King's College London Centre for Trauma, Resettlement and Mental Health in Sri Lanka, created by volunteers from the Institute of Psychiatry at King's College London in collaboration with the UK-Sri Lanka Trauma Group and the Sri Lankan Forum for Research and Development is being officially opened this Friday, 26th May 2006 in Colombo. Most of the volunteers are Sri Lankan origin but trained in the UK.


BMA Supports Emergency Medicine Training As Tribute To 7 July Bomb Victims, UK - Medical News Today 28/05/06

The British Medical Association today (25 May 2006) announced two memorials to commemorate the events surrounding the bomb which exploded on a bus outside BMA's London Headquarters on 7 July last year.


Cancelled Operations Down This Winter, UK - Medical News Today 28/05/06

This winter saw a dramatic reduction in the number of NHS operations cancelled at the last minute, according to new statistics released today by the Department of Health.


Include Indigenous Communities In MDGs Or Watch Them Die A Slow Death, Experts Warn - Medical News Today 28/05/06

We are dangerously close to killing off the world's Indigenous populations, and losing forever the invaluable knowledge these communities have about medicines and the ecosystem.


Funding Boost For NHS Dentistry, UK
- Medical News Today 26/05/06

NHS dental practices and their patients will benefit from a programme of capital investment of £100million over two years announced today by health minister Rosie Winterton, designed to improve and modernise dental practices across the country.


New Immigration Rules 'deleterious To Patient Care', UK - Medical News Today 26/05/06

The RCP (Royal College of Physicians) Trainees Committee has condemned the new immigration rules recently announced by the Home Office as unfair and potentially deleterious to patient care. The Committee discussed the issue on Thursday 11 April, their first meeting since the new rules were introduced. The Committee is also concerned that the changes will destabilise NHS Trusts already struggling to cope with the introduction of other health service changes, and will alter the image of the NHS as a place where postgraduate doctors compete for appointments in order for the best candidate to provide patient care.


Rosie Winterton Announces Details Of National Resource Centre For Patient And Public Involvement, UK - Medical News Today 26/05/06

A further step towards making it easier for people to get involved in their local health services was announced by Health Minister Rosie Winterton today. A new national Patient and Public Involvement Resource Centre to develop and support NHS staff and organisations to involve people in local health services will open its doors on June 1st after a contract with successful bidders was signed yesterday.


Nine-year High For Sight-saving Cornea Transplant Operations, UK - Medical News Today 26/05/06

The number of people whose sight was saved by a cornea transplant last year was the highest for almost a decade.


International News

Viagra blamed for STDs in pensioners - The Guardian 30/05/06

By day, residents of The Villages enjoy all the respectable pursuits of a healthy old age - a hand of cards, a tea dance and perhaps a round of golf before happy hour.


China to ban smoking for duration of Olympics - The Guardian 30/05/06

It is going to come as a shock to tens of millions of lungs, but the Chinese government is planning a tobacco-free Olympics when the world's heaviest smoking nation hosts the event in 2008.


Aid pours in to Java as quake toll passes 4,300 - The Guardian 29/05/06

Relief supplies and aid workers yesterday poured into the earthquake-devastated areas of Java, Indonesia, as the death toll soared to more than 4,300 people.

Little time for ceremony in a devastated land - The Guardian 29/05/06
'People were just screaming' - The Guardian 29/05/06
Let this rescue improve on the last - The Guardian 29/05/06
Disaster returns to Indonesia from Guardian Unlimited: News blog - The Guardian 29/05/06
Quake rescue 'a race against clock' - The Guardian 29/03/06
USAID Provides Additional Assistance In Response To Indonesian Earthquake Tragedy - Medical News Today 29/05/06
World Vision Distributing Medical And Survival Items To Indonesia Quake Victims - Initial Response Focused In Hardest-Hit Bantul And Klaten Districts - Medical News Today 29/05/06
Emergency quake aid arrives in Indonesia - The Telegraph 29/05/06
UNICEF Responding To Indonesian Earthquake - Focus On Immediate Survival Of Victims - Approximately One Third Are Feared To Be Children - Medical News Today 29/05/06
Aid programmes should be tailored to local communities - The Guardian 30/05/06
Indonesia - Disaster Relief Aid In Action - Medical News Today 30/05/06

New medical research - The Times 30/05/06

Poor children in their late teens are 50 per cent more likely to be overweight than those above the poverty line, says a Johns Hopkins University study in the Journal of the American Medical Association (May 24). The survey of more than 10,000 children says there was no such difference in the 1980s, and suggests that it may be caused by inactivity, fizzy drink consumption and skipping breakfast.


Effects of child abuse exaggerated, says priest - The Sunday Times 28/05/06 THE Catholic church has defended a Northern Ireland priest who said the effects of child sex abuse were exaggerated.
Leaving home - The Telegraph 30/05/06

Readers who have already celebrated their fiftieth birthdays will be familiar with the reflections that inevitably attend this landmark in our lives: the pride or vain regret, the contentment or unease, the expectation or the fear.

The six billion letter man makes DNA breakthrough - The Telegraph 29/05/06

An american scientist has become the first person in history to gaze at his entire genetic makeup, the DNA recipe book that he inherited from his parents.


US scientists back autism link to MMR - The Telegraph 28/05/06

The measles virus has been found in the guts of children with a form of autism, renewing fears over the safety of the MMR jab.

Brush with danger - Daily Mail 30/05/06

Sitting innocuously in your bathroom is an essential tool for your pursuit of good dental you thought. For according to one American expert your toothbrush might be doing you more harm than good.


The safe way to kill pain - Daily Mail 30/05/06

Up to 30,000 British adults could be in danger from over-the-counter painkillers because they are not following the doseage instructions correctly. This week a study by Spanish researchers, published in the medical journal Heart, found that common painkillers, such as ibuprofen, may raise the risk of heart failure in older people.


Teen sex rate has quadrupled - Daily Mail 29/05/06

The number of teenage girls who are sexually active has quadrupled over the last 50 years, U.S. researchers have found.


Sexiness is 'Caused by by genes' - The Mirror 29/05/06

SEXY men and women may have a "randy" mutation in their genes, scientists have revealed.

Differences In Sexual Desire Can Be Attributed To Genetic Variances - Medical News Today 30/05/06

Plea for free Africa healthcare - BBC Health News 29/05/06

A British-based charity has called for international donors to give specific long-term support to African nations in providing free healthcare


Early stroke cause 'discovered' - BBC Health News 29/05/06

A rare genetic disorder is the cause of some strokes in young people, German researchers have said.

Racial And Gender Disparities In Development Of Hypertension In American Indians - Medical News Today 30/05/06

Data from the largest epidemiological study of cardiovascular disease (CVD) and its risk factors in the American Indian community may indicate racial differences in the development of hypertension and that different risk factors are more predictive in men than in women.


Amitiza™ (lubiprostone) May Help Improve Symptoms Of Irritable Bowel Syndrome With Constipation - Medical News Today 30/05/06

A new study found that AMITIZA™ (lubiprostone) may help relieve the symptoms associated with constipation-predominant irritable bowel syndrome (IBS-C). IBS is a condition that affects nearly 30 million people in North America and accounts for 25-50 percent of referrals to gastroenterologists. The study was presented today at Digestive Disease Week, the largest annual meeting of digestive disease specialists.


Increasing Interest In Cholesterol-Lowering Treatment Drive Phytosterol Sales - Medical News Today 30/05/06

Heart diseases account for approximately 50 per cent of all mortalities in the industrialised world. With one of the major risk factors for heart disease being elevated cholesterol levels, particularly low-density lipoproteins (LDLs), there is an increasing demand for foods and beverages containing phytosterols or nutraceuticals that lower cholesterol levels.


Women With COPD Fare Worse Than Men With Same Level Of Disease - Medical News Today 30/05/06

disease (COPD) fare worse than men both in terms of the severity of their disease and their quality of life, according to a study to be presented at the American Thoracic Society International Conference on May 22nd.


Coalition Of Cancer Cooperative Groups Features Lance Armstrong In Cancer Clinical Trials Newsweek Supplement - Medical News Today 30/05/06

As part of a national campaign to increase awareness of cancer clinical trials in the United States, the Coalition of Cooperative Cancer Groups has published "Knowledge is Power: Lance Armstrong Encourages Everyone to Learn about Cancer Clinical Trials" as a supplement to the June 5 national edition of Newsweek.


Steroidal Inhalers Do Not Halt Progression Of Asthma In Children - Medical News Today 30/05/06

A study in the May 12 issue of The New England Journal of Medicine reported that steroidal inhalers do not halt progression of asthma in children. “That isn't surprising,” said Lynn Gerald, Ph.D., assistant director of the UAB Lung Health Center. “However, patients should be aware that inhaled steroids are an extremely effective treatment for asthma symptoms.”


Scientists Reveal Structure Of A Key Tuberculosis Protein - Medical News Today 30/05/06

Tuberculosis remains one of the deadliest threats to public health. Every year two million people die of the disease, which is caused by the microorganism Mycobacterium tuberculosis. Roughly one third of the world's population is infected and more and more bacterial strains have developed resistance to drugs.


Pregnancies Lower Breast Cancer Risk In BRCA1 And BRCA2 Mutation Carriers - Medical News Today 30/05/06

Good news for women with inherited mutations in BRCA1 or BRCA2 genes: A woman's risk to develop breast cancer after age 40 is the lower, the more pregnancies she has had. This is the result of the International BRCA1/2 Carrier Cohort Study (IBCCS), in which the German Cancer Research Center (Deutsches Krebsforschungszentrum, DKFZ) is involved.


Minimizing The Risk Of Melanoma - The Deadliest Skin Cancer - Medical News Today 30/05/06

The incidence of melanoma, the most serious and deadly type of skin cancer, is increasing. In the United States, the lifetime risk of developing melanoma is now about one in 70. It used to be less than one in 100.


Help - But No Miracle Cure - For Receding Hairlines - Medical News Today 30/05/06

It's undeniable. Your hair is thinning around the temples. One look at your older brother's receding hairline shows you what's likely ahead -- and you'd rather not go there. But is there any way to avoid a receding hairline?

Cancer Survivors Face Emotional Challenges After Successful Treatment - Medical News Today 30/05/06

Your bout with cancer - or maybe a battle royal - is over. You beat the disease, withstood the treatment. You're a survivor.


New Understanding Of COX-1 And COX-2 Enzymes Could Revise Classification Of Pain Meds - Medical News Today 30/05/06

COX-1 and COX-2 enzymes may be blocked by pain medications such as Advil and Vioxx in a more complex manner than was previously understood, a Queen's University study has found.


Researchers In Munich Discover A Cellular Mechanism That Can Protect Against Tumours - Medical News Today 30/05/06

Reinhard Fausser led a team which has published an article on this topic in the latest edition of Cell. A protein called Cyld controls Bcl-3 - and thus protects mice from tumour growth. The researchers were able to describe the cellular signalling path which causes uncontrolled growth when the Cyld gene is defective. Furthermore, there is evidence that such a defective Cyld gene may be the root cause of kidney, liver, uterus, and large intestine tumours. Cyld could possibly be one of Bcl-3's most important opponents - in mice and men (Cell, May 19 2006).


Complementary, Alternative Medicine Use High And Varied In Treating Middle Ear Infection In Israeli Children - Medical News Today 30/05/06

Israeli researchers have found that slightly more than half of children admitted to a major treatment facility for acute otitis media have received alternative and complementary therapy. The most common therapy received was various immune boosting national preparations containing Echinacea Purpurea, despite the fact that no evidence exists proving that this product is effective against this common pediatric medical disorder.


International Proteome Researchers Map The Entire Active Protein Inventory In Cells - Medical News Today 30/05/06

Working with colleagues from Denmark, Canada, China, and the U.S.A., the scientists have shown how cutting-edge methods can be used to catalogue the entire inventory of active proteins in cell organelles at a particular moment. Their work sheds considerable light on how cells use proteins. The work is published in the journal Cell (Cell 125, 1-13).


No Difference In Voice Quality After Comparing Different Treatments For Vocal Cord Cancer - Medical News Today 30/05/06

There is no significant difference in voice quality after external beam radiation therapy (EBRT) compared to endoscopic CO2 laser excision (CLE) in T1 glottic cancer. This is the conclusion of meta-analysis assessing voice outcomes after treatment for early glottic cancer.


PBS Stops Growing, Australia - Medical News Today 30/05/06

Newly released Federal Government figures have confirmed that spending on the Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme (PBS) is flat-lining.

Tonsil, Adenoid Removal Results In Better Sleep, Behavior For Children With Sleep Disordered Breathing - Medical News Today 30/05/06

An adenotonsillectomy, or surgical removal of the tonsils and adenoids, leads to an improvement in behavior and sleep for pediatric patients diagnosed with sleep disordered breathing has been revealed in a study from the University of Kansas Medical Center and School of medicine.


Researchers Open Door To Potential Treatments For Type 2 Diabetes - Medical News Today 30/05/06

Researchers funded by the Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR) and the Canadian Diabetes Association (CDA) have identified an unsuspected role of a protein named SHP-1 that could constitute a new therapeutic path against Type 2 Diabetes. Under the direction of professor André Marette (Laval University), Nicole Beauchemin (McGill University), Martin Oliver (McGill University Health Centre) and Katherine Siminovitch (University of Toronto) were part of a Canadian and American team which published an article in the May issue of Nature Medicine that explains the role of SHP-1 in the control of blood glucose.


Surgical Plugs In Ear's Bone Stops Strange Form Of Severe Dizziness - Medical News Today 30/05/06

Rapid, uncontrollable eye movements that swish and thump as the eyes roll and blink. Bones that creak as the body moves. Sudden dizziness, loss of balance. Falling down after a loud noise, such as the sound of your own voice, a cough or even laughter. These are hallmarks of a debilitating and relatively rare syndrome known as superior canal dehiscence that has stumped clinicians for a long time.


Progression From Adolescent Prehypertension To High Blood Pressure - Medical News Today 30/05/06

A study of more than eight thousand adolescents indicates that, without pharmacological treatment or life-style changes, young people with prehypertension or high blood pressure appear more likely to become hypertensive young adults, and consequently be at risk for the damaging consequences of hypertension, as their lives progress.


Many Physicians Do Not View Cardiovascular Risks As Reason To Change Treatment - Medical News Today 30/05/06

A study of patients with uncontrolled hypertension found that although nearly two-thirds had high or very high cardiovascular risks and risk factors, nearly one-third of their primary care physicians did not consider that those patients required a change in any hypertension treatment they were taking.


High Blood Pressure Linked To Female Sexual Dysfunction - Medical News Today 30/05/06

A study presented today at the 21st Annual Meeting of the American Society of Hypertension in New York City found that female sexual dysfunction (FSD) is more prevalent in women with hypertension compared to those with normal blood pressure, and that age and duration of hypertension appear to be significant predictors of FSD.


Potential Benefits Of Treating Prehypertension - Medical News Today 30/05/06

The lead author of a recently-published study of treating prehypertension says the positive findings of his research offer the prospect that early intervention may be able to prevent the emergence of high blood pressure.


Online Liver Transplant Group Offers Support Regardless Of Health, Schedule Or Distance - Medical News Today 29/05/06

Lori Dunn, who received a transplanted liver on July 24, 2005, attends weekly support group meetings at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center as often as possible to share her experiences and offer encouragement to other patients. But because distance and schedules don't always cooperate, she often turns to an online offshoot of the group, which enables everyone to participate, no matter how far away they live or what their physical limitations may be from week to week.


Number Of C-Sections In Developing Countries Increasing, Linked To Higher Risk Of Death, Health Complications, Study Says - Medical News Today 29/05/06

The number of caesarean sections performed annually in developing countries is increasing and might be linked to a higher risk of health complications and death among women and infants, according to a study published in the May 23 online edition of the journal Lancet, VOA News reports (McAlary, VOA News, 5/22). World Health Organization researcher Jose Villar and colleagues studied data from 97,065 deliveries that took place over three months in 120 public, private and social-security hospitals in Argentina, Brazil, Cuba, Ecuador, Mexico, Nicaragua, Paraguay and Peru.


How To Protect Yourself From Bird Flu - Harvard Health Letter - Medical News Today 29/05/06

News media are full of scary headlines about the H5N1 bird flu virus and the possibility that it might spread among the human population. Yet researchers note that no human flu pandemic has ever involved a flu virus of the H5 subtype. On the other hand, the H5N1 virus has already jumped from birds to pigs and cats, as well as infecting some people, suggesting it might have the capacity to develop into a flu that passes directly from one human to another. So should we be afraid-or cynical?


Report Shows QIOs Reducing Disparities In Quality Of Care, USA - Medical News Today 29/05/06

A new report shows Quality Improvement Organizations (QIOs) making significant progress reducing disparities, or variations, in the quality of health care received by underserved groups - principally African-Americans, Hispanics, Native Americans, and rural residents. Noting the positive results of QIO initiatives, the report calls on Medicare to launch a coordinated national campaign to address health care disparities.


For Infants With Swallowing Troubles, Treatment Of Gastroesophageal Reflux Disease May Help - Medical News Today 29/05/06

A new study from the University of Chicago establishes that Gastroesophageal Reflux Disease (GERD) may contribute to pediatric swallowing dysfunction. The study further suggests that GERD treatment may improve the swallowing function in distress.


Shingles: Painful Return Of Chickenpox Virus - Medical News Today 29/05/06

If you've had chickenpox, you may be at risk of shingles -- a painful skin disease that can lead to serious health complications


Mayo Clinic Study Finds Patients With Pancreatic Cancer Could Be Treated - Medical News Today 29/05/06

A new Mayo Clinic study reviewed CT scans of pancreatic cancer patients done before their cancer diagnosis and found that the cancer rapidly progresses from early to advanced stage in the six months prior to traditional clinical diagnosis. The study also found that in one-half of the diabetic patients, their new-onset diabetes predated clinical diagnosis of cancer by more than six months, giving researchers one more clue for earlier detection of pancreatic cancer. Results of the study will be presented Tuesday, May 23, in Los Angeles at Digestive Disease Week® 2006.


Stool Testing Novel Technique For Detecting Colon Cancer - Medical News Today 29/05/06

Researchers at Mount Sinai School of Medicine have found that an improved version of the non-invasive fecal DNA (fDNA) test to screen for colon cancer (CRC) demonstrates a higher sensitivity for detecting cancers of the colon. This data will be presented at the Digestive Disease Week (DDW) conference on May 21, 2006 in Los Angeles.


Beating Bad Breath - Medical News Today 29/05/06

If you're bothered by bad breath, simple measures often can help. Bad breath often stems from food particles in the mouth, from dry mouth, or from a health problem.


Combined Effects Of Air Transport, Intubation Leads To Increased Rate Of Vocal Cord Paralysis - Medical News Today 29/05/06

Intubation and decreased barometric pressures encountered during high altitude transport may lead to an increased rate of vocal cord paralysis of military burn victims. This is a finding of a retrospective study conducted by otolaryngologist - head and neck surgeons at the Brook Army Medical Center in Texas.


Combined Effects Of Air Transport, Intubation Leads To Increased Rate Of Vocal Cord Paralysis Of Military Burn Victims - Medical News Today 29/05/06

Intubation and decreased barometric pressures encountered during high altitude transport may lead to an increased rate of vocal cord paralysis of military burn victims. This is a finding of a retrospective study conducted by otolaryngologist - head and neck surgeons at the Brook Army Medical Center in Texas.


Research Looks To Prevent Facial Paralysis From Chronic Ear Disease - Medical News Today 29/05/06

A new study sets out to describe an unusual anatomic variant found during ear surgery. The authors of “Incidence of Dehiscence of the Facial Nerve in 416 Cases of Cholesteatoma,” are Marcus W. Moody MD, and Paul R. Lambert MD, both from the Department of Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston, SC. Their findings are being presented at the Annual Meeting of the American Otological Society, being held May 20-21, 2006, at the Hyatt-Regency Hotel, Chicago, IL.


Music 'can reduce chronic pain' - BBC Health News 28/05/06

Research has confirmed listening to music can have a significant positive impact on perception of chronic pain

Music eases perception of chrnic pain - Medical News Today 29/05/06


Tumours 'sabotage immune system' - BBC Health News 28/05/06

Scientists have shown how tumours can manipulate the immune system to stop it attacking cancer cells.


Prozac effect on brain pinpointed - BBC Health News 26/05/06
Researchers have discovered how the widely prescribed drug Prozac acts on the brain to counter depression.


Lower Literacy Means Poor Health And Poor Health Care Access For Older People
- Medical News Today 29/03/06

People aged 70 years and older with limited literacy skills are one and one half to two times as likely to have poor health and poor health care access as people with adequate or higher reading ability, according to a study led by researchers at the San Francisco VA Medical Center and the University of California, San Francisco.


Herceptin Plus Arimidex Extends Lives Of Breast Cancer Patients - Medical News Today 29/03/06

Herceptin combined with Arimidex extends the lives of patients with advanced HER2-positive breast cancer, says Swiss pharmaceutical company, Roche. The company announced that the combination had a significant impact on patients' progressions-free survival.


It's Not Bird Flu, It's Black Magic, Say Indonesian Villagers - Medical News Today 29/03/06

In the village where seven family members became infected with bird flu, locals are convinced the infections and six deaths were cause by black magic, not bird flu. Locals are afraid to go anywhere near the house where the seven family members lived.


First American With Diabetes To Climb Everest Is First In World To Complete Global Peaks And Poles Challenge - Medical News Today 29/03/06

Will Cross became the first American with diabetes to summit Mount Everest, the highest point on earth on which a human can walk without supplemental oxygen.1 With this achievement, Cross, a 39-year-old father of six from Pittsburgh sponsored by NovoLog® (insulin aspart [rDNA origin] injection), became the first in the world with diabetes to climb the highest mountain on each of the seven continents and trek to the North and South Poles, a multi-year odyssey known as the NovoLog® Peaks and Poles Challenge. He reached the summit at approximately 5:10 a.m. local time.


Mice Lacking Key Immune Component Still Control Chronic Viral Infections - Medical News Today 29/05/06

Despite lack of a key component of the immune system, a line of genetically engineered mice can control chronic herpes virus infections, researchers at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis have found.


Firearms Present 'triple Threat' To Battered Women - Medical News Today 29/05/06

Study results reported in SAGE Publication's Evaluation Review Women are more likely to be killed by an intimate partner than to die at the hands of a stranger according to "Intimate Partner Violence and Firearms," a new set of studies published in the June issue of SAGE Publications' Evaluation Review.


Establishing Trust Between Physicians And Patients With Rheumatic Diseases - Relationships Can Be Improved By Using Patient-centered Approach - Medical News Today 29/05/06

Trust between a patient and doctor is a key factor in promoting improved quality of life, compliance with treatment, and better health outcomes. Without trust, the patient-doctor relationship may not become firmly established, thus potentially hindering physicians' ability to help patients. This is of special concern in the setting of rheumatic diseases, which are chronic and involve patient-doctor relationships that need to be established over a lifetime of disease; yet few studies have been conducted to identify the components of establishing trust in these patients. A new study published in the June 2006 issue of Arthritis Care & Research (interscience.wiley.com/journal/arthritiscare) examined ethnically diverse patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA) or systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) to determine the elements of the patient-doctor relationship associated with trust in physicians.


Naltrexone Offers Relief For Crohn's Sufferers - Medical News Today 29/05/06

A Penn State College of Medicine pilot study suggests that a drug used to ease symptoms of alcohol and drug addiction may also bring relief to people with Crohn's disease, a chronic inflammatory disorder of the intestine that affects an estimated 500,000 Americans.


How Do Children Understand The Phenomenon Of War? - Medical News Today 29/05/06

All over the world children are exposed to war, some first-hand, others through media images. However, little is known about how children understand the phenomenon of war, and many parents are unsure how to approach the subjects of war and terrorism with their children.


Arsenic Inhibits DNA Repair - Medical News Today 29/05/06

Dartmouth researchers, working with scientists at the University of Arizona and at the Department of Natural Resources in Sonora, Mexico, have published a study on the impact of arsenic exposure on DNA damage. They have determined that arsenic in drinking water is associated with a decrease in the body's ability to repair its DNA.


High Expression Survivin Protein Levels Independent Poor Outcome Predictor For Patients Treated Surgically For Clear Cell Renal Cell Carcinoma - Medical News Today 29/05/06

AUA 2006 - Gene array data was utilized to demonstrate that survivin mRNA expression was associated with a worse outcome in conventional RCC. In this analysis, protein expression detected through immunohistochemistry was correlated with outcome.


Globe And Mail Examines Problem Of Obstetric Fistulas - Medical News Today 29/05/06

Toronto's Globe and Mail on Tuesday examined the problem of obstetric fistulas, which "affect the poorest women in the most isolated places" (Nolen, Globe and Mail, 5/23). Obstetric fistulas develop when a fetus becomes lodged during labor in the narrow birth canal of a girl or young woman, causing pressure that blocks the flow of blood to vital tissues and tearing holes in the bowel, urethra or both, causing incontinence. Physicians can repair a small fistula surgically in fewer than two hours, but to repair a larger fistula and restore a woman's continence might require more than one surgery (Kaiser Daily Women's Health Policy Report, 3/7). Obstetric fistulas can be prevented with caesarean-section deliveries, but fewer than half of African women give birth in medical settings or under trained supervision, the Globe and Mail reports. Because of the population fistulas affect, the issue "attracts little attention and even fewer resources," but campaigns aimed at drawing attention to this "unglamorous" health care issue have been successful in the past few years, according to the Globe and Mail. "We're seeing a lot of positive changes, of facilities being able to handle more cases - increased awareness and prioritization of the issue," Kate Ramsey, a technical specialist at the U.N. Population Fund's Campaign To End Fistula, said (Globe and Mail, 5/23).


One-third Of Adults With Diabetes Still Don't Know They Have It - Medical News Today 29/05/06

The prevalence of diagnosed diabetes in U.S. adults age 20 and older has risen from about 5.1 percent to 6.5 percent, according to researchers at the National Institutes of Health (NIH) and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), who analyzed national survey data from two periods--1988 to 1994 and 1999 to 2002. However, the percentage of adults with undiagnosed diabetes did not change significantly over the years studied. About 2.8 percent of U.S. adult--one-third of those with diabete--still don't know they have it. The study, published in the June 2006 issue of Diabetes Care, notes that type 2 diabetes accounts for up to 95 percent of all diabetes cases and virtually all undiagnosed diabetes cases. Diabetes is a group of diseases marked by high levels of blood glucose resulting from defects in insulin production, insulin action, or both. It is the most common cause of blindness, kidney failure, and amputations in adults and a major cause of heart disease and stroke.


New Technology Detects Risks Of Drugs To Heart Sooner - Medical News Today 29/05/06

A new technology to enable pharmaceutical companies to determine more effectively, and earlier on in clinical trials, whether an experimental drug is toxic to the heart has taken an important step toward the marketplace.


Kellogg's Corn Flakes Taint Advice, Europe - Medical News Today 29/05/06

Kellogg Europe Trading Ltd has issued advice about a taint affecting a small number of packs within certain batches of Kellogg's Corn Flakes.


New Pathways For Autoimmune Treatment Identified - Medical News Today 29/05/06

A rare genetic defect that can trigger a host of diseases from type 1 diabetes to alopecia has helped explain the imbalance of immune regulator and killer cells in autoimmune disease.


Myth Of Chiropractic-Caused Strokes Debunked By Medical Researchers - Medical News Today 29/05/06

A recent billboard advertisement, carried on the side of a bus in Bridgeport, Conn., is the latest in a series of attacks on chiropractic that use scare tactics and misinformation to undermine the growth of the profession, according to the World Chiropractic Alliance (WCA).


AstraZeneca Announces $100 Million R&D Investment In China - New Innovation Centre To Focus Initially On Oncology Research - Medical News Today 29/05/06

AstraZeneca announced its intention to invest $100 million in R&D in China over the next three years, focusing on the benefit and value of innovative medicines for Chinese patients.


Antitrust Authorities Approve Bayer's Acquisition Of Schering - Medical News Today 29/05/06

The European Commission approved without conditions Bayer's planned acquisition of Schering AG. This leaves the Leverkusen group free to complete the deal as far as antitrust law is concerned, since clearance in the United States was already obtained on April 21, 2006. Bayer had made its cash offer to Schering stockholders conditional upon regulatory approval by the E.U. and U.S. authorities.


Hemophilia - Promising Early Clinical Trials For Longer Acting Kogenate® Product - Medical News Today 29/05/06

Data from two early-stage clinical trials presented today at the World Federation of Hemophilia conference offer promising results and support further development for a new experimental factor VIII replacement product, BAY 79-4980. The findings suggest that this new product may offer people with hemophilia A (factor VIII deficiency) prolonged protection from bleeding with once-weekly infusions.


Acute Bacterial Sinusitis - New Study Data Confirm Excellent Speed Of Eradication By Avelox® (moxifloxacin HCl) - Medical News Today 29/05/06

A recently published study in the peer-reviewed online journal BMC Ear, Nose and Throat disorders found that Avelox® (moxifloxacin HCl) eradicated all pathogens in patients suffering from acute bacterial sinusitis (ABS) within only three days.


Global Incidence Of Constipation - Sufferers Are Not Using The Most Effective Treatments - Medical News Today 29/05/06

New omnibus data from the largest global survey to be published, conducted on the epidemiology of constipation, were presented at the Digestive Disease Week congress in Los Angeles. The survey, sponsored by Boehringer Ingelheim, offers new insights into the incidence of constipation and shows that sufferers are not using the most effective treatments.


Spiriva® Consistently Reduces Exacerbations And Associated Hospitalisations In Patients With COPD - Meta-Analysis Of Clinical Studies Shows - Medical News Today 29/05/06

Patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) treated with Spiriva® (tiotropium) for 6-12 months experienced significantly fewer exacerbations and hospitalisations compared with patients receiving placebo according to an analysis of pooled studies presented today at the International Conference of the American Thoracic Society (ATS).1 Spiriva® is the first and only once-daily, inhaled anticholinergic medication for maintenance treatment of COPD.


6-Month Study Evaluated Effectiveness Of Aripiprazole And Standard Of Care In Management Of Community-Treated Patients With Schizophrenia - Medical News Today 29/05/06

The Bristol-Myers Squibb Company (NYSE: BMY) and Otsuka Pharmaceutical Co., Ltd. atypical antipsychotic medicine, aripiprazole, demonstrated significantly greater improvement on the Investigator's Assessment Questionnaire (IAQ) versus standard-of-care in a six-month, randomized, open-label, multicenter trial of more than 500 adults living with schizophrenia conducted in Europe.1 The IAQ is a validated instrument that is a combined measure of efficacy, safety and tolerability, and is composed of 10 items.2 Standard-of-care included treatment with one of the following atypical antipsychotics: olanzapine, quetiapine or risperidone.


GlaxoSmithKline Demonstrates Progress Of Oncology Portfolio - Medical News Today 29/05/06

GlaxoSmithKline will present new data across a broad, innovative portfolio of experimental cancer medicines and vaccines at the annual American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO) meeting in Atlantastarting Friday 2nd June.


FDA Approves ZOSTAVAX®, Merck's New Vaccine For Prevention Of Shingles In Adults Age 60 And Older - Medical News Today 29/05/06

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has approved Merck's new vaccine ZOSTAVAX® [Zoster Vaccine Live (Oka/Merck)] for prevention of herpes zoster (shingles) in individuals 60 years of age and older.


Phase II Trial Of Trovax® In Prostate Cancer Commences - Oxford BioMedica - Medical News Today 29/05/06

Oxford BioMedica (LSE: OXB), a leading gene therapy company, announced today that a Phase II trial of TroVax in patients with prostate cancer that is unresponsive to hormone therapy is open for recruitment. This is the first clinical trial of TroVax in this cancer type.


Avastin Filed With FDA In US For Treatment Of Women With Advanced Breast Cancer - Doubles The Time Women Live Without Their Breast Cancer Progressing - Medical News Today 29/05/06

Roche and Genentech announced today that they have filed Avastin (bevacizumab) in the US for the first line treatment of women with metastatic (advanced) breast cancer. Breast cancer is the leading cause of cancer death worldwide in women.


Results Of Clipping And Coiling Of Aneurysms Are Similar Over Time - Medical News Today 28/05/06

A study led by UCSF neurologist S. Claiborne Johnston, MD, has shown that coiling of ruptured brain aneurysms is very effective during long-term follow-up, similar to outcomes with surgical clipping.


FSU Research Produces Images Of AIDS Virus That May Shape Vaccine - Medical News Today 28/05/06

As the world marks the 25th year since the first diagnosed case of AIDS, groundbreaking research by scientists at Florida State University has produced remarkable three-dimensional images of the virus and the protein spikes on its surface that allow it to bind and fuse with human immune cells.


Two Surgical Interventions For Preemies Have Same Effectiveness - Medical News Today 28/05/06

Neither of the two emergency surgical interventions used to correct perforated necrotizing enterocolitis (NEC), a common and dangerous complication of prematurity, appears to significantly improve an infant's survival and later health, according to a study by UAB researchers and colleagues in the May 25 issue of The New England Journal of Medicine.


Technique Speeds Up Detecting, Treating Wound Bacteria - Medical News Today 28/05/06

For Dr. Sydney Finegold, research is like reading a really good mystery or detective story.


AAAS Condemns British Group's Proposed Academic Boycott Of Israel - Medical News Today 28/05/06

The American Association for the Advancement of Science, the world's largest general science society, today urged a British teachers association to withdraw a motion calling on its members to boycott Israeli scholars and academic institutions that do not publicly declare their opposition to Israel's policies in the territories.


Drinking Daily Cuts Heart Disease Risk For Men, But Not For Women - Medical News Today 28/05/06

Men who drink alcohol every day have a lower risk of heart disease than those who drink less frequently, suggests research in this week's BMJ. But the same is not true for women.

Alcohol study has good news for men - Daily Mail 26/05/06


Medical Students And Doctors Continue Strike In India - Medical News Today 28/05/06

Despite appeals from India's Prime Minister, Manmohan Singh, thousands of doctors and medical students have continued to strike in protest at university quotas for lower castes. Upper caste junior doctors locked out-patient departments of hospitals in Kokata. Medical services in many parts of India have been disrupted as the strikes enter their third week.


Caritas Christi Head Resigns Amid Sexual Harassment Allegations - Medical News Today 28/05/06

Dr. Robert Haddad, Caritas Christi Head, allegedly hugged and kissed women inappropriately, leered at women and in some cases phoned their homes late at night. He was eventually given the choice of either resigning or being fired. He opted for the resignation, which included benefits, plus ten-months' pay - a golden handshake of $830,000.


Four Human Bird Flu Infections In Indonesia Confirmed - Medical News Today 28/05/06

A Hong Kong laboratory, which is recognized by WHO, has confirmed four cases of bird flu infection among humans in Indonesia. These include a 10-year-old girl from Bandung, an 18-year-old male shuttlecock maker from Surabaya, East Java, a 39-year-old person from Jakarta, and a 43-year-old person from Jakarta.


Are Small Renal Tumors Harmless? Analysis Of Histopathological Features According To Tumor Size In Tumors Up To 4 Cm In Diameter - AUA 2006 - Medical News Today 28/05/06

In this study, the authors examined 287 nephrectomy specimens to correlate tumor size with biological potential. They found that 19.5% of lesions were benign but this could not be correlated with tumor size. Furthermore, they found that in tumors 3-4 cm in size, 26% were grade 3 or 4, 36% were stage T3a, and 8.4% were M1.


Washington Times Examines 'Holistic' Approaches To Preventing Teen Pregnancy - Medical News Today 28/05/06

The Washington Times on Thursday examined two "holistic" approaches to preventing teen pregnancy in the U.S. The first approach -- detailed in a recent report by the National Campaign To Prevent Teen Pregnancy -- seeks to add "relationship skills" to sex-education programs. Marline Pearson, co-author of a report for NCPTP, said, "[W]e need to look beyond the goal of managing the health risks of sex to the goal of building healthy relationships." The report says that developing healthy relationships "has been the missing ingredient" in teen pregnancy prevention programs. "Teens hear about biology and body parts" but need to learn "how to achieve responsible and respectful relationships." The second holistic approach, developed by psychologist Michael Carrera and the Children's Aid Society, integrates sex education programs into a variety of social services provided to low-income students from fifth grade through high school. The approach, known as the CAS-Carrera model, provides daily services in education, employment, family life, sexuality education, art, sports and mental, physical, reproductive and dental health care, according to the Times. Carrera said that the best way to prevent teen pregnancy is to "move from fragmentation (of services) to wholeness," adding that if teens are prepared for college and the job market, have good "sexual literacy" and are in good health, they will make better decisions "because there's something at stake." According to preliminary data from the National Center for Health Statistics, teen birth rates have dropped annually, from 62 births per 1,000 teenage girls in 1991 to 41 births per 1,000 teenage girls in 2005. However, there was only a 1% decrease in the teen birth rate from 2003 to 2004 (Wetzstein, Washington Times, 3/25).


New Clinical Trial To Examine Ways To Improve Treatment Of Uterine Fibroids, University Of Pennsylvania School Of Medicine - Medical News Today 28/05/06

Researchers at the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine are working on ways to improve the results of a non-surgical method to treat fibroids. They are examining the overall effectiveness of different agents used to destroy uterine fibroids - a discovery that could lead to more answers about the durability of a procedure called Uterine Fibroid Embolization (UFE). It' s already been established throughout the medical community that, after a decade, UFE works to relieve the symptoms of fibroids. Now, in this new study, investigators want to learn how to optimize the procedure, by running a comparison of materials used during it.


Nobel Laureate Nüsslein-Volhard To Discuss Mysteries Of Genetics - Medical News Today 28/05/06

Why do children look like their parents? How does an embryonic cell know how to become an eye rather than an eyelash? How do simple egg cells develop into so many different life forms?


Central African Republic - Funding Urged As Humanitarian Crisis Deepens - Medical News Today 28/05/06

As insecurity in Chad continues to make international headlines, the United Nations World Food Programme urged the international community not to lose sight of the suffering of as many as 50,000 displaced people in the troubled northwest region of neighbouring Central African Republic.


Malaria, Potato Famine Pathogen Share Surprising Trait - Medical News Today 28/05/06

Two wildly different pathogens - one that infects vegetables, the other infecting humans - essentially use the same protein code to get their disease-causing proteins into the cells of their respective hosts.


Turning The Tables On Drug Discovery - Medical News Today 28/05/06

EUREKA project E! 2314 O'SCREEN reverses the traditional screening process used to discover potentially active new pharmaceutical compounds. Testing single, targeted molecules rather than tens of thousands it promises vastly increased efficiency in drug discovery.


Innovations Needed To Monitor Kidney Health - Medical News Today 28/05/06

Doctor Harry Holthöfer, M.D., Ph.D, at the University of Helsinki, Finland, coordinates a new EU-funded project, which aims to develop new diagnostic approaches for early identification of patients at high risk of rapid loss of kidney function. The project links together researchers from Finland, the Netherlands and Switzerland and four SMEs from Finland, the Netherlands and Italy. The EU has granted 4.4 million euro funding for this project.


Radiesse(TM) Injectable Filler Provides 12-Month Improvement Of Vocal Fold Insufficiency In Multicenter Clinical Voice Study - Medical News Today 28/05/06

BioForm Medical, Inc. a leading medical device company that develops and commercializes injectable implant products for soft tissue augmentation announced the results of a rigorous clinical study confirming the long-term efficacy of Radiesse for the treatment of Vocal Fold Insufficiency. This common voice-altering condition is a serious form of voice loss in which one or both vocal folds (and cords) lack the physical capacity to vibrate properly. Radiesse treatment has demonstrated success in improving the voice of patients for 12 months without surgery.


Antipodean Pharmaceuticals Initiates Phase 2 Trial In Parkinson's Disease - Medical News Today 28/05/06

Antipodean Pharmaceuticals, Inc. today announced it has initiated Phase 2 clinical trials to test the efficacy of its lead compound MitoQ (mitoquinone) in patients with Parkinson's Disease in New Zealand and Australia. The trial will be led by Barry Snow, MD, FRACP, FRCP, Head of the Department of Neurology, Auckland Hospital and involve 10 consultant neurologists at the country's main regional hospitals who will assess and advise potential participants. Parkinsons New Zealand, a non-profit patient information and support group will also be involved to help patients.


Johns Hopkins Researchers Present Advances In Prostate Cancer Program At The Annual Meeting Of The American Urological Association - Medical News Today 28/05/06

Ciphergen Biosystems, Inc. (Nasdaq: CIPH) announced the discovery of two biomarkers that may aid in the management of prostate cancer, including for the detection, staging, and prediction of recurrence. These markers, a fragment of protein C inhibitor (PCI) and complement factor 4 (C4a), were identified in two separate studies, a multi-institutional study encompassing over 400 men and a five-year longitudinal study following 104 patients after radical prostatectomy. These studies demonstrated that PCI provides information useful for the detection and staging of prostate cancer, and the combined use of pre-surgery PCI, PSA, and C4a is predictive of prostate cancer recurrence. The work was performed by Dr. Daniel Chan and Dr. Zhen Zhang of the Johns Hopkins Medical Institutions as part of our research collaboration.


Genentech Submits Supplemental Biologics License Application For Avastin With Chemotherapy In First-Line Metastatic Breast Cancer - Medical News Today 28/05/06

Genentech, Inc. (NYSE: DNA) today announced that the company submitted a supplemental Biologics License Application (sBLA) with the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for Avastin(R) (bevacizumab) in combination with taxane chemotherapy for patients who have not previously received chemotherapy for their locally recurrent or metastatic breast cancer. Genentech has requested Priority Review of the application, which means that if accepted, the FDA would make its decision on the application within six months of the agency's receipt of the submission, or in November 2006. Avastin is currently approved as a first-line treatment for metastatic colorectal cancer in combination with intravenous 5-FU-based chemotherapy.


Six-Month Study Evaluated Effectiveness Of Aripiprazole And Standard Of Care In Management Of Community-Treated Patients With Schizophrenia - Medical News Today 28/05/06

The Bristol-Myers Squibb Company (NYSE: BMY) and Otsuka Pharmaceutical Co., Ltd. atypical antipsychotic medicine, aripiprazole, demonstrated significantly greater improvement on the Investigator's Assessment Questionnaire (IAQ) versus standard-of-care in a six-month, randomized, open-label, multicenter trial of more than 500 adults living with schizophrenia conducted in Europe.(1) The IAQ is a validated instrument that is a combined measure of efficacy, safety and tolerability, and is composed of 10 items.(2) Standard-of-care included treatment with one of the following atypical antipsychotics: olanzapine, quetiapine or risperidone.


Immune Mediated Survival Advantage And Primary Tumor Control Of Cryoablation Compared To Nephrectomy In A Murine Model Of Advanced Renal Cancer - Medical News Today 28/05/06

An interesting study by Hedican and colleagues suggests that energy ablative therapies such as cryoablation may offer more than just local tumor control, by augmenting host immune function, to improve survival. Tumors were implanted orthotopically in both immunocompetent and nude (T-suppressor cell deficient) mice.


Barr Laboratories Receives FDA Approval For Extended-Cycle Contraceptive Seasonique - Medical News Today 27/05/06

Barr Laboratories on Thursday announced it has received approval from FDA for its extended-cycle oral contraceptive Seasonique, according to spokesperson Susan Cruzan, the AP/New Bedford Standard Times reports (AP/New Bedford Standard Times, 5/25). Seasonique is similar to Barr's Seasonale, which was approved in September 2003, and allows users to reduce their number of annual menstrual periods from 13 to four. Unlike Seasonale, with which women take 84 active pills consecutively and then take seven placebo pills, Seasonique uses pills containing a 0.01 milligram dose of estrogen in place of the placebo pills (Kaiser Daily Women's Health Policy Report, 4/7). Barr has said that using the low-dose estrogen pills instead of the placebo pills for seven days limits bloating, hormonal fluctuations and breakthrough bleeding, the Standard Times reports. Seasonique is expected to be available for prescription sales in July and is projected to cost about one dollar per pill (AP/New Bedford Standard Times, 5/25).


Kenya Improving Access To Vertical HIV Transmission-Prevention Services, Official Says - Medical News Today 27/05/06

Although the Kenyan government has not met its goal for increased access to prevention of mother-to-child HIV transmission services set at the 2001 U.N. General Assembly Special Session on HIV/AIDS, it has improved access to such services, a government official said recently, IRIN News reports. World leaders in 2001 pledged to ensure that 80% of pregnant women worldwide would have access to PMTCT services. Robert Ayisi, vertical HIV transmission-prevention coordinator for Kenya's National AIDS and Sexually Transmitted Infections Control Programme, said, "We now have between 40% and 50% of all HIV-positive expectant mothers accessing PMTCT and have trained thousands of health workers." The government ahead of the UNGASS review next month has asked that donor countries make their programs more "Afro-centric" and consider local cultural traditions and practices, according to IRIN News. In Kenya, traditional birth attendants are present at more births than trained medical workers, and Ayisi said the government is training such attendants in how to prevent vertical HIV transmission. The government also is encouraging traditional birth attendants to help reduce the stigma surrounding the virus, in part because many women do not follow guidelines to prevent vertical transmission -- such as not breast-feeding -- because of stigma. An infant has a 15% to 30% chance of contracting HIV through breast-feeding, IRIN News reports. According to IRIN News, lack of participation among men in the health of women and infants also hinders PMTCT efforts in the country. In an effort to increase participation among men, Machakos District Hospital in Machakos, Kenya, began a program called "Men As Partners" as part of its overall PMTCT program (IRIN News, 5/24).


Scientists Confirm That HIV Originated In Wild Chimpanzees, Study Says - Medical News Today 27/05/06

Scientists on Thursday in a study published in the online edition of the journal Science confirmed that HIV originated in wild chimpanzees and likely crossed over into humans in Cameroon, the New York Times reports (Altman, New York Times, 5/26). Scientists for many years believed that HIV evolved from a similar virus called simian immunodeficiency virus that is found in chimpanzees, but until now that virus had been found only in chimpanzees in captivity (Xinhuanet, 5/26). Beatrice Hahn, a virologist at the University of Alabama-Birmingham, and researchers from the University of Montpellier and the University of Nottingham over seven years collected 599 samples of chimpanzee feces from 10 forest sites in the southern region of Cameroon and tested them for SIV. The scientists were able to trace individual chimpanzees by genetically analyzing the feces. The researchers found evidence of SIV infection in samples that came from five of the 10 forest sites. The researchers recorded an SIV prevalence of about 35% in three chimpanzee communities and a prevalence of 4% and 5% in the two other communities (New York Times, 5/26). All infected chimpanzees had a shared base genetic pattern that suggested a common progenitor of the virus, Hahn said. SIV does not appear to cause illness in chimpanzees, Hahn said (Neergard, AP/WJLA, 5/25).



Resection Of Nodal Disease In Patients With Metastatic Conventional Renal Cell Carcinoma Improves Survival - AUA 2006 - Medical News Today 27/05/06
Aggressive surgical resection of nodal disease in the setting of cytoreductive surgery for metastatic RCC was evaluated in this study out of M. D. Anderson.


Demand For Primary Care Providers Outpaces Demand For Specialists, Study Says, USA - Medical News Today 27/05/06

Recruitment of primary care physicians outpaced demand for specialists and other types of doctors last year, marking the first time since the 1990s that primary care has been the most in-demand practice area, according to a recent report by physician recruiting firm Merritt, Hawkins & Associates, the AP/Seattle Post-Intelligencer reports. From March 2005 to April 1, the most common recruitment search performed by Merritt Hawkins was for internists, with family practitioners ranking second, according to the report. During the study period, demand for internists increased 46%, and demand for family practitioners rose 55%, the report says. Merritt Hawkins said demand for primary care physicians is increasing as the population grows and ages, but fewer medical school graduates are specializing in general medicine. Average annual salary offers were $162,000 for an internist and $145,000 for a family practitioner, compared with $351,000 for a radiologist and $342,000 for a cardiologist, the report finds. However, salary offers for internists have increased 10% to 15% in the last few months, Kurt Mosley, senior vice president for business development at Merritt Hawkins, said. Internists can increase their recruitment potential by subspecializing in cardiology, gastroenterology or other areas, he added (Agovino, AP/Seattle Post-Intelligencer, 5/24).


Ten Lawsuits Filed Over Tentative Settlement To Delay Generic Version Of Plavix - Medical News Today 27/05/06

Health plans, unions and businesses have filed ten lawsuits over a tentative settlement that would delay the sale of a generic version of the blood thinner Plavix, the AP/Fort Worth Star-Telegram reports (Agovino, AP/Fort Worth Star-Telegram, 5/26). The settlement, announced in March, would resolve a patent infringement lawsuit filed against generic pharmaceutical company Apotex by Sanofi-Aventis and Bristol-Myers Squibb, which co-market Plavix. BMS and Sanofi had filed the lawsuit against Apotex in federal court over allegations that the generic version of Plavix manufactured by the company violated a U.S. patent on the medication. Under the settlement, BMS and Sanofi would pay an undisclosed amount to Apotex, which could begin to sell the generic version of Plavix in September 2011, eight months before the U.S. patent expires (Saul, New York Times, 3/22). The settlement requires Federal Trade Commission approval. According to the ten lawsuits, the settlement would violate federal antitrust laws. FTC Commissioner Jon Leibowitz last month said his staff would examine the settlement and raised concerns about the increased number of similar agreements. BMS and Sanofi representatives declined to comment on the ten lawsuits, and Apotex did not return a call.


WHO Puts Tamiflu Maker On Alert After Suspected Human-to-Human Transmission - Medical News Today 27/05/06

Roche, the makers of Tamiflu, have been put on alert by the World Health Organization (WHO) after human-to-human transmission of bird flu was suspected among seven family members in Indonesia. This is the first time Roche has been put on this kind of alert.


Cambodia Launches Media Guide To Increase Publicity, Awareness Of Country's HIV/AIDS Epidemic - Medical News Today 27/05/06

The Cambodian government on Monday launched a media guide on HIV/AIDS to increase publicity and raise awareness of the epidemic among people in the country, Xinhua/People's Daily reports. The 186-page guide has 21 sections that feature facts and data about HIV/AIDS in Cambodia and around the world; HIV/AIDS and the media; the effect of the virus on children and adolescents; HIV screening, counseling, treatment and care; and the country's goals to reduce the spread of HIV/AIDS over the coming decade, Xinhua/People's Daily reports. "Media plays [a] significant role in the HIV/AIDS program and is also a key player in disseminating true information about HIV/AIDS and changing attitude[s] of the community toward the most vulnerable victims," Hong Sun Huot, president of the National AIDS Authority, said, adding, "We need to expand media coverage rather than to cause restrain to the effort." Hong urged national and international journalists to join the fight against HIV/AIDS. According to Xinhua/People's Daily, Cambodia diagnosed the first case of HIV in 1993, and HIV prevalence in the country peaked at 3.7% in 1997 (Xinhua/People's Daily, 5/22). Cambodia's current estimated HIV prevalence of 1.9% is the highest in Asia (Kaiser Daily HIV/AIDS Report, 1/3).


Mononuclear Cell Infiltration In Clear Cell Renal Cell Carcionma Independently Predicts Patient Survival - AUA 2006 - Medical News Today 27/05/06

In this study of 306 patients, primary tumor specimens were characterized for the presence and extent of lymphocyte infiltration as a function of cancer specific survival (CSS).


IVF Might Increase Risk Of Pregnancy Complication Placenta Previa, Study Says - Medical News Today 27/05/06

Women who undergo in vitro fertilization are about six times as likely as women who conceive naturally to experience a pregnancy complication called placenta previa, in which the placenta partially or completely covers the cervix, obstructing the fetus' delivery through the birth canal, according to a study published in the current issue of Human Reproduction, BBC News reports (BBC News, 5/24). Placenta previa, which occurs in about 12,000 to 15,000 deliveries annually in the U.S., is the leading cause of hemorrhaging in the second and third trimesters and raises the risk of preterm delivery, according to USA Today. For the study, Liv Bente Romundstad and colleagues at St. Olav's University Hospital in Trondheim, Norway, examined about 845,000 single-fetus pregnancies reported to the Norwegian Medical Birth Registry from 1988 to 2002, about 7,600 of which were a result of IVF. By identifying 1,349 women who had conceived both naturally and using IVF, researchers were able to adjust for risk factors, such as whether the women were older than age 30, smokers or previously had delivered several infants (Rubin, USA Today, 5/25). Conceiving through IVF -- whether before or after naturally conceiving -- raises the risk of developing placenta previa from three in 1,000 deliveries to 16 per 1,000 deliveries, according to the study (Reaney, Reuters, 5/24). Bente Romundstad said that the complication might occur because the embryo often is positioned low in the uterus when it is transferred through the cervix during the IVF process. "The procedure may induce uterine contractions due to the release of prostaglandins [hormone-like substances] after stimulation of the cervix, leading to more embryos implanting low-down in the uterus," she wrote (Martin, Daily Telegraph, 5/25). Previous research has shown that positioning the embryo lower in the uterus can increase implantation rates, so fertility clinics might intentionally do so, Reuters reports.


FDA Approves Duramed's SEASONIQUE(TM) Extended-Cycle Oral Contraceptive Company's Second Proprietary Extended-Cycle OC To Be Available In July - Medical News Today 27/05/06

Barr Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (NYSE: BRL) today announced that the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has approved its Duramed Pharmaceuticals, Inc.'s New Drug Application (NDA) for SEASONIQUE(TM) (levonorgestrel/ethinyl estradiol tablets 0.15 mg/0.03 mg and ethinyl estradiol tablets 0.01 mg) extended-cycle oral contraceptive for the prevention of pregnancy. SEASONIQUE represents the next generation of extended-cycle oral contraceptives in a category the Company created with the launch of the SEASONALE(R) extended-cycle oral contraceptive in 2003.


FDA Advisory Committee To Consider Navy's Proposed 'RESUS' Trauma Trial At July 2006 Meeting - Medical News Today 27/05/06
Biopure Corporation (Nasdaq: BPUR) announced today that it has been notified by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) that the FDA's Blood Products Advisory Committee will meet on July 14, 2006 to discuss the Navy's proposed RESUS clinical trial of the company's investigational oxygen therapeutic Hemopure(R) [hemoglobin glutamer - 250 (bovine)] for out-of-hospital treatment of hemorrhagic shock resulting from traumatic injury. FDA has invited the Naval Medical Research Center (NMRC) and Biopure to present at the meeting. As previously announced, NMRC's investigational new drug application (IND) for RESUS is on clinical hold at FDA.


Desvenlafaxine Succinate (DVS-233) Phase 3 Data Show Significant Improvement In Symptoms Of Depression In Adult Patients Versus Placebo - Medical News Today 27/05/06
Wyeth Pharmaceuticals, a division of Wyeth (NYSE: WYE), this week presented for the first time phase 3 data and results from other studies concerning its investigational drug for major depressive disorder (MDD), desvenlafaxine succinate (DVS-233), a novel serotonin-norepinephrine reuptake inhibitor (SNRI) at the 2006 American Psychiatric Association Annual Meeting in Toronto.


Data From Sangamo BioSciences' Diabetic Neuropathy Program Published In Diabetes - Medical News Today 27/05/06

Sangamo BioSciences, Inc. (Nasdaq: SGMO) announced today publication in Diabetes, a journal of the American Diabetes Association, of preclinical animal data demonstrating the efficacy of the Company's ZFP Therapeutic(TM), SB-509, for the treatment of diabetic neuropathy. The positive data reported in the peer-reviewed article, suggest that SB-509 may provide a promising, new approach to treating this condition, one of the most common complications of diabetes. The data also support Sangamo's ongoing clinical program in diabetic neuropathy. The Company has announced that it expects to initiate a Phase 2 study of SB-509 in the second half of 2006. The Diabetes article entitled, "Gene Transfer of an Engineered Transcription Factor Promoting Expression of VEGF-A Protects Against Experimental Diabetic Neuropathy" is available on line at http://diabetes.diabetesjournals.org/.


Prostate Cancer Detection And Screening Session I - AUA 2006 - Medical News Today 27/05/06
A Podium Session on Prostate Cancer Detection and Screening took place on Sunday May 21, 2006 at the annual AUA meeting in Atlanta. Some highlights from the 12 papers presented are as follows.


Researchers Identify Genetic Defects That Cause Main Types Of Non-Hodgkin Lymphoma, Paving The Way For Potential New Targeted Therapies - Medical News Today 27/06/05

Researchers will report on the discovery of genetic defects that cause particular types of non-Hodgkin lymphoma (NHL), making these genes rational targets for new anti-lymphoma treatments, in the next issue of Blood.


New Clinical Data For ADVEXIN Recurrent Head And Neck Cancer Therapy - Medical News Today 27/05/06
Introgen Therapeutics, Inc. (Nasdaq: INGN) will present data and update the results of clinical trials from ADVEXIN p53 therapy used in recurrent head and neck cancer. The data will be concurrently presented at the annual meetings of the American Society of Gene Therapy and the American Society of Clinical Oncology. Additionally, the Company will present data from its Li-Fraumeni Cancer program in which ADVEXIN is used to successfully treat inherited cancer. Introgen recently announced it will provide ADVEXIN p53 therapy for compassionate use to treat qualified cancer patients suffering from Li- Fraumeni Syndrome. The American Society of Gene Therapy (ASGT) meeting is being held May 31 - June 4 in Baltimore, MD, and The American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO) meeting is being held June 2-6 in Atlanta, GA.


Prostate Cancer Basic Research Session II - AUA 2006 - Medical News Today 27/05/06
A Discussed Poster Session on Prostate Cancer Basic Research took place on Sunday May 21, 2006 at the annual AUA meeting in Atlanta. A few of the many interesting posters on basic and potential translation science are described herein.


Agent Orange Exposure May Be Associated With An Increased Risk Of Biochemical Progression In Prostate Cancer - Medical News Today 27/05/06
Abstract 131: Of 869 patients who underwent radical prostatectomy at 3 VA Medical Centers, a history of Agent Orange exposure was identified in 10% of patients.



Prostate Cancer Detection And Screening Session II - AUA 2006 - Medical News Today 27/05/06

A Moderated Poster Session on Prostate Cancer Detection and Screening took place on Sunday May 21, 2006 at the annual AUA meeting in Atlanta. Some highlights from the posters presented are as follows.



Prostate Cancer Basic Research Session I - AUA 2006 - Medical News Today 27/05/06

A Discussed Poster Session on Prostate Cancer Basic Research took place on Sunday May 21, 2006 at the annual AUA meeting in Atlanta. Many interesting posters on basic and potential translation science were presented. A few of these are described herein.



An Update On Prenatal Diagnosis And Treatment Of Congenital Adrenal Hyperplasia - AUA 2006 - Medical News Today 27/05/06

The first lecture of the day by Maria I. New, MD from the Mount Sinai Hospital in New York City was entitled, “An Update on Prenatal Diagnosis and Treatment of Congenital Adrenal Hyperplasia.” The lecture focused on the prenatal treatment of Congenital Adrenal Hyperplasia (CAH) and some of the physiology and phenotypes of the disease.



Report Analyzes U.S. Response To Domestic HIV/AIDS Challenges - Medical News Today 26/05/06

"HIV/AIDS Policy in the United States: Monitoring the UNGASS Declaration of Commitment on HIV/AIDS," Open Society Institute's Public Health Watch HIV/AIDS Monitoring project: The report finds that the U.S. has fallen short of meeting goals on controlling HIV/AIDS domestically, set at the 2001 U.N. General Assembly Special Session on HIV/AIDS. According to the report, the number of new HIV cases each year has not decreased in the last decade; half of all HIV-positive people who need treatment are not receiving it; efforts against HIV/AIDS are "uncoordinated"; and the disease continues to disproportionately affect low income communities, communities of color, men who have sex with men and injection drug users (OSI release, 5/23).



Report Analyzes U.S. Response To Domestic HIV/AIDS Challenges - Medical News Today 26/05/06

"HIV/AIDS Policy in the United States: Monitoring the UNGASS Declaration of Commitment on HIV/AIDS," Open Society Institute's Public Health Watch HIV/AIDS Monitoring project: The report finds that the U.S. has fallen short of meeting goals on controlling HIV/AIDS domestically, set at the 2001 U.N. General Assembly Special Session on HIV/AIDS. According to the report, the number of new HIV cases each year has not decreased in the last decade; half of all HIV-positive people who need treatment are not receiving it; efforts against HIV/AIDS are "uncoordinated"; and the disease continues to disproportionately affect low income communities, communities of color, men who have sex with men and injection drug users (OSI release, 5/23).



WHO Needs To Restructure Its HIV/AIDS Policies, Efforts, Opinion Piece Says - Medical News Today 26/05/06

The "greatest tribute" to World Health Organization Director-General Lee Jong-wook -- who died in Geneva on Monday after undergoing emergency surgery for a blood clot in his brain -- "would be a new commitment to implementing policies that work," Carol Adelman, director of the Center for Science in Public Policy at the Hudson Institute in Washington, D.C., writes in an International Herald Tribune opinion piece. After WHO failed to achieve the 3 by 5 program goal, which aimed to have three million HIV-positive people in the developing world receiving antiretroviral drugs by 2005, the agency now must "reach out beyond its normal circles of consultants and government health ministries in order to work with local doctors, clinics, hospitals and businesses in fighting [HIV/]AIDS and other diseases," Adelman writes. "Sound medical and public health policies, not publicity and exaggerated numbers, should be WHO's priority," she says. "The world's global health authority must ... focus on testing and evaluation, responsible treatment and monitoring of [HIV/]AIDS patients" in order to "achieve the desired ... outcome" of "break[ing] down the real obstacles to [HIV/]AIDS treatments," Adelman writes. "It is time for WHO to rethink its strategies and modus operandi," Adelman says, concluding, "Good intentions are not good enough" (Adelman, International Herald Tribune, 5/23).



New Research Links Placenta Praevia Directly To Assisted Reproductive Techniques - Medical News Today 26/05/06

Norwegian researchers have found the first evidence that techniques used in assisted reproduction (ART) may be directly linked to an increase in placenta praevia - a potentially dangerous condition in which the placenta covers, or partially covers the cervix, blocking the baby's passage into the birth canal.



Can Placebo Make You Run Faster? Apparently It Can - Medical News Today 26/05/06

Can the placebo effect make a person run faster? Yes, it can. The American Council on Exercise (ACE), America's nonprofit fitness advocate, is pleased to announce the results of exclusive research that measured what happens when athletes think they're getting an extra boost in the form of “super-oxygenated” water.



Thailand's HIV/AIDS Prevention Program Absent, Endangering Country, Advocates Say - Medical News Today 26/05/06

Thailand's HIV prevention program has all but disappeared, putting the country's population at increased risk of contracting the virus, according to some HIV/AIDS advocates, Thailand's Nation reports. Several HIV/AIDS prevention and treatment measures -- including HIV/AIDS education for injection drug users; universal access to antiretroviral drugs; and "merit based" access to HIV/AIDS treatment for migrant workers -- which the government in 2004 at the XVI International AIDS Conference in Bangkok said it would introduce, have not yet been implemented, Mechai Viravaidya, founder and chair of the Population & Community Development Association, said. According to Petchsri Sirinirund, an HIV/AIDS expert for the Ministry of Public Health's Disease Control Department, the high mobility of migrant workers, of whom there are about two million in the country, helps to spread HIV. Mechai added that without prevention programs targeted at migrant workers, HIV will continue to spread among the general population. "Thailand's acclaimed achievements in HIV prevention are history," Mechai said, adding, "In the past three years, people working in the field have realized the epidemic is back." According to the Nation, condom use among young people has decreased while the rate of sexually transmitted infections has increased. Petchsri said the 2007 national AIDS plan will focus on HIV prevention (Arthit, Nation, 5/24).



Many Barriers To HIV/AIDS Treatment Delivery Remain Worldwide, Report Says - Medical News Today 26/05/06

Although access to treatment for people living with HIV/AIDS around the world has increased over the past six months, there still are significant barriers to achieving universal access to treatment, according to a report released Wednesday by the International Treatment Preparedness Coalition, a group of 700 HIV/AIDS treatment advocates from more than 100 countries, the AP/Seattle Post-Intelligencer reports (Lederer, AP/Seattle Post-Intelligencer, 5/25). The report, titled "Missing the Target -- Off Target for 2010: How to Avoid Breaking the Promise of Universal Access," is the first semi-annual update to a report released in November 2005 that aimed to identify challenges to treatment access worldwide and provide solutions to overcome them. According to the November report, the World Health Organization missed its 3 by 5 Initiative target of treating three million HIV-positive people in developing countries with antiretroviral drugs by the end of 2005 because of a lack of international cooperation and coordination, as well as a lack of national leadership. The latest report says a pledge made by leaders of the Group of Eight industrialized nations to provide universal HIV/AIDS treatment access by 2010 will not be reached unless government ministers meeting next week at the U.N. General Assembly Special Session on HIV/AIDS reaffirm their commitment to the goal (ITPC release, 5/24).



FDA Grants Tentative Approval For Aurobindo's Antiretroviral Drug Abacavir - Medical News Today 26/05/06

Indian drug manufacturer Aurobindo Pharma has received tentative approval from FDA to produce 300 mg tablets of abacavir sulfate, which is used in combination with other antiretroviral drugs to treat HIV-1 infection, the company announced on Tuesday, the Hindu Business Line reports. Abacavir is the generic version of GlaxoSmithKline's Ziagen. The product will be eligible for consideration under the President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief, according to a press release from the company (Hindu Business Line, 5/24).


Most Americans Completely Unprepared For Disasters - Medical News Today 26/05/06

Although the vast majority of Americans think they are prepared for a hurricane or other disaster, a new poll released today by the American Red Cross showed that most have not taken even the basic steps needed to prepare for a disaster or emergency situation.


Continuing Commitment Needed In Fight Against HIV/AIDS, UNAIDS Executive Director Piot Says In Reuters - Medical News Today 26/05/06

UNAIDS Executive Director Peter Piot in a Reuters interview published Tuesday said that a "long-term commitment" is needed in the fight against the HIV/AIDS pandemic. "We need to move from crisis management ... to a long-term commitment," Piot said, adding, "We are in this for the long haul. Not as an institution but as an issue." According to Piot, one of the major achievements of the past decade has been putting HIV/AIDS on the "mainstream" agenda. Redefining the issue of HIV/AIDS as a threat to economic and social development and not solely as a disease has played an important role in moving forward, according to Piot. "We are moving into a new era in the response to [HIV/]AIDS," Piot said, adding, "We have political momentum, financial momentum and a momentum of results." Piot said addressing sexual violence, inequality between the sexes and homophobia -- issues that have fueled the pandemic -- also is essential to curbing HIV/AIDS in the long term (Reaney, Reuters, 5/23).


HIV-Positive Cambodians Call For End To Discrimination, Better Access To Treatment - Medical News Today 26/05/06
About 100 HIV-positive people living in Cambodia recently gathered to call on the government to provide better treatment for HIV/AIDS and on the public not to discriminate against people living with the virus, AFP/Yahoo! News reports. According to the Cambodian Alliance for Combating HIV/AIDS, only about 14,300 of the estimated 123,000 HIV-positive people in the country have access to treatment for the virus. In addition, the group said many HIV-positive people face discrimination, including being evicted from their homes, deserted by their families, fired from their jobs and being improperly treated in drug trials. Cambodia's HIV prevalence of 1.9% is the highest in the region (AFP/Yahoo! News, 5/24).


Health Sector In Northern Cote D'Ivoire Destroyed By Civil War, HIV/AIDS Prevention, Treatment Efforts Undermined - Medical News Today 26/05/06

The health sector in Cote d'Ivoire's rebel-controlled northern region has been "all but wiped out" by civil war, which began in 2002, driving out medical workers and undermining HIV/AIDS prevention and treatment efforts, according to a study released on Friday that was financed by the Global Fund To Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria, IRIN News reports. For the study, Swiss and Ivorian researchers looked at the situation in health facilities and human resources in the public and private sectors before the war began and in March 2004, 19 months after rebels seized the country's northern region. According to the study, the number of physicians in the central part of the country decreased by 98%. The number of physicians in the west declined by 91%, and the number of physicians in the north declined by 95%. Almost 80% of health facilities in rebel-held areas were looted or ravaged and the facilities that remained lacked equipment, antiretroviral drugs and testing kits for sexually transmitted infections. Researchers found that condom use among adults in northern and central areas of the country also decreased, while the number of STIs increased significantly in the west. In addition, the study finds that the number of nongovernmental organizations working to address HIV/AIDS had almost doubled since before the war in rebel-held areas, but most NGOs were local organizations that had no means to implement HIV/AIDS prevention and treatment programs. In Bouake, the central rebel capital, several international NGOs and U.N. organizations were working to increase awareness and educate people, the study finds. According to UNAIDS, Cote d'Ivoire in 2003 had an HIV prevalence of slightly higher than 7%, but some experts estimate the figure could be higher than 10% in northern regions (IRIN News, 5/23).


German Star Footballer Michael Ballack Accepts Appointment As UNAIDS Special Representative - Medical News Today 26/05/06

Michael Ballack has accepted the appointment as a Special Representative for the Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS). As UNAIDS Special Representative, Michael Ballack will raise awareness on HIV and AIDS with an emphasis on youth and sport.


Manipulating Robots Using Human Brain Activity - Medical News Today 26/05/06

Advanced Telecommunications Research Institute International ("ATR") and Honda Research Institute Japan Co., Ltd. ("HRI") have collaboratively developed a new "Brain Machine Interface" ("BMI") for manipulating robots using brain activity signals. This new BMI technology has enabled the decoding of natural brain activity and the use of the extracted data for the near real-time operation of a robot without an invasive incision of the head and brain. This breakthrough facilitates greater possibilities for new types of interface between machines and the human brain.


Suntory, Kyoto Prefectural University Of Medicine Discover That Whiskey Congeners May Prevent Diabetes - Medical News Today 26/05/06

Suntory has discovered unique properties of whiskey in collaboration with the Kyoto Prefectural University of Medicine.


Shingles Vaccine, Zostavax Approved In USA And Europe - Medical News Today 26/05/06

The first vaccine to prevent shingles, Merck's Zostavax, has been approved in both the USA and Europe for adults aged 60 or more. Shingles develops when the virus that causes chickenpox, varicella-zoster, is reactivated. After a childhood bout of chicken pox, the virus lays dormant for many years, ready to come into action when the carrier's immune system weakens, either through age or illness.


Suntory Finds That Oolong Tea-derived Polymerized Polyphenol Has Anti-obesity Effect - Medical News Today 26/05/06

Suntory announced on May 22 that it has found a unique property of polymerized polyphenol derived from oolong tea.


Lactobacillus Fermented Foods Made Of Sesame, Soybean And Konbu May Enhance Resistance To Harmful Bacterial Infection - Medical News Today 26/05/06

Suntory delivered a presentation on Gozugon, a food made of sesame, soybean and konbu (dried kelp) and fermented by plant-derived Lactobacillus pentosus S-PT84, at the 60th Annual Meeting of the Japanese Society of Nutrition and Food Science.


Sitaxsentan Improves Quality Of Life In Pulmonary Hypertension - Medical News Today 26/05/06

Researchers have documented an improved quality of life in patients with pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) who are treated with the investigational agent sitaxsentan.


Brother And Sister Die Of Bird Flu In Indonesia - Medical News Today 26/05/06

Preliminary test results indicate that an 18-year-old male and his 10-year-old sister, from West Java, Indonesia, were infected with the H5N1 bird flu virus strain. They both died within hours of each other last Tuesday, one day after being admitted to hospital in Bandung.


Need for extensive pregnancy benefits questioned
- Reuters 29/05/06

For pregnant women who work outside the home, rest -- provided in some countries by the combination of taking time off from work and government-supported social benefits -- does not appear to lead to bigger, and, therefore, perhaps healthier babies, according to a study conducted in Sweden.


Cutting carbs can lower cholesterol - Reuters 29/05/06

Trimming carbohydrate intake results in healthy improvements in blood fat levels, even if a person doesn't lose an ounce, a new study shows.


Multi-pronged approach curbs risky sex in the HIV+ - Reuters 29/05/06

Programs intended to help individuals infected with HIV, the virus that causes AIDS, to reduce their sexual risk work best if they include training on skills like how to use a condom, as well as motivational training designed to boost social support or otherwise improve overall quality of life, a review of studies suggests.


Early deprivation has long-lasting effects: study - Reuters 29/05/06

Severe malnourishment and other forms of deprivation for sustained periods during a child's early years may have lasting consequences on his or her intellectual development in later childhood, results of a new study show.


Children called "missing face" of AIDS pandemic - Reuters 27/05/06
Some 2.3 million children under 15 years of age are living with HIV, with little access to treatment, according to a report by child advocacy groups.


Thyroid cancer raises risk of second cancer - Reuters 27/05/06

After surviving cancer of the thyroid, the risk of a second different cancer is elevated by about 30 percent, according to results of a new study. Conversely, many cancers are associated with increased risk of subsequent thyroid cancer.


Tobacco use by teens common: worldwide survey - Reuters 26/05/06
Nearly one in five 13- to 15-year-old students worldwide use tobacco products, according to findings of a new survey released Friday.


Sedentary arthritis patients risk disability - Reuters 26/05/06
Few women with arthritis of the hip may be getting the exercise they need to prevent disability, researchers from Japan report.


US FDA approves Merck vaccine to prevent shingles - Reuters 26/05/06

U.S. health officials on Friday approved the first vaccine to prevent shingles, a painful disease characterized by a blistering rash that affects nearly 1 million, mostly older adults every year.


Study questions need for iron in pregnancy - Reuters 26/05/06
Children whose mothers take iron supplements while pregnant don't have higher IQs than those whose mothers didn't take iron pills, a study from Australia shows.


Poverty fuels HIV among black heterosexuals - Reuters 26/05/06

Poverty is a key reason why African-American heterosexuals have a far higher rate of infection with HIV, the virus that causes AIDS, than other racial groups, a new study suggests.


Avoid ADHD drugs, Canada tells heart patients - Reuters 26/05/06

Canada's health ministry on Friday warned people with high blood pressure, heart disease and a number of other medical ailments not to take drugs used to manage Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD).


AIDS, malaria offset health gains in Africa: report - Reuters 26/05/06

Fewer children in sub-Saharan Africa are dying from measles, diarrhea and respiratory infections but improvements have been offset by HIV/AIDS and malaria, researchers said on Friday.


Cheshire and Merseyside News

Coleen's joy over aid for children's hospices - Daily Post 30/05/06

WAYNE ROONEY'S fiancee, Coleen McLoughlin, yesterday welcomed a £27m funding package for children's hospices announced by the Department of Health.


Water giant in sewage blunder - Daily Post 30/05/06

WATER giant United Utilities has been ordered to pay £10,000 for discharging over 56,000 cubic metres - equivalent to 22 Olympic sized swimming pools - of untreated sewage into the River Mersey.


Town Hall to ban smoking - Daily Post 30/05/06

CHESTER City Council has given the go ahead for a complete smoking ban at Chester Town Hall.


Nurses go in bid to save 5m
- Liverpool Echo 26/05/06

HEALTH chiefs are scrapping up to 75 jobs in Wirral - including specialist nurses - and 32 beds as they struggle to save £5m


Nightingale nostalgia - Southport Visiter 26/05/06

A SPECIAL nursing service has taken place at Holy Trinity Church on Hoghton Street.


SatNav sends mercy calls wrong way - Chester Chronicle 26/05/06

AMBULANCES have been getting stuck on a private road after drivers were given the wrong directions by satellite navigation systems.


NHS Direct staff fear for the future - Chester Chronicle 26/05/06

ABOUT 50 employees facing redundancy at an NHS Direct call centre in Chester say a three-month consultation over job losses is 'meaningless'.


Delight at further blow to waste incinerator - Chester Chronicle 26/05/06

PROTESTERS are delighted at the latest setback to plans for a massive incinerator at Ince Marshes.


Run to raise probe cash - Chester Chronicle 26/05/06

HUSBANDS of Chester singers picked up their handbags and ran to raise money for a much needed piece of medical equipment at the Countess of Chester Hospital.


Learn how to save a life - Warrington Guardian 27/05/06

GET the chance to learn essential first aid for less as part of Adult Learners Week.


Struck off nurse is allowed to return to work - Warrington Guardian 26/05/06

A NURSE who was struck off for faking university results has been fully restored to the nursing register.


Warrington needs Halton - Warrington Guardian 29/05/06

WE can't survive without you. That's the message health chiefs gave Halton Hospital patients this week as they hold their first public meetings about radical plans to close five wards and transfer acute medical services to Warrington.


Disabled football tourney is a hit - Crewe Guardian 26/05/06

YOUNG disability footballers from Crewe and Nantwich took part in the Cheshire Academy's first soccer competition last week.


Cumbria and Lancashire News


War Veteran Rescues Wife From Nursing Home - Lancashire Evening Telegraph 27/05/06

AN 80-year-old war veteran 'rescued' his wife of 55 years from a nursing home because he could no longer stand to be without her.


Petitions in the hands of our health bosses - Carlisle News & Star 27/05/06

TWO major petitions to save health services in north and west Cumbria are now in the hands of top executives.


Probe After Rehab Patient Is Found Dead - Blackburn Citizen 27/05/06

POLICE are investigating the death of a 21-year-old found hanging in his room at a privately-run rehabilitation hospital.


Support To Kick Addiction - Blackpool Citizen 26/07/05

Youngsters whose lives are blighted by drink and drugs now have a new shoulder to lean on after Blackpool Council launched their latest support service.


Drop In Day At Drug Unit - Preston Citizen 26/07/06

The nerve centre of Preston's drugs operations threw open its doors on Tuesday to give visitors a rare insight into its services.


Greater Manchester News


Chained to his hospital bed - Manchester Evening News 29/05/06

PRISON officers handcuffed a man to his hospital bed to stop him escaping - even though one of his legs had just been amputated.

Prisoner handcuffed to hospital bed after losing leg - The Guardian 30/05/06


Dye worker wins historic cancer case - Manchester Evening News 29/05/06

A FORMER production worker has won a landmark four-year legal battle to get compensation for being exposed to chemicals which he says caused his cancer.


Attacks Rise On Hospital Staff - Bolton Evening News 27/05/06

A RECORD number of staff at the Royal Bolton Hospital are being attacked by patients and their families.


Duckling Is New Arrival At Maternity Unit - Bolton Evening News 27/05/06

MIDWIVES at the Royal Bolton Hospital are celebrating a new arrival with a difference a duckling.


Cancer Centre For Hospital - Bolton Evening News 26/05/06

BOLTON is set to become one of a handful of specialist bowel cancer centres in the country.


Health Plans Feedback Breaks All The Records - Bury Times 26/05/06

HEALTH chiefs have admitted they were "surprised" at the record-breaking level of response to controversial proposals to close Fairfield Hospital's maternity department.

Friday, May 26, 2006

Contents

Click on content link below to go to the news from that section: this will open a web page if you receive this by email



National News


NHS patients left in dark over post operation recuperation - The Guardian 26/05/06

Patients are routinely sent home from NHS hospitals in England without being told about the side effects of medication or danger signals to watch out for after an operation, the Healthcare Commission said yesterday.


Watchdog criticises firm behind 'elephant man' drug trials - The Guardian 26/05/06

The government's drugs watchdog yesterday criticised the company behind the disastrous Parexel drug trial which left six healthy men seriously ill, and urged caution in the use of the entire class of drug tested on the volunteers.

Drug trial firm comes under fire from regulator - The Telegraph 26/05/06
Regulators slam drug trial firm - BBC Health News 25/05/06


It's official - the British diet is getting healthier - The Guardian 26/05/06

It might be every child's favourite treat, but ice cream is officially on the slide. Yet wholemeal bread is definitely back in vogue - poised to become more popular than sliced white loaves - according to an annual survey that provides a snapshot of the nation's weekly shopping basket.


Deaths from 'dirty hospital bug' double in five years - The Independent 26/05/06

The hospital bug Clostridium difficile is causing more than twice as many deaths as it did five years ago, the first official figures show.

NHS hospitals are getting dirtier despite promises, claim patients - The Telegraph 26/05/06


R&D surge will make GSK the Microsoft of drug market - Garnier - The Independent 26/05/06

Blockbuster drugs will fuel pipeline, chief executive of pharmaceutical giant tells Julia Kollewe


NHS chief resigns after calling reforms a deceit - The Times 26/05/06

THE management crisis in the health service has worsened with the resignation of a senior director who accused ministers of “deceit over reform”.


The biggest killer by far - The Times 26/05/06

HEART disease claimed the lives of one in five men and about one in six women last year, figures indicate.

Heart disease is biggest killer - BBC Health News 25/05/06


NHS hospital staff 'leave patients to go hungry' - The Times 26/05/06

ONE in three patients who needs help eating while in hospital does not receive regular assistance, exacerbating the growing problem of malnutrition in the NHS, research has revealed.


'Five-a-day' advice being ignored - The Times 26/05/06

Most people are ignoring the Government’s message to eat five portions of fruit and vegetables each day, with one in five refusing to eat any at all, according to the latest Food Expenditure report. For the 74 per cent who are trying to eat more, the average consumption is only 3.7 portions. People spent an average of £34.31 a week on food and drink in 2004-05, but only £1.82 of this went on fruit and vegetables. Chocolate sales were up by 10 per cent


Alternative medicine and NHS resources - The Times 26/05/06

In their call for a halt to NHS funding of alternative therapies Professor Michael Baum and his colleagues are in danger of throwing the baby out with the bathwater (report, May 23). While the efficacy of some treatments, such as homoeopathy, reflexology and crystal healing, may be difficult to prove, other alternative treatments have been practised safely and effectively for thousands of years and have been proven by scientific studies.


Is milk really bad for kids? - The Times 26/05/06

The report that certain schools will restrict milk intake to insipid, semi-skimmed milk is a regrettable sign of how distorted our attitude to food has become (news, May 25). The contribution food makes to obesity hinges about quantity and processing, the latter usually involving the addition of refined sugars and salt, and not the consumption of a natural product regarded as irreplaceable in most world societies.

Now Nanny bans the hard stuff - The Telegraph 26/05/06


Weighing a possible heart attack against certain pain - The Times 26/05/06

If properly informed, patients can assess the benefits of anti-inflammatory drugs


How can you run faster? Just imagine you're getting a boost - The Times 26/05/06

The key to faster running could be all in the mind, according to a study commissioned by the American Council on Exercise. Dr John Pocari, an exercise physiologist at the University of Wisconsin, measured what happens when runners think they are getting a boost from “super-oxygenated” water. His subjects ran three 5km time-trials, with half the group drinking a glass of plain bottled water and half taking what they thought was super-oxygenated water (but was, in fact, tap water) before they started. The latter group covered the distance 83 seconds faster, on average. Heart rate and blood lactate levels were the same between the groups, leading researchers to conclude that the mind plays a powerful role in helping athletes to improve.


Is this the final collapse for the rugby scrum? - The Telegraph 26/05/06

A leading surgeon has called for a ban on contested scrums in rugby union, thereby picking a fight with a cohort of very large, very strong men whose livelihoods he threatens.


Tories six points ahead as scandals rock Blair - The Telegraph 26/05/06

The Conservatives are experiencing their most sustained electoral recovery for more than 14 years as public confidence in the competence of Tony Blair's government plummets, according to a YouGov poll published in The Daily Telegraph today.

Blair starts to lose his grip as Cameron wins a vote of trust
- The Telegraph 26/05/06


Prostate patients 'have needless surgery' - Daily Mail 25/05/06
.
Men with prostate cancer may be undergoing needless treatments and suffering serious life-long side effects as a result, a study claims.


One cigarette 'could make you a smoker in later life' - Daily Mail 25/05/06

The compulsion to smoke after trying just one cigarette can lie dormant for three years or more, according to research out today.


Card for cut-price prescription - BBC Health News 26/05/06

People living in Wales who use a GP across the border in England will be able to claim lower-price prescriptions under a new scheme.


Trust debt 'bigger than thought' - BBC Health News 25/05/06

Health managers admitted on Thursday that the Royal Cornwall Hospitals Trust is more in debt than first thought.


Breast cancer deadlines 'missed' - BBC Health News 25/05/06

Almost 7,000 women in the southern and eastern health board areas missed a government deadline for breast cancer tests, it has emerged.


Private firm GP deal to be signed - BBC Health NEws 25/05/06

A private health firm has won a £5m contract to run GP services in London - one of the first of an wave of deals expected to be given the go-ahead.


Patients Feel That They Are Not Treated With Respect As Persons In The New NHS - Medical News Today 26/05/06

New research into the sustainability of public services and the responses of those who use them has revealed that while strict targets, internal markets and competition may improve output they may also make the people who use the services less trustful.


NICE Responds To Reports Of Herceptin Licence, UK - Medical News Today 25/05/06

In response to the announcement today by Roche that Herceptin has been granted a licence for use in early breast cancer, NICE Chief Executive Andrew Dillon said: “Our appraisal of the clinical and cost effectiveness of Herceptin is already underway. We are working hard to ensure our review is completed as soon as possible, and we will update our timelines on the basis of the earlier than anticipated granting of the licence as indicated by the manufacturer. We are keen to ensure that guidance is available in a matter of weeks.”


International News


'I like to be big' - The Guardian 26/05/06

If there is a 'face of child obesity', it is six-year-old, 15-stone Dzhambulat Khatokhov. Sheer size has made this boy from a poor Russian family a hero in his home town and an object of fascination in the west. Nick Paton Walsh tracks him down


Hunt for origin of HIV pandemic ends at chimpanzee colony in Cameroon - The Guardian 26/05/06

Scientists searching for the origin of HIV, the global pandemic infecting more than 40 million people, believe they have finally tracked its original source to two colonies of chimpanzees in a corner of Cameroon.

HIV origin 'found in wild chimps' - BBC Health News 25/05/06


Where death stalks the poor - The Guardian 26/05/06

Faariz Kungara knows the pain is coming when the top of her head grows warm. The heat stretches downward, past her ears, and becomes an unbearable ache, she said. From the claustrophobic confines of the gloomy, waist-high shelter that serves as her home, Kungara prays for relief.


Regular drinking cuts risk of heart attack... for men - The Independent 26/05/06

Frequent drinking is an effective way of preventing a coronary, unless you are a woman. Men who drink alcohol every day have a lower risk of heart disease than those who drink once a week or less, a study found. But for women, a weekly drink is as effective as a daily one; there is no gain from more frequent drinking. It is well known that moderate drinking protects against heart disease but most research has been done on men.

A drink a day is a hearty tonic ... but only if you ar a man - The Times 26/05/06
A daily drink 'only good for men' - BBC Health News 25/05/06
Daily tipple can bring health benefits -- for men - Reuters 25/03/06


Organs transplant girl goes home - The Times 26/05/06

Spanish doctors carried out a six-organ transplant on an 18-month-old girl who was born with cancer, a hospital in Madrid has announded. The baby, named Cristina, was sent home with her parents after the operation on March 25, which was made public this week.


Children missing out on HIV drugs - BBC Health News 25/05/06

Only one HIV-positive child in 20 in developing countries receives the treatment they need, a report by children's campaigners has found.


Nerve stimulation has long-term antidepressant effect - Reuters 25/05/06

For chronically depressed adults who find no relief with drugs or psychotherapy, an implanted pacemaker-like device that sends electrical pulses to the brain -- so called vagus nerve stimulation -- may provide long-term benefits, according to two reports this week at the American Psychiatric Association annual meeting in Toronto.


Few kids with serious insect stings get needed care - Reuters 25/05/06

Most children who suffer a serious allergic reaction to an insect sting are not taken to a hospital as they should be, a large study conducted in Israel suggests.


New approach helps new moms with eating disorders - Reuters 25/05/06

Special training using video feedback can help mothers with eating disorders interact in a healthier way with their infants during mealtimes, a new study shows.


World Bank sees health aid needs at least $25 bln/yr - Reuters 25/05/06

Rich countries would have to give $25 billion to $70 billion more each year for developing nations to meet the health-care needs set out in the Millennium Development Goals, a World Bank study said on Thursday.


Poor physical performance may precede dementia - Reuters 25/05/06

Poor physical performance is associated with an increased risk of dementia and Alzheimer's disease among individuals 65 years of age or older, according to a new report. The findings suggest that diminished physical function precedes the onset of cognitive impairment.


Postpartum depression may be linked to colic - Reuters 25/05/06

Mothers who develop postpartum depression may have an increased risk of having an infant with colic and of not forming a strong bond or, attachment, with their infants, according to the results of a study by researchers in Turkey.


Patients, Be Patient: Brain Images Suggest New Therapy For Severe Depression Can Take Months To Work - Medical News Today 26/05/06

It takes time - between three and 12 months - before a new type of therapy for treatment-resistant depression starts to benefit patients, according to new preliminary brain scan research that confirms earlier observations by psychiatrists about vagal nerve stimulation. Saint Louis University, working in collaboration with Washington University School of Medicine, conducted a pilot study of brain scans of a small group of depressed patients who received vagal nerve stimulation after failing other therapies.


Exploring The Potential Of Cholesterol-lowering Drugs For Patients With Systemic Sclerosis - Medical News Today 26/05/06

Systemic sclerosis (SSc), also known as scleroderma, is an uncommon and confounding disease characterized by excessive fibrous tissue formation and vascular abnormalities. Primarily affecting the small arties, SSc decreases blood flow to the body's extremities. This can lead to Raynaud's phenomenon, a condition that causes the hands and feet to feel extremely cold and numb; ulcers on the fingers and toes; and gangrene. SSc can also restrict blood flow to internal organs, resulting in lung, kidney, and heart damage. While its cause and cure have yet to be found, SSc is generally viewed and treated as an autoimmune inflammatory disorder.


New Biomarkers For Improving Treatment Of Spondylarthritis - Medical News Today 26/05/06

Clinical trials are essential to the development of effective treatments for chronic autoimmune arthritis. For ethical, practical, and financial reasons, researchers increasingly face the challenge of achieving proof-of-concept in early-phase clinical trials of limited size, limited duration, and minimal patient risk. Analysis of tissue from the synovium, the thin membrane lining the joint space and primary target of inflammation, provides a straightforward way to meet this challenge. This approach has been used extensively, and proven valuable, in studies of rheumatoid arthritis (RA).


Infectious Disease Experts Offer Advice To Prevent And Treat Lyme Disease - Medical News Today 26/05/06

It's tick season, but gardeners, hikers, and others enjoying the great outdoors shouldn't let concerns about Lyme disease keep them inside. A few tips to keep ticks away, and some advice from infectious diseases doctors about Lyme disease, should help you enjoy the spring and summer weather, according to the Infectious Diseases Society of America (IDSA), a medical professional association representing the nation's foremost experts in Lyme and other infectious diseases.


More Effective Reporting Needed On Spinal Manipulation In Children - Medical News Today 26/05/06

Few serious harmful events stemming from spinal manipulation in children have been reported compared to the number of manipulations delivered, says new University of Alberta research. The results, which are to be presented at The North American Research Conference on Complementary and Integrative Medicine held in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada, May 24th-27th, 2006, show the need to develop a more effective reporting system among health professions.


Innocuous Intestinal Bacteria May Be Reservoir For Resistance - Medical News Today 26/05/06

"Harmless" bacteria in the digestive tracts of dairy cows, may not be so harmless after all. They may be a reservoir for antibiotic resistance genes that can be transferred to more harmful, disease-causing bacteria, according to research presented today at the 106th General Meeting of the American Society for Microbiology in Orlando, Florida.


Revolution In The Fight Against Cancer & Viruses - Medical News Today 26/05/06

A recent scientific discovery could herald the introduction of fast, effective treatments for cancer and viruses.


Forsyth Issues Imperative For A Vaccine Against Cavities - Medical News Today 26/05/06

Researchers at The Forsyth Institute have made significant advances in research to develop a vaccine against cavities. The research team of Martin Taubman, DDS, PhD and Daniel J. Smith PhD, has discovered key molecules that can stimulate a human immune response and has successfully conducted immunization trials in animal models. The global epidemic of dental caries (cavities) highlights the growing imperative to develop a vaccine to prevent cavities.


Two Very Different Surgical Procedures Produce Same Results In Often Fatal Intestinal Disorder - Medical News Today 26/05/06

Two surgical procedures, one invasive and the other much less so, for premature infants with intestinal perforation due to necrotizing enterocolitis (NEC) produce virtually identical results, according to a Yale School of Medicine study published today in the New England Journal of Medicine.


Reconstructing A Healthcare System In Iraq - Medical News Today 26/05/06

Nurses in Iraq listed building new hospitals, English language training and creating more autonomy and respect for their profession as priorities in reconstructing a healthcare system in the war ravaged country, according to a study by researchers at Yale School of Nursing.


A Gene Predisposing To Pituitary Tumors Identified - Medical News Today 26/05/06

A recent Finnish study identifies a low-penetrance gene defect which predisposes carriers to intracranial tumors called pituitary adenomas. In particular individuals carrying the gene defect are susceptible to such tumors which secrete growth hormone. Excess of growth hormone results in conditions called acromegaly and gigantism. Identification of this gene defect using DNA-chip technologies is an example how genetic research can tackle more and more demanding tasks, such as identification of predisposition genes conferring a low absolute but high relative risk. The results are published in the May 26 issue of the journal Science. The research group, lead by professor Lauri Aaltonen (University of Helsinki, Finland) and Dr Outi Vierimaa (Oulu University Hospital, Finland) providing the initial observations leading to the investigations, aimed at unravelling the genetic basis of susceptibility to pituitary adenomas. Pituitary adenomas are common benign neoplasms, accounting for approximately 15 % of intracranial tumors.


Plague Agent Helps UT Southwestern Researchers Find Novel Signaling System In Cells - Medical News Today 26/05/06

The bacterium that causes bubonic plague would seem unlikely to help medical scientists, but researchers at UT Southwestern Medical Center have harnessed it to uncover a new regulatory mechanism that inhibits the immune system.


Parasitic Worms Used To Fight Bowel Disease - Medical News Today 26/05/06

Although most of us cringe at the sound of the words "parasitic worms," it's a fact that some of these creatures are actually good for us.


DNA: Bacteria's Survival Ration - Medical News Today 26/05/06

Ability to feed on waste DNA can mean difference between life and death The ubiquitous bacteria E. coli rank among nature's most successful species for lots of reasons, to which biologists at the University of Southern California have added another: in a pinch, E. coli can feast on the DNA of their dead competitors. A research team led by Steven Finkel, assistant professor of molecular and computational biology in the USC College of Letters, Arts and Sciences, had already shown that DNA is an acceptable source of nutrients for bacteria.


New Research Links Placenta Praevia Directly To Assisted Reproductive Techniques - Medical News Today 26/05/06

Norwegian researchers have found the first evidence that techniques used in assisted reproduction (ART) may be directly linked to an increase in placenta praevia - a potentially dangerous condition in which the placenta covers, or partially covers the cervix, blocking the baby's passage into the birth canal.


Enzyme Defect Leads To Hyperinsulinism - Medical News Today 26/05/06

A recent study in the Journal of Biological Chemistry confirms that mutations in an enzyme called glutamate dehydrogenase can cause congenital hyperinsulinism. The research appears as the "Paper of the Week" in the June 2 issue of the Journal of Biological Chemistry, an American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology journal.


Low Carbohydrate Diet Did Not Increase Bone Loss, Study Finds - Medical News Today 26/05/06

A strict low-carbohydrate diet had no effect on bone loss for adults following an Adkins-type diet for weight loss, a three-month study by rheumatologists at the University of South Florida found. The clinical study was published this week in the online issue of the journal Osteoporosis International.


Low-Income Teenagers More Likely To Be Overweight Than Those In Higher-Incomes Families, Study Says - Medical News Today 25/05/06

The percentage of teenagers ages 15 to 17 who are overweight is 50% higher in low-income families than in higher-income families, according to a study published Wednesday in the Journal of the American Medical Association, the AP/Long Island Newsday reports. For the study, Richard Miech, a sociologist at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, and colleagues examined data from 10,800 teens ages 12 to 17 who participated in four nationally representative surveys conducted between 1971 and 2004 (Tanner, AP/Long Island Newsday, 5/23). Researchers defined low-income teens as those in families whose annual incomes did not exceed the federal poverty level and defined overweight teens as those with a body mass index in the 95th percentile (Bor, Baltimore Sun, 5/24). In the early 1970s, the study finds that about 4% of teens ages 15 to 17 in low-income families were severely overweight, compared with about 5% of those in higher-income families. However, by the early 2000s, 23% of teens ages 15 to 17 in low-income families were severely overweight, compared with about 14% of those in higher-income families, the study finds (AP/Long Island Newsday, 5/23). According to the study, low-income children have about the same obesity rates as higher-income children until age 14, after which time obesity rates increase at a much higher rate among low-income children.


Report Examines Disparities In Sickle Cell Disease Funding, Treatment - Medical News Today 25/05/06

"Sickle Cell Disease: A Question of Equity and Quality," Pediatrics: The report -- by Lauren Smith of the Boston University School of Medicine Department of Pediatrics, Suzette Oyeku of the Children's Hospital Boston Division of General Pediatrics, and colleagues -- looks at gaps in the equity of public and private funding for research on and in care delivery of sickle cell disease. The report also examines how a recent law -- the Sickle Cell Treatment Act of 2004 -- could affect support and treatment of the disease (Smith et al., Pediatrics, May 2006).


Don't Deny Children The Chance Of Child-effective Treatments, Say Doctors And Parents - Medical News Today 25/05/06

New treatments are normally tested on adults before they are tested on children. A paper by doctors involved in gene therapy for cystic fibrosis argues that approach could be wrong. “We could be denying children life enhancing treatment on inadequate grounds” said lead author Dr Adam Jaffe.
Link http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/medicalnews.php?newsid=43928


Cheshire and Merseyside News


City academics to join drug trial disaster inquiry - Daily Post 25/06/05

RESPECTED professors from Liverpool University are part of a group set up to investigate drug trials after disastrous tests which left six men seriously ill earlier this year..


Liverpool beats its 'quit smoking' target again - Daily Post 25/06/05

LIVERPOOL has surpassed its anti-smoking targets, encouraging hundreds more people than expected to give up cigarettes for the third year running.


We don't want toxic 'ghost ships' on our riverside - Daily Post 25/06/05

WIRRAL is tonight expected to emphatically reject any prospect of "toxic ghost ships" being dismantled on the Mersey.


Primary Care Trust merges with St Helens - Runcorn World 25/05/06

A NEW organisation will soon run Halton's GPs, dentists and various other community health services.


Health staff face upheaval - Warrington Guardian 25/05/06

MORE than 200 health workers in Stockton Heath look set to face major upheavals - including possible job losses - due to an NHS reorganisation.


Hospitals are quick to deal with patients - Midweek Advertiser 24/05/06

TRIAGE times are tops at Ormskirk Hospital. Along with its sister site at Southport, it deals with more patients within the first four hours than any other hospital in Cheshire or Merseyside.


Cumbria and Lancashire News


Mum’s plea over cancer drugs
- Bolton Evening News 25/05/06

A BREAST cancer sufferer who won her fight to be given the wonder-drug Herceptin has backed plans to make more-effective drugs available to women in the early stages of the disease.


Hospital art under the hammer - Lancashire Evening Telegraph 25/04/06

A PAINTING depicting Blackburn Royal Infirmary as it awaits demolition is to go under the hammer to help raise money for a state-of-the-art heart scanner.


Herbal medicine ‘no waste of cash’ - Lancashire Evening Telegraph 25/05/06

A HERBALIST today defended complementary medicine after leading doctors called for an end to free alternative treatment on the NHS.


Nurofen killed nurse - Carlisle News & Star 25/05/06

A FORMER Carlisle nurse died after taking too much Nurofen for a stomach complaint.


Hearing difficulties website launch - Carlisle News & Star 25/05/06

A NEW website has been launched to help people with hearing difficulties in Cumbria.


Retired doctor returns to open new surgery - Carlisle News & Star 25/05/06

FUSEHILL Medical Centre was officially opened yesterday by the doctor who spent years campaigning on behalf of his patients for the new facilities.


Support is avaialable for carers - Carlisle News & Star 25/05/06

CUMBRIANS with disabled, sick or frail relatives are being urged to take advantage of new support channels ahead of the 12th annual Carers Week.


Patients moved from hazard ward - Carlisle News & Star 25/05/06

ELEVEN elderly patients at a psychiatric clinic in Carlisle are to be moved after fire chiefs ruled that their ward posed a fire hazard.


Major shake-up of NHS services - Ormskirk Advertiser 25/05/06

SIX new NHS bodies are to be formed in a major shake-up.

PCT changes win approval - Midweek Advertiser 24/05/06


Greater Manchester News


The nip and tuck tourists - Manchester Evening News 25/05/06

ROSLYN Johnson had yearned to have plastic surgery for more than a decade but couldn't afford the operation in England. Last summer the 57-year-old, from Cheadle Hulme, sold her static caravan and joined an increasing number of men and women travelling abroad for low-cost surgery.


Shoplifting doctor faces ban - Bury Times 25/05/06

A DOCTOR from Whitefield has been found to have "damaged the reputation of the medical profession" as a result of her shoplifting.


Trust boss is appointed amid controversy - Bury Times 25/05/06

THE health trust which runs Fairfield Hospital has announced that acting chairman John Jesky is to take on the role permanently.

Thursday, May 25, 2006

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International News





National News


Breast cancer drug may be 'too expensive' - Independent 25/05/06

A senior member of the Government's medicines watchdog has warned that the breast cancer drug Herceptin may be unaffordable by the NHS.

Licence should lift curbs on Herceptin, say cancer charities - Guardian 25/05/06

Breast cancer drug on NHS 'in weeks' - The Times 25/05/06





Experts warn of IVF health dangers - the Daily Mail 25/05/06

Doctors have identified a potentially life-threatening condition in women who have IVF treatment.





Just one cigarette in childhood can lead to later addiction, says study - 25/05/06

Children who smoke even a single cigarette at an early age are twice as likely to take up the habit later in life, even if they spend several subsequent years not smoking, a study has found.





Private firm wins first GP services contract - Guardian 25/05/06

Tony Blair's plan to break GPs' monopoly over family doctor services will be tested for the first time today when the Department of Health signs a contract with a private firm to take responsibility for thousands of patients in London.





New database to make disease research fairer - The Times 25/05/06

MORE than a quarter of medical research funding is spent on finding treatments for cancer





Whole milk banned in schools to fight obesity - The Times 25/05/06

SCHOOLS are to be banned from serving whole milk to children, as part of the offensive against obesity. From September, all state schools in England must offer only semi-skimmed or skimmed milk to pupils aged 3 to 18. The ruling will apply to milk served during school lunches and at break times, and to cartons sold in vending machines.





International News


Fertility Options And The Impact Of Cancer Therapy On Patients' Fertility Prior To Initiating Therapy - Medical News Today 25/05/06

UroToday.com - Dr Schover, Professor or Behavioral Sciences, MD Anderson Cancer Center presented highlighted the importance of discussing fertility options and the impact of cancer therapy on patients' fertility prior to initiating therapy.





Drinking Mineral Water Could Reduce Aluminium In Alzheimer's Disease Sufferers - Medical News Today 25/05/06

Scientists at Keele University in Staffordshire have found that drinking a well-known mineral water regularly could reduce the levels of aluminium in the bodies of people with Alzheimer's disease.





Heavy Marijuana Smoking Not Linked To Raised Lung, Neck Cancer Risk - Medical News Today 25/05/06

As marijuana produces more resin and tar than tobacco, as marijuana smokers inhale deeper into the lungs and hold the smoke down for longer, one would expect to find that lung cancer risk would be significantly higher. However, researchers from the David Geffen School of Medicine, University of California, were surprised to find there was no link at all.





Listening To Music Can Reduce Chronic Pain And Depression By Up To A Quarter - Medical News Today 25/05/06

Listening to music can reduce chronic pain by up to 21 per cent and depression by up to 25 per cent, according to a paper in the latest UK-based Journal of Advanced Nursing.





NHS Targets Lead To 'poor Leadership' And Paralysis Through Constraints - Medical News Today 25/05/06

New research from Lancaster University Management School into the role and anxieties of senior NHS chief executives reveals that the government's approach to public sector management needs an overhaul. The results reveal that the reduction in local control following the 2000 NHS plan demoralised many senior managers and eroded their capacity to lead.





Queensland Scientists Identify Molecule That Links Both Sides Of The Brain - Medical News Today 25/05/06

A Queensland Brain Institute-led team has identified a molecule that plays a key role in establishing the major nerve connections between each side of the adult brain.





Sleeping Less Linked To Weight Gain - Medical News Today 25/05/06

Women who sleep 5 hours or less per night weigh more on average than those who sleep 7 hours, according to a study to be presented at the American Thoracic Society International Conference on May 23rd.





Studies Find Cognitive Therapy Benefits IBS - Medical News Today 25/05/06

Cognitive behavioral therapy and hypnotherapy have been successfully used in the treatment of a variety of chronic syndromes, including common functional disorders of the gastrointestinal tract, such as irritable bowel syndrome

Wednesday, May 24, 2006

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National News


NHS trust admits liability over death - Independent 24/05/06

The family of a woman who died in hospital after delivering a stillborn baby has won £300,000 in an out-of-court settlement after fighting for five years to force Swansea NHS Trust to admit liability for the death.





Alternative therapists back their treatments on NHS - Independent 24/05/06

Acupuncturists, herbalists and homoeopaths were battling to defend their place in the NHS yesterday after eminent doctors recommended they be ditched.

NHS must audit spending on alternative therapy, MPs say - The Times 24/05/06





Eye warning call for cigarettes - BBC News 24/05/06

Experts are calling for cigarette packets to carry a warning that smoking can cause blindness.





Payout after baby delivery death - BBC NEws 24/05/06

A £300,000 settlement has been agreed for the family of a mother-of-two who bled to death after the birth of a still-born baby five years ago.





Cancer drug Herceptin given UK licence - Telegraph 24/05/06

The breast cancer drug Herceptin has been granted a UK licence for use in the early stages of the disease, its manufacturer Roche has said.





'Sleep more and stay slim' - the Daily Mail 24/05/06

Getting a good night's sleep may be one of the simplest ways to stay slim, new research suggests.





What a relief! Over the counter drug for migraine - the Daily Mail 24/05/06

Migraine sufferers are now able to buy one of the most effective drugs for their condition direct from their chemist - without the need for a prescription.





Heart drug cuts cancer risk - the Daily Mail 24/05/06

A common blood pressure drug taken by millions of Britons could cut the risk of cancer, say scientists.





New mothers 'hooked by power-pramming' - the Daily Mail 24/05/06

At first, the sight of 20 red-faced women lying on the damp grass of a central London park and juggling newborn babies is quite worrying. But this is "power-pramming"





'NHS health tourism is rife but I can't turn sick patients away' - the Daily Mail 24/05/06

A leading doctor has hit out at the "massive problem" of health tourism for NHS hospitals.





Heather wants health warnings on milk - the Daily Mail 24/05/06

Heather Mills McCartney has provoked controversy after calling on the Government to issue "health warnings" on milk and dairy products.





International News


Low Levels Of Vitamin D In Teens May Affect Lung Function - Medical News Today 24/05/06

Teenagers who consume low amounts of vitamin D have lower lung function than teens who get the recommended amount of the nutrient, according to a study to be presented at the American Thoracic Society International Conference on May 22nd.





The Body Has More Than One ‘Body Clock' - Medical News Today 24/05/06

Research conducted at Oregon Health & Science University suggests that contrary to popular belief, the body has more than one "body clock." The previously known master body clock resides in a part of the brain called the suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN). Researchers at OHSU's Oregon National Primate Research Center (ONPRC) have now revealed the existence of a secondary clock-like mechanism associated with the adrenal gland.





Lower Income People More Likely To Be Under Stress Than Wealthier People - Medical News Today 24/05/06

People with low incomes are more likely to be under stress than their wealthier peers, according to a study published in Psychosomatic Medicine, the journal of the American Psychosomatic Society, by Sheldon Cohen, the Robert E. Doherty Professor of Psychology at Carnegie Mellon University





Consumption Of High-flavanol Cocoa Improves Skin Structure And Function - Medical News Today 24/05/06

Cocoa butter has long been used topically in many skin creams and cosmetics because it is thought to be good for the skin. Now, new research just published in the Journal of Nutrition reveals the potential benefits of consuming flavanol-rich cocoa and how it might actually benefit skin from the inside out.





Certain Blood Pressure-lowering Drugs Reduce Diabetes Risk In Hispanic Patients - Medical News Today 24/05/06

The combination of drugs traditionally used to control blood pressure might not be ideal for Hispanic patients, University of Florida researchers warn.





Simple Lifestyle Changes May Improve Cognitive Function And Brain Efficiency - Medical News Today 24/05/06

A UCLA research study published in the June issue of the American Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry found that people may be able to improve their cognitive function and brain efficiency by making simple lifestyle changes such as incorporating memory exercises, healthy eating, physical fitness and stress reduction into their daily lives.





U.K. Home Office Immigration Decision Could Lead To Deportation Of Hundreds Of HIV-Positive People - Medical News Today 24/05/06

A recent decision by the U.K. Home Office authorizes hundreds of HIV-positive people living in the country -- where they are receiving antiretroviral therapy -- to be deported to their home countries, London's Independent reports. A majority of the people who could be deported are from African countries that have high HIV prevalence and limited access to antiretroviral drugs, according to the Independent. "We're seeing appalling hypocrisy from the government," Ruth Bundey, an attorney representing several HIV-positive people, said, adding, "On the one hand, it is extending monetary aid to Africa to help 'make poverty history.' Simultaneously though, it is throwing out individuals who have no hope of medical treatment in their home countries and are therefore being sent home to die."





Selenium-protein Deficiency Raises Prostate Cancer Risk - Medical News Today 24/05/06

Selenium, an essential dietary mineral that can act as an antioxidant when incorporated into proteins, has been shown in many studies to reduce the incidence of cancers -- notably lung, colorectal and prostate.





New Genetic Test For Breast Cancer - Medical News Today 24/05/06

Researchers at Montefiore Medical Center are leading a nationwide clinical trial to determine whether a new genetic test can be used to personalize treatment for early-stage breast cancer.





Immune Signals Of Variations Of A Single Gene Linked To More Severe Crohn's Disease - Medical News Today 24/05/06

Building on previous evidence supporting the theory that the pathophysiology of Crohn's Disease is altered by genetic variation, recent studies have found that the combination of immune signals given by three variants of a single candidate gene affects the severity of the disease, particularly among Ashkenazi Jews. The findings, presented at the annual meeting of the American Gastroenterological Association, were reported by researchers from Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, the University of Washington and Mount Sinai School of Medicine.





Alcohol Abuse Increases The Risk Of Suffering From Pneumonia - Medical News Today 24/05/06

The results of a paper published in the journal Chest (1) show that alcoholic and ex-alcoholic individuals have a higher risk of suffering from community acquired pneumonia. Although mortality did not differ significantly, an increase of the severeness of the disease was shown, and consequently, an increase of the morbidity and the complications was revealed. This study was conducted by the Pneumonia Multidiscipline Group of Hospital Clínic de Barcelona, led by Dr. Antoni Torres, from the Institut Clínic del Tórax, and leader of the IDIBAPS Group Management and Prevention of the Pulmonary Disease.





Video games can help cut surgical errors: study - Reuters 24/05/06

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - A new study suggests that people preparing for surgery ask their doctor: "Have you played your video games today?"





Study finds no marijuana link to lung cancer - Reuters 24/05/06

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Marijuana smoking does not increase a person's risk of developing lung cancer, according to the findings of a new study at the University of California Los Angeles that surprised even the researchers.





Cheshire and Merseyside News


Sign up today to save siblings - Daily Post 24/05/06

WORKERS in Liverpool city centre are being urged to place themselves on the national bone marrow register at a special clinic taking place today.





My tampon nearly killed me - Liverpool Echo 24/05/06

A SCHOOLGIRL was left fighting for her life after being struck down by a deadly bug.





CJD victim makes medical history - Daily Post 24/05/06

THE FAMILY of a man who has survived an unprecedented five years with the human version of Mad Cow Disease claim he would be doing even better if a hospital in Liverpool had carried out pioneering surgery on him.





Alder Hey wards may be shut down at weekends - Daily Post 24/05/06

HOSPITAL executives may be forced to close two wards at Alder Hey hospital at weekends to save cash, the Daily Post can reveal.





Cumbria and Lancashire News


Hospital Could Be On The Move - Lancashire Evening Telegraph 24/05/06

A HOSPITAL could close and be replaced on another site, health bosses have indicated. A group set up to determine the future of the borough's NHS services is to study "potential development sites" for Rossendale Hospital.





Greater Manchester News


A&E units just for sick children - Manchester Evening News 24/05/06

SICK babies and children are to be given their own £1m accident and emergency units at three Greater Manchester hospitals.





NHS urged to ditch alternative medicine - Manchester Evening News 24/05/06

NHS Trusts have been urged by a group of top scientists to reject the use of complementary medicine and use available funds for treatments "based on solid evidence".





Nurse was injured by in-patient - Wigan Observer 24/05/06

A man who fractured a nurse's arm in a hospital corridor has been given a conditional discharge by Wigan magistrates. Peter Wynne Williams, 35, of Wigan Lane, Wigan, admitted assaulting the nurse on June 21 last year as he attempted to escape from Leigh Infirmary where he was an in-patient under section.

Tuesday, May 23, 2006

Contents

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International News



National News


Where GPs fail patients, other means succeed - The Times 23/05/06

THE approach of the Prince of Wales to alternative medicine is obviously sincere, but equally decent are the distinguished doctors who have taken him to task for advocating it.





NHS told to abandon alternative medicine - The Times 23/05/06

A GROUP of Britain’s leading doctors has urged every NHS trust to stop paying for alternative medicine and to use the money for conventional treatments.





Sleeping pill wakes men in vegetative state - The Guardian 23/05/06

A drug commonly used as a sleeping pill appears to have had a miraculous effect on brain-damaged patients who have been in a permanent vegetative state for years, arousing them to the point where some are able to speak to their families, scientists report today.





Heroin addicts could inject themselves at supervised centres in police-backed plans - The Guardian 23/05/06

Police chiefs have backed proposals which could see heroin addicts injecting themselves in officially sanctioned centres.

Panel backs drug-injecting rooms - BBC Health News 23/05/06





Surgeon 'in a hurry' took wrong kidney - The Telegraph 23/05/06

A surgeon removed the wrong kidney from a patient, leaving her with only a diseased one, the General Medical Council heard yesterday.





Doctors attack 'bogus' therapies - BBC Health News 23/05/06

Some of Britain's leading doctors have urged NHS trusts to stop using complementary therapies and to pay only for medicine "based on solid evidence".





MRSA mystery for Sussex hospitals - BBC Health News 23/05/06

A health trust in Sussex is at a loss to explain why rates of MRSA infection suddenly jumped up at the start of 2006 after nine months of steady decline.





Stress 'main reason for sickies' - BBC Health News 23/05/06

Almost four in 10 workers in Wales have called in sick because they have felt stressed and unable to cope with work, according to a Samaritans survey.





Legal bid over junk food ad ban - BBC Health News 22/05/06

Campaigners are seeking to take the TV regulator Ofcom to court over its refusal to consider a pre-watershed ban on junk food advertising.





Earlier use of cancer drug backed - BBC Health News 22/05/06

A class of breast cancer drug currently used once the disease has spread, should also be used in the early stages, the NHS advisory body proposes.

NHS go-ahead for new breast cancer drugs - The Guardian 23/05/06





Ban on volunteers issuing condoms - BBC Health News 22/05/06

Volunteer workers in the Lothians have been banned from issuing condoms to under-16s despite a rise in the number of teenage pregnancies.





Protester given Herceptin drug - BBC Health News 22/05/06

A woman who staged a sit-in at the offices of her primary care trust to demand a drug to fight breast cancer has undergone her first treatment.





Hospital cutting 145 more posts - BBC Health News 22/05/06

An extra 145 jobs are set to go at a Norfolk hospital as part of package of cuts to help meet an £11m deficit.





Concern over 'bigger Mac' burger - BBC Health News 22/05/06

McDonald's is pressing ahead with plans for a World Cup burger bigger than its Big Mac despite MPs calling for a ban.





Town HIV line receives 450 calls - BBC Health News 22/05/06

More than 450 people have called a helpline set up after several people in a Cornish town tested positive for HIV, health officials say.





International News


Studies show screening for bladder cancer pays - Reuters 22/05/06

Urine tests that screen for bladder cancer can help people get treated for the deadly disease before it spreads and save money by reducing the need for expensive care, U.S. researchers reported on Monday.





Botox effective for overactive bladder: study - Reuters 22/05/06

NEW YORK (Reuters) - The popular wrinkle treatment Botox may have more than just cosmetic applications for people with a far more pressing quality of life issue than a wish to present an unfurrowed brow in public.





Study backs high-dose flu vaccines for elderly - Reuters 22/05/06

Elderly people, whose immune responses typically weaken with age, can be safely protected against common influenza with doses of vaccine that are up to four times stronger than usual, researchers said on Monday.





Cholesterol drugs may improve abnormal heart rhythm - Reuters 22/05/06

A study of a class of commonly used cholesterol-lowering drugs, called statins, used by patients with enlarged hearts (dilated cardiomyopathy) shows that these patients had significant reductions in mortality, which was due in large measure to an anti-arrhythmic effect.





Common painkillers may raise risk of heart failure - Reuters 23/05/06

Patients who use non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs), which include over-the-counter analgesics such as ibuprofen or naproxen, have a small increased risk of experiencing a first hospitalization for heart failure, researchers from Spain report.






Slovak doctor says solar flares could raise strokes - Reuters 22/05/06

Human beings may be at higher risk of strokes in years when the explosions on the sun peak, according to a neurologist who studied the records of 6,100 patients in Slovakia.





Child cancer survivors face employment troubles - Reuters 22/05/06

People who survive cancer as children are twice as likely to be unemployed than those without a history of childhood cancer, Dutch researchers reported on Monday.





Obesity raises overall risk of breast cancer-study - Reuters 22/05/06

Women who gain weight as adults face a higher lifetime risk of all types of breast cancer, researchers reported on Monday.





Poor balance predicts Alzheimer's - BBC Health News 22/05/06

Problems with walking and balance may be the first sign of Alzheimer's disease, say US researchers.





WHO chief dies after blood clot - BBC Health News 22/05/06

The head of the World Health Organization (WHO) has died, two days after emergency surgery for a blood clot on his brain.





Groups With Differing Views On Sexual Health Release Report Defining Best Practices For Research - Medical News Today 23/05/06

A group of 18 organizations that were brought together by former Surgeon General David Satcher on Thursday released a report that defines sexual health and provides best practices for sexual health research, the Columbia State reports (Columbia State, 5/19).





Alcohol Consumption Habits May Threaten GI Health - Medical News Today 23/05/06

Many studies have evaluated the risks and benefits of alcohol intake, with some concentrating on potential benefits while others focus on the risks of abuse.





Treatment For Anorexia Nervosa - Medical News Today 23/05/06

Research news from European Eating Disorders Review The lead researcher, Prof. Arthur Crisp, argues in defence of the concept that anorexia nervosa is rooted in a biologically based avoidance behaviour, driven by a phobia of normal adult body weight.





Cost Of HIV/AIDS, TB Drugs In Ukraine Decreased 20-Fold Because Of Anticorruption Measures, Health Official Says - Medical News Today 23/05/06

The cost of HIV/AIDS and tuberculosis drugs in Ukraine has decreased 20-fold because of effective measures to combat corruption within the country's government, Deputy Health Minister Valentyn Snisar said Wednesday, the AP/Kyiv Post reports.





More Than 210,000 HIV-Positive South Africans On Antiretrovirals - Medical News Today 23/05/06

More than 210,000 HIV-positive people in South Africa are receiving antiretroviral drugs, making the country's antiretroviral drug program the largest in the world, the government announced Wednesday, according to AFP/Yahoo! News.





Progressive Weight Training Does Not Cause Lymphedema In Breast Cancer Survivors, Study Says - Medical News Today 23/05/06

Breast cancer survivors who have had their lymph nodes removed and who practiced slow, progressive weight training did not increase the onset of lymphedema -- a buildup of lymphatic fluid under the skin -- according to a study published in the May 15 edition of the Journal of Clinical Oncology, the New York Times reports.

Contents

Click on content link below to go to the news from that section: this will open a web page if you receive this by email

National News
International News



National News


Where GPs fail patients, other means succeed - The Times 23/05/06

THE approach of the Prince of Wales to alternative medicine is obviously sincere, but equally decent are the distinguished doctors who have taken him to task for advocating it.





NHS told to abandon alternative medicine - The Times 23/05/06

A GROUP of Britain’s leading doctors has urged every NHS trust to stop paying for alternative medicine and to use the money for conventional treatments.





Sleeping pill wakes men in vegetative state - The Guardian 23/05/06

A drug commonly used as a sleeping pill appears to have had a miraculous effect on brain-damaged patients who have been in a permanent vegetative state for years, arousing them to the point where some are able to speak to their families, scientists report today.





Heroin addicts could inject themselves at supervised centres in police-backed plans - The Guardian 23/05/06

Police chiefs have backed proposals which could see heroin addicts injecting themselves in officially sanctioned centres.

Panel backs drug-injecting rooms - BBC Health News 23/05/06





Surgeon 'in a hurry' took wrong kidney - The Telegraph 23/05/06

A surgeon removed the wrong kidney from a patient, leaving her with only a diseased one, the General Medical Council heard yesterday.





Doctors attack 'bogus' therapies - BBC Health News 23/05/06

Some of Britain's leading doctors have urged NHS trusts to stop using complementary therapies and to pay only for medicine "based on solid evidence".





MRSA mystery for Sussex hospitals - BBC Health News 23/05/06

A health trust in Sussex is at a loss to explain why rates of MRSA infection suddenly jumped up at the start of 2006 after nine months of steady decline.





Stress 'main reason for sickies' - BBC Health News 23/05/06

Almost four in 10 workers in Wales have called in sick because they have felt stressed and unable to cope with work, according to a Samaritans survey.





Legal bid over junk food ad ban - BBC Health News 22/05/06

Campaigners are seeking to take the TV regulator Ofcom to court over its refusal to consider a pre-watershed ban on junk food advertising.





Earlier use of cancer drug backed - BBC Health News 22/05/06

A class of breast cancer drug currently used once the disease has spread, should also be used in the early stages, the NHS advisory body proposes.

NHS go-ahead for new breast cancer drugs - The Guardian 23/05/06





Ban on volunteers issuing condoms - BBC Health News 22/05/06

Volunteer workers in the Lothians have been banned from issuing condoms to under-16s despite a rise in the number of teenage pregnancies.





Protester given Herceptin drug - BBC Health News 22/05/06

A woman who staged a sit-in at the offices of her primary care trust to demand a drug to fight breast cancer has undergone her first treatment.





Hospital cutting 145 more posts - BBC Health News 22/05/06

An extra 145 jobs are set to go at a Norfolk hospital as part of package of cuts to help meet an £11m deficit.





Concern over 'bigger Mac' burger - BBC Health News 22/05/06

McDonald's is pressing ahead with plans for a World Cup burger bigger than its Big Mac despite MPs calling for a ban.





Town HIV line receives 450 calls - BBC Health News 22/05/06

More than 450 people have called a helpline set up after several people in a Cornish town tested positive for HIV, health officials say.





International News


Studies show screening for bladder cancer pays - Reuters 22/05/06

Urine tests that screen for bladder cancer can help people get treated for the deadly disease before it spreads and save money by reducing the need for expensive care, U.S. researchers reported on Monday.





Botox effective for overactive bladder: study - Reuters 22/05/06

NEW YORK (Reuters) - The popular wrinkle treatment Botox may have more than just cosmetic applications for people with a far more pressing quality of life issue than a wish to present an unfurrowed brow in public.





Study backs high-dose flu vaccines for elderly - Reuters 22/05/06

Elderly people, whose immune responses typically weaken with age, can be safely protected against common influenza with doses of vaccine that are up to four times stronger than usual, researchers said on Monday.





Cholesterol drugs may improve abnormal heart rhythm - Reuters 22/05/06

A study of a class of commonly used cholesterol-lowering drugs, called statins, used by patients with enlarged hearts (dilated cardiomyopathy) shows that these patients had significant reductions in mortality, which was due in large measure to an anti-arrhythmic effect.





Common painkillers may raise risk of heart failure - Reuters 23/05/06

Patients who use non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs), which include over-the-counter analgesics such as ibuprofen or naproxen, have a small increased risk of experiencing a first hospitalization for heart failure, researchers from Spain report.





Slovak doctor says solar flares could raise strokes - Reuters 22/05/06

Human beings may be at higher risk of strokes in years when the explosions on the sun peak, according to a neurologist who studied the records of 6,100 patients in Slovakia.





Child cancer survivors face employment troubles - Reuters 22/05/06

People who survive cancer as children are twice as likely to be unemployed than those without a history of childhood cancer, Dutch researchers reported on Monday.





Obesity raises overall risk of breast cancer-study - Reuters 22/05/06

Women who gain weight as adults face a higher lifetime risk of all types of breast cancer, researchers reported on Monday.





Poor balance predicts Alzheimer's - BBC Health News 22/05/06

Problems with walking and balance may be the first sign of Alzheimer's disease, say US researchers.





WHO chief dies after blood clot - BBC Health News 22/05/06

The head of the World Health Organization (WHO) has died, two days after emergency surgery for a blood clot on his brain.





Groups With Differing Views On Sexual Health Release Report Defining Best Practices For Research - Medical News Today 23/05/06

A group of 18 organizations that were brought together by former Surgeon General David Satcher on Thursday released a report that defines sexual health and provides best practices for sexual health research, the Columbia State reports (Columbia State, 5/19).





Alcohol Consumption Habits May Threaten GI Health - Medical News Today 23/05/06

Many studies have evaluated the risks and benefits of alcohol intake, with some concentrating on potential benefits while others focus on the risks of abuse.





Treatment For Anorexia Nervosa - Medical News Today 23/05/06

Research news from European Eating Disorders Review The lead researcher, Prof. Arthur Crisp, argues in defence of the concept that anorexia nervosa is rooted in a biologically based avoidance behaviour, driven by a phobia of normal adult body weight.





Cost Of HIV/AIDS, TB Drugs In Ukraine Decreased 20-Fold Because Of Anticorruption Measures, Health Official Says - Medical News Today 23/05/06

The cost of HIV/AIDS and tuberculosis drugs in Ukraine has decreased 20-fold because of effective measures to combat corruption within the country's government, Deputy Health Minister Valentyn Snisar said Wednesday, the AP/Kyiv Post reports.





More Than 210,000 HIV-Positive South Africans On Antiretrovirals - Medical News Today 23/05/06

More than 210,000 HIV-positive people in South Africa are receiving antiretroviral drugs, making the country's antiretroviral drug program the largest in the world, the government announced Wednesday, according to AFP/Yahoo! News.





Progressive Weight Training Does Not Cause Lymphedema In Breast Cancer Survivors, Study Says - Medical News Today 23/05/06

Breast cancer survivors who have had their lymph nodes removed and who practiced slow, progressive weight training did not increase the onset of lymphedema -- a buildup of lymphatic fluid under the skin -- according to a study published in the May 15 edition of the Journal of Clinical Oncology, the New York Times reports.

Monday, May 22, 2006

Contents

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International News
Cheshire and Merseyside News



National News


Obesity tests for four-year-olds - BBC News 22/05/06

Tests to see if children aged four and 10 are overweight are being introduced in schools.





Climbie parents call for action - BBC News 22/05/06

Victoria Climbie's parents have spoken out after it emerged that many NHS Trusts have not implemented key recommendations made after her death.





UK heart drug policy 'not enough' - BBC News 22/05/06

Statins - cholesterol-lowering drugs - should be prescribed for more people in the UK to be effective in reducing heart disease, researchers have said.





Fewer NHS beds 'but better care' - BBC News 22/05/06

People are getting better care despite NHS bed numbers falling by a third in the last 20 years, health managers say





Survive the hayfever season - the Daily Mail 22/05/06

The hayfever season is here and 12million Britons will sneeze, wheeze and itchy themselves through the summer months. To help you beat your symptoms this year, we've put together a complete guide to hayfever, which includes information on the causes of the allergy and how to avoid and treat it.





Common painkillers 'increase risk of heart failure by a third' - The Times 22/05/06

REGULAR use of painkillers increases the risk of heart failure by 30 per cent, according to a new study.





International News


Sperm Cells Drawn By Faintest Ovary Scent - Medical News Today 22/05/06

In this week's Analytical Chemistry, scientists at Indiana University Bloomington report biochemical machinery that allows mouse sperm cells to follow the weakest of scents. Even when ovary extracts were diluted 100,000 times, some sperm cells still found their mark.





Remicade Approved For Children With Crohn's Disease - Medical News Today 22/05/06

The FDA has approved Remicade (infliximab) for the treatment of Crohn's Disease for children, the first and only approved biologic therapy for children with Crohn's Disease. Remicade is a genetically engineered monoclonal antibody. It reduces inflammation by blocking the action of tumor necrosis factor-alpha. In 1998 this treatment was approved for Crohn's disease treatment for adults.





Botox Into Frown Lines Can Help Patients With Major Depression - Medical News Today 22/05/06

A trial carried out by Dr. Eric Finzi and Dr. Erika Wasserman found that treating clinically depressed patients with botox on the frown lines of their faces actually got rid of their depression.





Protein Connections: A Network To Understand Disease - Medical News Today 22/05/06

In the 1990s, the notion of "six degrees of separation" emphasized human linkages that connected people around the world.





New Alternative To Hip Replacement Designed For Patients With Active Lifestyles - Medical News Today 22/05/06

There is a new option for patients suffering from hip pain who do not want to give up their active lifestyle. NewYork-Presbyterian/Columbia University Medical Center is one of the first hospitals in the U.S. to offer a new alternative for total hip replacement-hip resurfacing. The technique allows the orthopedic surgeon to shave and cap several centimeters of bone within the hip joint, helping to preserve bone and joint stability for young or active patients.





Global Problem Of Adherence To Osteoporosis Treatment Puts Lives At Risk And Costs Billions - Medical News Today 22/05/06

A new report from the International Osteoporosis Foundation (IOF) details for the first time the global implications and significant personal, social and economic costs associated with women not staying on their osteoporosis treatment.





Genetic Basis For Premature Ovarian Failure Identified - Medical News Today 22/05/06

Researchers have successfully identified several genes associated with Premature Ovarian Failure (POF) or premature menopause, enabling carriers to make informed choices with regards to family planning.





First Guidelines For Care, Diagnosis Of Swimmer's Ear - Medical News Today 22/05/06

Antiseptic or antibiotic ear drops should be the front-line treatment for people suffering from swimmer's ear, while restraint should be exercised in using oral antibiotics, according to new treatment guidelines issued as the nation's public pools prepare to open around Memorial Day.





Avian Flu An Expensive Long-term Emergency - More Than $300 Million Required To Fund FAO's Activities To Control The Disease - Medical News Today 22/05/06

The current avian flu crisis is not only an immediate, short-term problem, it is likely to be a continuing emergency that will last several years, says Joseph Domenech, FAO's Chief Veterinary Officer.





Vegan Women Much Less Likely To Have Twins Than Women Who Eat Animal Products, Especially Diary - Medical News Today 22/05/06

An obstetrician well known for his care of and research into multiple-birth pregnancies has found that dietary changes can affect a woman's chances of having twins, and that her overall chance is determined by a combination of diet and heredity.





The Heart - An Easily Accessible And Safe Target For Endoscopic Ultrasound And Fine Needle Intervention? - Medical News Today 22/05/06

Procedures involving the heart can be complicated and dangerous for the patient, but the use of technologies that can improve visualization of the area can increase the accuracy of the interventions. The heart's close proximity to the wall of the esophagus has led researchers to study the possible benefit of endoscopic ultrasound to visualize the heart and help guide interventions.





National UK Heart Disease Prevention Threshold 'cheapest But Least Effective' - Medical News Today 22/05/06

The UK national threshold for preventing heart disease with cholesterol lowering statins is much cheaper, but also much less effective, than either US or European recommendations, finds research published ahead of print in Heart.





Improved Recognition Of Prostate Cancer With Special Test CPSA - Fewer Biopsies Required - Medical News Today 22/05/06

Men can have more confidence in the results of the special test cPSA for prostate cancer than those of conventional testing, according to the findings of a study which have now been published in the renowned Journal of Urology (Vol. 175 (4), 1275-1280, April 2006).





Falls At Home Among Elderly Cost Ambulance Service £145 Each Time, UK - Medical News Today 22/05/06

Falls among the elderly cost one ambulance service an average of £145 on every occasion, and add up to two days of crew time a month, reveals a study in Emergency Medicine Journal.





A Novel Approach To Diagnostic And Therapeutic Intervention In The Vascular System - Medical News Today 22/05/06

The human vascular system represents a unique highway that allows access to every part of the body, and problems with the system can result in serious health conditions. The ability to safely intervene, diagnose, and treat vascular abnormalities with minimally-invasive techniques represents significant advances in the practice of medicine.





Child cancer survivors face employment troubles - Reuters 22/05/06

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - People who survived cancer as children were twice as likely to be unemployed than those without a history of childhood cancer, Dutch researchers reported on Monday. Survivors of brain cancer or other central nervous system tumors were five times more likely to be unemployed, A.G.E.M. de Boer of the Coronel Institute for Occupational Health at Academic Medical Center in Amsterdam and colleagues reported.





Fake Chinese drug kills nine - Reuters 22/05/06

BEIJING (Reuters) - Nine people have died after being injected with a fake drug made by a Chinese company and 14 executives have been detained for questioning, state media said on Monday.





Merck cancer vaccine faces Christian-right scrutiny - Reuters 22/05/06

CHICAGO (Reuters) - Merck & Co. Inc.'s vaccine to prevent the world's most prevalent sexually transmitted infection sailed through a panel of U.S. health experts, despite early fears of opposition from the Christian Right that it might lead to promiscuity and a false sense of security.





Cheshire and Merseyside News


Royal in waiting times failure - Daily Post 22/05/06

WAITING times at the Royal Liverpool University hospital's accident and emergency department are the second worst in the country.

Contents

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National News


NHS seeks 1,000 non-execs - The Observer 21/05/06

Ambitious mass recruitment programme for primary care trusts will take away talent from the City, according to experts


What teens really think about sex - The Observer 21/05/06

Experts shocked as report reveals depths of ignorance that lead many to unsafe sex


Copies of lost 'blood row' papers found - The Observer 21/05/06

Families' delight as vital documents thought to have been destroyed turn up in solicitors' offices


Smoking can blind you, say doctors - The Observer 21/05/06

Cigarette packets should carry warnings that smoking causes blindness, doctors will argue this week as a new study shows that the habit can badly damage eyesight.


'More NHS beds must go' in boost for home care - The Observer 21/05/06

Proposal by hospital managers' leader will fuel doctors' anger over wards already shut down


Lack of PE teachers puts health drive in doubt - The Observer 21/05/06

The government's commitment to tackle childhood obesity has been thrown into doubt because Glasgow's primary schools have only a handful of PE teachers.


Charity worker's stab horror - The Observer 21/05/06

Graduate's death leads to calls for increased protection for mental health staff who visit patients in their own homes


Fighting for his life - The Observer 21/05/06

The BBC's security correspondent was a champion of the Arab world, but that didn't stop al-Qaeda gunmen pumping him with bullets and leaving him for dead on a Saudi street. Horrific injuries left him paralysed, but he was back at work within a year and now he's written an extraordinary book about his ordeal. Here Kate Kellaway listens to his humbling refusal to cast blame


All set for a baby.com revolution - The Observer 21/05/06

Babies assigned a personal website at birth; companies that store your 'digital assets' like a bank; search engines which find your perfect holiday with undreamt-of precision. These are some of the concepts on the agenda at the 15th International World Wide Web Conference, the first to be held in Britain.


Seven ways to cope with IBS - The Guardian 20/05/06

Have you been told to put up with your irritable bowel syndrome? Don't, says Andy Darling. There's help out there


Patients are a virtue - The Guardian 20/05/06

The NHS has become one of the most attractive places to work, as far as graduates are concerned. Liz Ford reveals Universum's annual survey of students' ideal employers


Why you should have a phone mast as close to your house as possible - The Guardian 20/05/06

I am routinely accused, in long and angry letters, of being in the pay of the pharmaceutical industry, the mobile phone industry and the government. Needless to say, I lap it up, and would never engage in similarly ad hominem attacks in return, since critiques of character and finance are a poor substitute for a sober analysis of the data.


Midwife-led birth centres threatened by cost cutting - The Guardian 20/05/06

More than a quarter of England's popular and successful midwife-led birth centres are being threatened with closure, in spite of government promises to give women more choice over how and where they have their babies.


If I had the time: Grasp some nettles - The Guardian 20/05/06

I've never been keen on nettles, particularly since I fell off a horse into a bed of them at a family gathering as a child, but there's more to nettles than just pain infliction, according to Caroline Ware of the Natural History Museum. She reckons nettles suffer from a bit of an image problem and, in an attempt to rectify the situation, environmentalists have declared this week Be Nice to Nettles Week with nettle-friendly events taking place around the country.


Interview: Karen Richardson of the Centre for Separated Families in York - The Guardian 20/05/06

Karen Richardson runs the small but visionary Centre for Separated Families in York - which is why this feminist single mother now finds herself campaigning to end discrimination against men


Case study: transforming people's health - The Guardian 20/05/06

Abdul Azad is an active member of Birmingham's Bangladeshi community and is involved in a variety of local initiatives both as an employee and volunteer, from anti-smoking organisations to interpreting services. He has a background in report writing and publishing.


Emma Mitchell: What can I do about chronic venous insufficiency? - The Guardian 20/05/06

When travelling in hot countries my ankles and feet often swell. My GP says it's chronic venous insufficiency, but doesn't have any suggestions. On long flights I wear support socks, take aspirin and have tried herbal remedies such as horse chestnut, but none of these strategies helps. I'm in my late 50s, and the problem has become apparent in the past four or five years.


Shorts: Eat Right update - The Guardian 20/05/06

It's time to check in with our two Eat Right competition winners. Emma Chaplin has made a fantastic start, losing a stone in just over a month. 'I've had some ups and downs,' she says, 'but despite the tricky bits - largely down to PMS giving me the appetite of a semi-starved bear - I have stuck to the programme. Small amounts of treats along with trying to eat enough of the right stuff not to get hungry seems to be working.' Trainee midwife Aine Gallagher isn't far behind, having lost 10lb. 'My motivation is high, because the plan is working,' she says. 'It's been a case of applying a different set of rules. Old rules = eat whatever I fancied whenever I fancied. New rules = eat three well-proportioned meals a day and a small snack. I haven't been hungry, or felt deprived - that's been the biggest surprise.' She's struggling to schedule in 'proper' exercise, but has incorporated more activity into her daily routine. 'Leaving for college a bit earlier and walking from the station to work makes a great start to my day,' she says. 'I'm looking forward to becoming fitter, stronger and leaner.'

Grief.com - The Independent 21/05/06

Tim died aged 29. But his mother keeps him alive on the web, and they are not alone


Men use Botox to keep cool at work - The Independent 21/05/06

One fifth of those having cosmetic injections are male, and do so to combat sweat and stress


Single minded: I want your baby (but not you) - The Independent 21/05/06

She really, really wanted a baby and now she's got one. Sarah Harris on the trend for single women to choose parenthood


MASH-style 'drunk tents' to treat town centre bingers - The Independent 21/05/06

Dozens of makeshift field hospitals will be set up in cities across Britain this summer as emergency services prepare for a surge in drink-related violence. Ambulance officials warned they may be unable to reach other people who dial 999 with life-threatening conditions in time because of the burden they face from drunks.


A culture in ferment: Why it's kill or cure for the world's pharmaceutical giants - The Independent 21/05/06

At GlaxoSmithKline's annual general meeting last week, chief executive Jean Paul Garnier at times sounded as much like a field general as he did the head of the UK's biggest pharmaceutical company.

Women able to take a tipple while pregnant - The Sunday Times 21/05/06

WOMEN can drink small amounts of alcohol during pregnancy without damaging their baby, one of Britain’s royal colleges of medicine has ruled.


Big Mac bites back as salad drive wilts - The Sunday Times 21/05/06

THE salad days are over at McDonald’s. The fast-food chain’s British outlets are to undergo a “back to burgers” relaunch after years of trying to promote sales of pasta, fresh fruit and salads, under pressure to encourage healthy eating.


Pupils to get obesity check - The Sunday Times 21/05/06

PARENTS are to be sent official warning letters if their children are found to be obese after ministers decided to bring back routine weighing of primary school children.

Obesity tests: The fat police - The Independent 21/05/06
Fat: How the national obsession is coming into the classroom - The Independent 21/05/06
Candida Crewe: The weigh-in could become a weapon in the war against fat - The Independent 21/05/06


Tory A-lister urges well-off to avoid burdening NHS Hospital refuses to take stem cells - The Sunday Times 21/05/06

THE most controversial character on the Conservative party’s new A-list of favoured prospective parliamentary candidates has urged the well-off not to use the NHS.


Parents urged to keep the junk out of lunchboxes - The Times 20/05/06

PARENTS got a double helping of new rules yesterday telling them how to keep their children out of trouble at school.

Packed lunches are 'nutritional disaster' - Daily Mail 19/05/06


Gascoigne maps his path from sporting stardom to despair - The Times 20/05/06

ON THE pitch Paul Gascoigne was the man who could do anything with a football at his feet.


Women to act on youth disorder - The Times 20/05/06

Members of the Townswomen’s Guild are being asked to compile a dossier with the aim of persuading the Government to rewrite its policies on antisocial behaviour.


I've got the power - The Times 20/05/06

IT’S THE new generation game: a tiny implantable device could soon be transforming people into mini power stations.


Love is off the menu - The Times 20/05/06

If avoiding sex becomes an obsession you may be a sexual anorexic


The de Bono code - The Times 20/05/06

The man who invented lateral thinking tells John Naish why he is founding a new religion


Passing the label test - The Times 20/05/06

A new law will outlaw bogus health and nutrition claims. Kate Wighton reports on what it means for consumers


Take a good look at yourself - The Times 20/05/06

A remarkable new book charts the visualisation of the human body over 600 years. Nigel Hawkes reveals the inside story


Junk medicine: clinical trials - The Times 20/05/06

The results of medical research funded by the pharmaceutical industry often now meet with public suspicion. Controversy over drugs such as Vioxx and SSRI antidepressants, in which inconvenient safety data is alleged to have been covered up, has left many critics wondering how far profits influence the outcome of studies that big business pays for.


Dr Copperfield: inside the mind of a GP - The Times 20/05/06

Life on the wards just got tougher. It’s bad enough battling MRSA, bed shortages and arrogant consultants. Now, junior staff have to fight off gift-bearing patients and relatives. Because, according to news reports this week, managers at the Royal Cornwall Hospital NHS trust are performing a “chocolate audit”, the idea being that all presents given to staff must be logged as a proxy measure of patient satisfaction.


The perfectly awful idealist - The Times 20/05/06

It’s hard work living with an idealist, specially when she is a scornful teenager in whose eyes you can do no right.


Where kids can go wild - The Times 20/05/06

There aren’t many occasions when you would encourage your child to handle sharp knives, build fires or eat wild plants. But bushcraft courses not only get them outdoors and build confidence, but learning survival skills also helps to harness their rebellious instincts. We’ve tracked down the best courses for aspiring Ray Mears types.


Turn a darker shade of pale - The Times 20/05/06

Fake tan has come a long way from the mousses that left you with skin like a footballer’s wife. This year’s hot products are moisturisers with a hint of colour, which claim that you can build up a natural-looking glow without turning orange, staining clothes or getting streaky legs. Our guinea pigs put six of the best to the test and gave them marks (stars) out of five.


Agony and ecstasy: sex advice - The Times 20/05/06

I'm getting married this summer but sex with my fiancee has become dull and infrequent. Will it all be downhill with her from now on?


TB: spreading good news - The Times 20/05/06

In your reply to a letter from a reader concerned that routine BCG immunisations for children have been stopped (Body & Soul, April 1), you said: “TB is not very infectious.” If that is so, why did so many people die from it? Seventy years ago my husband’s mother and one of her sisters died from TB; 40 years later his stepmother and her brother developed TB but survived thanks to modern antibiotics. Are children really not at risk?


What's up doc? Asking you to poke your tongue out - The Times 20/05/06

Why bother? The doctor is, unsurprisingly, examining your tongue, checking its size, surface and movement.


Eco-worrier: planet-friendly taxis - The Times 20/05/06

Is it true that there are now green taxis?


Is it true that ... high blood pressure causes headaches? - The Times 20/05/06

Not unless you’re suffering from the vanishingly rare malignant hypertension, in which case, your blood pressure’s stratospherically high and you’re exhibiting other symptoms: you may have kidney problems or even suffer a stroke.


Going loco trying to keep the shopping local - The Times 20/05/06

How close to home can you buy fresh, locally-grown produce? Three urban foodies take up the challenge


At your table: bread - The Times 20/05/06

There’s nothing like a freshly made bread roll, still warm, with a smidgin of unsalted butter. You need only to look in supermarkets and delis to see that although what I call the plastic, tasteless, white sliced loaf can still be found, alongside it are wholemeal, wholegrain, sourdough, raisin and walnut, sun-dried tomato and potato breads, not to mention dark rye/pumpernickel-style varieties that taste almost treacly and are delicious thinly sliced and served with butter and wafer-thin ham or smoked salmon.


Menu mentor - The Times 20/05/06

Jane Clarke's weekly guide to nutricious but delicious eating out: Chinese takeaway


Getting satisfaction - The Times 20/05/06

Rolling Stones wife Jo Wood, 50, says an organic lifestyle keeps her fit for rock and roll

Harrison's parents chose his name when he was a 35-week foetus - then they were offered a termination - The Telegraph 21/05/06

Lisa Green could hardly wait to give birth to her second child. The images from her eight-month scans were showing a fully formed baby weighing more than 7lb. With the excitement and anticipation familiar to any expectant parent, she and her husband Tim had already chosen a name for their unborn son.

Legal nicety that kills babies - The Telegraph 21/05/06
Anti-abortionists bombard MP with hate mail and death threats - The Independent 21/05/06


A new hip resort for sun, sea and surgery - The Telegraph 21/05/06

'Hello, you're looking lovely and pale." "Thanks, I'm afraid the pallor will soon wear off. I've just got back from having an NHS operation abroad."


Honourable men - The Telegraph 21/05/06

Rebecca Tyrrel reviews Julius Caesar, Coriolanus, Enemies and NHS The Musical!


Nish Joshi's Q & A - The Telegraph 21/05/06

If I eat potato, pasta or bread, or drink lager, I feel bloated and uncomfortable. Could I be allergic to yeast or wheat? I'm at a loss to know what to eat, which is ruining my appetite.


Surgeon used eBay to buy equipment - The Telegraph 20/05/06

A surgeon has upset hospital bosses by ordering medical equipment through the auction website eBay.


Schools to follow Jamie Oliver's recipe - The Telegraph 20/05/06

Your view: Should schools or parents take the blame for childhood obesity?


Churches can play key role, says Williams - The Telegraph 20/05/06

The Archbishop of Canterbury, Dr Rowan Williams, said yesterday that churches could play a unique role in the inner cities because they were not perceived as having vested interests to defend.


Seaside gets cleaner bill of health - The Telegraph 20/05/06

A record 120 beaches in England and Wales have been awarded Blue Flag status for their cleanliness and water quality. Seventy-seven of them are in England (20 more than last year) and 43 in Wales (an increase of five).


Taxman kicks away pensioners' healthcare crutch - The Telegraph 20/05/06

The cost of cover is set to rise for some retirees. Nina Montagu-Smith examines the options


Patient's NHS victory - The Telegraph 20/05/06

Waiting lists on the National Health Service and rationing for older patients were in the news again this week.

Travelling hopefully - The Times 20/05/06


Keep an eye on the bills - The Telegraph 20/05/06

We all know that plumbers and mechanics may bump up prices when told "it's an insurance job" but many might be surprised to find doctors doing the same thing.


Savvy shopper: coconuts - The Telegraph 20/05/06

Don't be shy: get to know a coconut and reap the dividends. By Rose Prince


Prisoner and wife 'had sex at hospital' - The Telegraph 20/05/06

A prisoner under guard while he was treated at an NHS hospital sneaked his wife into a lavatory for sex, it was claimed yesterday.

Coroner issues baby death warning - BBC Health News 21/05/06

A coroner has warned that more than 300 babies may be dying each year in England and Wales after sharing a bed or sofa with their parents.


Hearing tests 'key for language' - BBC Health News 20/05/06

etecting hearing impairment in babies early can improve their language ability later, a study suggests.


Minister intervenes over Meadow - BBC Health News 19/05/06

The Attorney General is hoping to take part in an appeal arising out of the case of paediatrician Sir Roy Meadow.


NHS trust to axe up to 150 posts - BBC Health News 19/05/06

Up to 150 jobs are to be cut by an NHS trust after it was told to balance its books by the Department of Health.


Private GP deal decision reserved - BBC Health News 19/05/06

The High Court has reserved judgment on a legal challenge to a private US company taking over the provision of GP services in Derbyshire.


PFI hospitals face huge overspend - BBC Health News 19/05/06

The government is attempting to rein in some of the biggest hospital building schemes as they threatened to run 4bn over budget.


Tourette's housemate 'exploited' - BBC Health News 19/05/06

Campaigners have accused Channel 4's Big Brother of exploiting a man with Tourette Syndrome by accepting him as one of this year's housemates.


Junk food banned in school meals - BBC Health News 19/05/06

School dinners in England will be free from chocolate, crisps, fizzy drinks and "low-quality" meat from the autumn, the government has announced.


Pharmacies to sell migraine drug - BBC Health News 19/05/06

A migraine drug is to be made available over-the-counter in the UK for the first time, the medicines watchdog has announced.


Watchdog body hits at hospitals - BBC Health News 19/05/06

Hospitals in NI should make more effort to recover their full costs from private patients, a report says.


Biggest UK hospital revamp begins - BBC Health News 19/05/06

Work has begun on the UK's biggest PFI hospital scheme, the 1.2bn revamp of St Bartholomew's and the Royal London.

Eyeballs Vs Footballs: The Final - Medical News Today 21/05/06

Professional goalkeepers fail to stop free kicks because of shortcomings in their visual system, according to new research by Cathy Craig and colleagues, from Queen's University Belfast, Northern Ireland. The projected trajectory of a ball following a curved flight path is more difficult to judge because our visual system is not sensitive enough to gauge a change of direction at speed, mid-flight. The research1 is published in Springer-Verlag's journal Naturwissenschaften.


Super Broccoli Takes Brassica Family To Chelsea Flower Show - Medical News Today 21/05/06

Super Broccoli takes brassica family to Chelsea Flower Show Warwick HRI, the University of Warwick's plant research Department, has created a stand at the world famous RHS Chelsea Flower Show in London this week. However the star exhibit in their garden won't be multicoloured flowers or a soothing water feature. The Warwick HRI stand will show how far scientists have reached in breeding a range of "Super Broccoli" and its wider brassica family which will: help us live longer, last longer on our shelves, and use much less pesticide and fertilizer.


Adolescents Behaving Badly, But Better Than Their Parents Did, UK - Medical News Today 21/05/06

Bournemouth University study reveals that today's girls are worse behaved than boys and children of smokers are even more likely to behave badly


New Study Assesses Impact Of Early Detection Of Hearing Impairment On Children's Language Skills - Medical News Today 21/05/06

The early detection of hearing impairment in babies significantly improves the language ability of affected children in later childhood, a new study led by Dr Colin Kennedy of the University of Southampton has revealed.


Health Services Should Borrow Marketing Ideas From Big Companies Like Nike And Coca-Cola To Improve People's Health - Medical News Today 20/05/06

Health services should borrow marketing ideas from big companies like Nike and Coca-Cola to improve people's health, say experts in this week's BMJ.


Study Suggests New Human Genotype May Be Prone To VCJD - Medical News Today 20/05/06

A small study in this week's BMJ suggests a new human genotype may be prone to variant Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (vCJD).


Experts Urge Industry And International Donors To Prepare Pneumococcal Vaccines - Medical News Today 20/05/06

In today's online edition of The Lancet, a group of leading global health experts have come together to call for vaccine manufacturers and international donors to negotiate affordable pricing of pneumococcal conjugate vaccines and for governments of developing world countries and their partners to establish disease surveillance networks and begin preparations for pneumococcal vaccine introduction.


Independent Publishes Special Issue To Launch Partnership With Product RED - Medical News Today 19/05/06

London's Independent on Tuesday published a special issue -- including numerous articles on global HIV/AIDS issues -- to launch its partnership with Product RED, the Independent reports (Vallely, Independent, 5/15). The newspaper earlier this month announced that it would become the first media outlet to sign on as a partner in the project, which was launched in January by Irish musician Bono to donate a portion of profits from a range of branded products to the Global Fund To Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria. American Express, Converse, Giorgio Armani and Gap were the initial partners in the program and are distributing credit cards and selling tennis shoes, sunglasses and T-shirts, respectively, carrying the Product RED label.


Bigger Ambulance Trusts Will Mean A Better Service, UK - Medical News Today 19/05/06

Health Minister Lord Warner today confirmed details of a major reorganisation of the ambulance service in England.


International News

Nurse exodus leaves Kenya in crisis - The Observer 21/05/06

Poor pay and lack of jobs are forcing workers to abandon their country's health service to seek work in the UK, reports Tracy McVeigh in Nairobi


Top priest told to retire as Pope toughens stand on child abuse - The Guardian 20/05/06

Pope Benedict threw his authority behind a new and uncompromising approach to sex abuse in the Roman Catholic church yesterday when he ordered one of its most influential figures, who faces multiple allegations, to give up his ministry and retire to a life of "prayer and repentance".

Wallaby milk gives scientists the jump on deadly superbug Hospital refuses to take stem cells - The Sunday Times 21/05/06

IT’S a magical liquid 100 times stronger than penicillin in combating bacteria — and it comes ready-made in a pouch. Scientists have found that wallaby milk could be nature’s greatest elixir for fighting disease.


Hospital refuses to take stem cells - The Sunday Times 21/05/06

A PREGNANT woman has been refused permission by an Irish hospital to collect stem cells from the blood in her baby’s umbilical cord.


Burger giant on defensive against a Big Mac attack - The Telegraph 20/05/06

A British-produced drama attacking the junk food industry was premiered at the Cannes Film Festival last night, prompting McDonald's to prepare a new defence of its burgers.

Fast-food film leaves a nasty taste for big burger chains - The Independent 20/04/06

One in 50 teenagers 'wet the bed' - BBC Health News 20/05/06

As many as one in 50 teenagers still wet the bed, research has suggested.


Scan drug 'boosts cancer therapy' - BBC Health News 19/05/06

A drug used to help doctors interpret medical scans may also help to boost the potency of anti-cancer therapies, research suggests.


WHO urges drug trial registration - BBC Health News 19/05/06

The World Health Organization is calling for tighter registration of clinical drug trials so that negative findings cannot be kept secret.

China Must Produce Pediatric Antiretrovirals To Fill Shortage, Advocate Says - Medical News Today 21/05/06

China must produce HIV/AIDS medications for the tens of thousands of children living with the disease, Chung To, a Hong Kong-based HIV/AIDS advocate, said, Reuters Health reports. Although Chinese companies since 2002 have been manufacturing at least three generic antiretroviral drugs, they do not produce any such drugs for children. According to Chung, founder of the Chi Heng Foundation, which advocates for children affected by and living with HIV/AIDS, no pediatric antiretroviral drugs were available in China until last year when the Clinton Foundation donated antiretroviral drugs to 200 children. Chung said he hopes the Clinton Foundation's contribution will make the Chinese government aware of the need to care for HIV-positive children. There are about one million children in China either living with or affected by HIV/AIDS, Chung said (Tan, Reuters Health, 5/16).


Women Exposed To Violence From Partner Have Higher Rates Of Depression, Adverse Health, Study Says - Medical News Today 21/05/06

Women who have been exposed to intimate partner violence, or IPV, have significantly higher rates of depression, social isolation and physical health symptoms than other women, according to a study published in the June issue of the American Journal of Preventive Medicine, United Press International reports (United Press International, 5/16). Amy Bonomi, senior research associate at the health system Group Health Cooperative's Center for Health Studies, from 2003 to 2004 interviewed a random sample of 3,429 18- to 64-year-old women who were members of Group Health (King, Seattle Times, 5/16). The study finds that women who have been exposed to IPV within the last five years are four times as likely as other women to have symptoms of severe depression and three times as likely to describe their health as fair or poor, the Seattle Post-Intelligencer reports. Robert Thompson, senior investigator for the Center for Health Studies, and colleagues in another AJPM study of the same women found that 44% said they had been sexually, physically or psychologically assaulted by a partner at some point in their life (Davidow, Seattle Post-Intelligencer, 5/16). About 8% said they had been abused in the last year, according to the study. "It's an enormous problem that's buried in our society," Thompson said, adding, "It's across the population and has major effects" (Seattle Times, 5/16). Bonomi said, "We need billboards that say, 'Being called names by a partner is hazardous to your health'" (Seattle Post-Intelligencer, 5/16).


How Accommodating Is Our Society To Women Who Choose To Breastfeed Their Babies? - Medical News Today 21/05/06

Although the act of breastfeeding is not "illegal," women in various parts of the U.S. can be arrested for "public indecency" when breastfeeding their baby in public. As of November 2005, 12 states and Washington, DC had not enacted at least some kind of law regarding breastfeeding.


Researchers Make Vitamin E Offshoot A Potent Cancer Killer - Medical News Today 21/05/06

Researchers here have learned how a derivative of vitamin E causes the death of cancer cells. The researchers then used that knowledge to make the agent an even more potent cancer killer.


Computerized Atlas Highlights 'plethora' Of Changes In Brain Disorder - Medical News Today 21/05/06

A computerized atlas has brought unprecedented sensitivity to the search for brain structure changes in a genetic condition known as Williams syndrome, revealing 33 abnormalities in the folding of the brain's surface. The disorder, which occurs in 1 in every 20,000 births, impairs visual and spatial skills but preserves musical ability and sociability.


Researchers Link Two More Genes To Sudden Infant Death Syndrome - Medical News Today 21/05/06

Recent discoveries at Mayo Clinic added two more cardiac genes to the list of potential links to sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS), increasing the possibility that genetic defects of the heart may cause up to 15 percent of SIDS cases. This research will be presented Friday at Heart Rhythm 2006, the 27th Annual Scientific Sessions of the Heart Rhythm Society in Boston.


Millions Squandered In Unnecessary Tests Ordered In Routine Doctor Visits - Medical News Today 21/05/06

Unnecessary medical tests are costing the U.S. health care system millions--and potentially billions-- of dollars per year, and add unnecessary patient stress, say researchers from Georgetown University Medical Center and Johns Hopkins University in the June issue of the American Journal of Preventive Medicine.


New Study Finds Key Role For VEGF In Onset Of Sepsis - Medical News Today 21/05/06

A study led by researchers at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center (BIDMC) has found that the vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) protein is a key biomarker for sepsis, a severe inflammatory response that develops following a bacterial infection. The findings, which will be published in the June 12, 2006, issue of The Journal of Experimental Medicine (JEM) and currently appear on-line, offer a promising new target for the development of drug therapies to treat this overwhelming - and often fatal -- condition.


The Public Library Of Science Launches The New Open-access Journal PLoS Clinical Trials - Medical News Today 21/05/06

The Public Library of Science announces PLoS Clinical Trials: A new open-access journal advancing the reporting of trial results


The University Of Jaen Uses Virtual Reality Techniques For Hallucinations Treatments - Medical News Today 21/05/06

Scientists of the University of Jaen are working in a project, pioneer in the world, to improve the treatment of hallucinations, by means of acting in the attention processes using virtual reality techniques. It is a project funded by the Spanish Ministry of Science and Technology, carried out by the ‘Evaluación Psicológica' group, focused on the development of psychological methods that complement pharmacological treatments in order to try to control psychotic symptoms.


Granada-born Researcher Warns That Female University Students Have The Profile Of Women Prone To Develop Breast Cancer - Medical News Today 21/05/06

The risks of suffering from breast cancer are mostly linked to reproductive habits. This is not goods news for female university students today, as they have the profile of potential ill breast cancer patients. The research coordinator of the Hospital Clinico of Granada, Dr. Nicolás Olea, reasserts this idea with a study he carried out with over 500 women who were admitted to that hospital between 1996 and 1998 to have a breast cancer-related operation. Approximately half of them had a breast tumour removed, whereas the rest was due to other medical reasons.


SequenceBase Corporation And FIZ Karlsruhe Announce Introduction Of The USPTO Genetic Sequence Database - USGENE On STN International - Medical News Today 21/05/06

SequenceBase Corporation and FIZ Karlsruhe are pleased to announce that a preview of The USPTO Genetic Sequence Database, USGENE will be shown for the first time to attendees at the Patent Information Users Group Meeting (PIUG) in Minneapolis, Minnesota on May 21, 2006. This database, USGENE, will be available on STN International (The Scientific & Technical Information Network) in the summer of 2006. This comprehensive database, USGENE, is an entirely new resource for freedom-to-operate, prior-art, validity and patent infringement searches. The database has been loaded for worldwide access at FIZ Karlsruhe, the European Service Center of STN.


Nexa Orthopedics Receives FDA Clearance To Market Pyrolytic Carbon Implant - Medical News Today 21/05/06

Nexa Orthopedics Inc. ("Nexa"), the technology leader in products for reconstructive surgery of the extremities, announced today that it has received 510(k) clearance to market from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration for its pyrolytic carbon Carpometacarpal Implant (CMI). The Nexa CMI is designed to relieve basal thumb joint pain associated with arthritis while improving the thumb's range of motion and biomechanical function.


Diovan(R) (valsartan) Trial To Lower C-Reactive Protein, An Important Marker Of Inflammation - Medical News Today 21/05/06

Diovan lowered the level of the inflammatory marker high sensitivity C-reactive protein (hsCRP), independently of its established efficacy in lowering blood pressure, according to findings presented at the American Society of Hypertension, Inc. (ASH) Annual Scientific Meeting and Exposition (ASH 2006) and published online in Hypertension later today. The study also showed that Diovan and Diovan HCT helped a significant number of hard-to-treat patients with a severe form of high blood pressure -- called "stage 2" -- quickly achieve blood pressure goals.


Spine Surgeons Dr. Adelt And Dr. Bertagnoli Present Follow Up Data On Patients Receiving The Coflex(TM) Interspinous Implant - Medical News Today 21/05/06

Prominent German spine surgeons, Dieter Adelt, MD and Rudolf Bertagnoli, MD announced encouraging results in separate studies of a total 246 stenosis patients receiving Paradigm Spine's coflex(TM) spinal implant. The surgeons spoke to more than 1,500 colleagues attending the sixth annual Spine Arthroplasty Society (SAS) meeting in Montreal last week.


Boston Scientific Launches Two Large-Scale Studies Of Wireless Home Monitoring System For Heart Failure Patients - Medical News Today 21/05/06

Boston Scientific Corporation (NYSE: BSX) today announced the launch of two large-scale clinical studies to evaluate the benefits of the LATITUDE(R) Patient Management system in managing heart failure patients. The system includes the Cardiac Rhythm Management industry's first and only wireless weight scale, wireless blood pressure cuff and monitoring of patient symptoms. It is also the industry's only system that provides automatic alerting to physicians of heart failure conditions using a wireless weight scale. An abrupt change in weight could indicate worsening heart failure. Close management of weight and other parameters is recommended by the recently issued American College of Cardiology and American Heart Association Class I guidelines for managing heart failure patients.


Gene First Linked To Rare Disease May Trigger Skin Cancer, Other Tumors - Medical News Today 20/05/06

A gene first identified in connection with a rare disease in which patients develop multiple, benign skin tumors may be a more general player in cancers found throughout the body, according to a report in the May 19, 2006 Cel


How Humans Represent Themselves And Others As Physical Responses In Their Brains - Medical News Today 20/05/06

Researchers at Baylor College of Medicine (BCM) have mapped not only where trust forms in the brain but have also uncovered clues as to how humans represent themselves and others as physical responses in their brains. Results are reported in this week's issue of the journal Science.


Schizophrenia Limits Understanding Of Body Language, Study - Medical News Today 20/05/06

Understanding the meaning behind a person's posture or body movement comes easily to many people and helps guide how we react to others socially.


Observing For The First Time How DNA Damage Is Identified, Hebrew University - Medical News Today 20/05/06

For the first time anywhere, researchers at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem have succeeded in observing and describing how damaged DNA is naturally identified.


Safe Sex Messages In Schools Don't Change Behaviour - Medical News Today 20/05/06

Current efforts to combat sexually transmitted infections and unplanned pregnancy in schools do not change sexual risk behaviour, concludes a study in this week's BMJ.


MSF Backs R&D Project To Develop Needed AIDS Test For Patients - Medical News Today 20/05/06

As health ministers meet in Geneva at the World Health Assembly (WHA) next week, the medical humanitarian organisation Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) is calling on governments to overhaul the way medical research and development (R&D) is prioritised and financed. Because the current R&D system continues to fail people in developing countries, MSF is collaborating on a project underway at the University of Cambridge to develop a much-needed AIDS test for use in resource-poor settings.


FDA Should Approve Emergency Contraceptive Plan B Quickly To Demonstrate Its Independence - Medical News Today 20/05/06

Andrew von Eschenbach, acting US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) commissioner, should move quickly to approve emergency contraceptive Plan B to show he has the independence needed to head the organisation, states an editorial in this week's issue of The Lancet.


Automated External Defibrillator Recalls Common, Study - Medical News Today 20/05/06

Data presented today at the Heart Rhythm Society's 27th Annual Scientific Sessions finds that during a 10-year study period more than one in five automatic external defibrillators (AEDs) were recalled due to potential malfunction. The findings represent some of the first data available on safety and reliability of the devices, which are used to resuscitate victims of cardiac arrest.


Aspirin + Dipyridamole Better Than Aspirin Alone To Prevent Circulatory Problems After Minor Stroke - Medical News Today 20/05/06

A combination of aspirin and the antiplatelet drug dipyridamole is better than aspirin alone for the prevention of new circulatory events after a minor, non-disabling stroke, according to a paper published in this week's issue of The Lancet.


Heart Attack Survivors Lacking Variability In Their Heart Rate Are At A Greater Risk Of Death - Medical News Today 20/05/06

Heart attack survivors who lack variability in their heart rate are at a greater risk of death, according to a paper in this week's issue of The Lancet. The study found that measuring the ability of the heart rate to slow down (heart rate deceleration capacity) was a better predictor of mortality after heart attack than current measures.


Journal Of Gastrointestinal Surgery Added To Springer's Growing Medical Program - Medical News Today 20/05/06

The Society for Surgery of the Alimentary Tract (SSAT) has chosen Springer as the publisher of the Society's journal Journal of Gastrointestinal Surgery. Springer will begin publishing this monthly journal both online and in print in January 2007, with Volume 11, Issue 1. It was previously published by Elsevier.


Knocking The SOCS Off Rheumatoid Arthritis - Medical News Today 20/05/06

Rheumatoid arthritis is an autoimmune disease that causes chronic inflammation of the joints and occurs when the body's tissues are mistakenly attacked by its own immune system. A study by Ian Wicks and colleagues from the Walter and Eliza Hall Research Institute, Australia, appearing online on May 18 in advance of print publication in the June issue of the Journal of Clinical Investigation, is the first analysis of the function of the SOCS-3 molecule in a mouse model of inflammatory arthritis.


Mouse Model Reveals Secrets Of Lung Injury That Can Follow Blood Transfusions - Medical News Today 20/05/06

Approximately 1 in every 600 persons who receive a transfusion of a plasma-containing blood product develops transfusion-related acute lung injury (TRALI) within 6 hours of the transfusion. As such, TRALI has emerged as the leading cause of death from a blood transfusion. The mechanisms underlying this condition are poorly understood by researchers, primarily because of the absence of a clinically relevant animal model for study. In a study appearing online on May 18 in advance of print publication in the June issue of the Journal of Clinical Investigation, Mark Looney and colleagues from the University of California, San Francisco, describe a new in vivo mouse model of TRALI and provide novel insights into the role of neutrophils and Fc gammna receptors in the pathogenesis of lung injury.


Caffeine Therapy Helps Premature Babies Breathe Better - Medical News Today 20/05/06

Premature babies commonly suffer from ‘Apnea of Prematurity' - as their lungs have not developed completely and their nervous systems are immature, babies literally forget to breathe. A new study has found that caffeine therapy can help these babies breather better.


Mast Cells Regulate Adverse Effects In The Lung In Asthma - Medical News Today 20/05/06

In a study appearing online on May 18 in advance of print publication in the June issue of the Journal of Clinical Investigation, Stephen Galli and colleagues from Stanford University developed a mouse model of asthma that more closely mimics human disease than standard asthma models, in order to demonstrate that mast cells are key drivers of the most important inflammatory, structural, and functional changes observed within the lungs in chronic asthma.


Advocates, Health Experts Meet In Moscow For First Conference On HIV/AIDS In Region - Medical News Today 20/05/06

HIV/AIDS advocates and health experts from 50 Eastern European and Central Asian countries gathered on Monday in Moscow for the first joint conference aimed at dealing with HIV/AIDS in the region, Russian Centre TV reports. At the three day conference, delegates plan to discuss ways to promote effective HIV prevention methods and increase access to treatment. Delegates also plan to discuss how to increase tolerance and reduce the stigma surrounding the disease (Russian Centre TV, 5/15). UNAIDS Executive Director Peter Piot in his keynote address at the conference called on delegates to tackle stigma and discrimination "head-on" in order to control the spread of HIV. "Fear and stigma are truly the best friends of HIV," Piot said (UzReport.com, 5/15). According to the U.N., 1.6 million HIV-positive people were living in Eastern Europe and Central Asia at the end of 2005, a figure that has increased tenfold in less than a decade (BBC News, 5/15).


High Benzene Levels Found In Some Soft Drinks - Medical News Today 20/05/06
Rated 3 in Health; News; National and International News on May 20, 2006 at 16:46:00 GMT.
According to a sample of 100 drinks, the FDA found that 5 had benzene levels over the 5 parts per billion limit set for drinking water. In fact, one of them, Safeway Select Diet Orange, had 79 parts per billion. Human consumption of benzene is linked to a higher risk of developing leukaemia.


PAR-1 Proves Integral In Acute Lung Injury - Medical News Today 20/05/06

It has been previously shown that activation of TGF-beta by the alphavbeta6 integrin plays a central role in animal models of several common diseases, including pulmonary fibrosis, emphysema, and acute lung injury.


Organ Development: A Place For Everything And Everything In Its Place - Medical News Today 20/05/06

During development, organ formation is controlled by a strictly coordinated developmental program. Yet at times, these mechanisms do not function properly and can result in an organ of other structure being positioned abnormally within the body (a condition known as ectopia). In a study appearing online on May 18 in advance of print publication in the June issue of the Journal of Clinical Investigation, Yoshiya Kawaguchi and colleagues from Kyoto University, Japan, present insights into the molecular mechanisms that control organ development, particularly of the pancreas, in the fore-midgut area.


Epimorphin: Epithelial Master Regulator - Medical News Today 20/05/06

The normal development (morphogenesis) and maintenance of many organs and tissues, including intestine, skin, mammary gland, lung, gallbladder, and liver, are dependent on interaction between mesenchymal and epithelial cells.


Gene Expression Signature Acts As A Prognostic Indicator For Liver Cancer - Medical News Today 20/05/06

The identification of cancer-specific gene expression patterns or "signatures" is a fast growing area of cancer research. Aberrant activation of the Met signaling pathway is frequently associated with tumor growth and tumor spread to other organs. In order to define the Met-dependent gene expression signature, Snorri Thorgeirsson and colleagues from the National Cancer Institute examined the gene expression signatures from healthy as well as Met-deficient mouse liver cells.


How The Body Recognizes A Fungus Among Us - Medical News Today 20/05/06

The fungus Candida albicans can cause a wide variety of infections, ranging from mucosal infections in generally healthy individuals to life-threatening infections in persons with impaired immunity. Beating this infection requires mononuclear immune cells such as neutrophils and macrophages to recognize the fungus, ingest it, and kill it by releasing proinflammatory cytokines that activate the immune response. In a study appearing online on May 18 in advance of print publication in the June issue of the Journal of Clinical Investigation, Mihai Netea and colleagues from Radboud University Nijmegen Medical Center, The Netherlands, show how mononuclear cells recognize the cell surface of C. albicans. They reveal that this process involves multiple recognition systems that recognize various components within the layers of the fungal cell wall.


Testing The Efficacy Of Targeted Therapies Against Human Lung Cancer - Medical News Today 20/05/06

As reported in the June 1 issue of G&D, Drs. Katerina Politi, Harold Varmus and colleagues at the Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center in New York have developed a novel animal model of lung adenocarcinoma that will be of great use in testing the efficacy of targeted therapies against human lung cancer.


Role Of Partial Nephrectomy In The Treatment Of Upper Tract Transitional Cell Carcinoma - Medical News Today 20/05/06

Traditionally, upper tract transitional cell carcinoma (TCC) is managed with nephroureterectomy with excision of a bladder cuff. In cases of locally advanced or regionally advanced disease, neoadjuvant systemic chemotherapy may be offered prior to surgery. There exists a subset of patients that are not optimal candidates for nephroureterectomy, particularly those with solitary kidneys, those with baseline insufficiency, and those with bilateral synchronous tumors. For these patients, novel, creative approaches are required to establish cancer control while attempting to maintain enough functioning renal mass to avoid renal replacement therapy. While many cases can be managed with endoscopic tumor resection/ablation, some patients are not candidates for or refuse these minimally invasive therapies. In this study, Goel and colleagues, out of the Cleveland Clinic, examine their experience with partial nephrectomy as a surgical therapy for upper tract TCC.


Comparative Study Of Ileocecal Vs. Ileal Neobladders In Radical Cystectomy Patients - Medical News Today 20/05/06

The use of orthotopic urinary diversion has gained increasing popularity in the past 20 years. Intestinal options for neobladders include ileocecal and ileal segments. The choice of intestinal segment has both functional and metabolic implications. In the April issue of the BJU International, Dr. Khafagy and associates from the National Cancer Institute, Cairo, Egypt report a comparative study using either ileocecal or ileal neobladders.


Effect Of Non-Steroidal Anti-Inflammatory Drug Use On The Incidence Of Erectile Dysfunction - Medical News Today 20/05/06

Arthritis and erectile dysfunction (ED) affect men more as they age. In this article, R. Shiri and colleagues of the Tampere School of Public Health of Tampere Finland first list several prior articles that show that the occurrence of these two diseases correlates well.


Comparison Of The Effectiveness And Side-Effects Of Tolterodine And Oxybutynin In Children With Detrusor Instability - Medical News Today 20/05/06

Anticholinergic therapy remains the first line treatment for detrusor instability (DI), which is typically characterized by urinary urge incontinence. The aim of this study by Kilic et al was to assess the effectiveness and tolerability of tolterodine and oxybutynin in children with DI. They had a total of 60 children with DI enrolled prospectively and followed for 6 months. Thirty (14 male, 16 female, mean age 7.97 ± 2.71 years) were in the tolterodine group and 30 (12 male, 18 female, mean age 7.33 ± 2.23 years) in the oxybutynin group. All of the patients in the study population had a history of dysfunctional voiding. Urodynamic investigations were conducted in all of the patients before and after anticholinergic treatment. Episodes of urge urinary incontinence and side effects were also evaluated.


How Cells Avoid Becoming Cancerous - Medical News Today 20/05/06

Researchers at the University of California, San Diego and three other institutions have described for the first time a web of inter-related responses that cells use to avoid becoming diseased or cancerous after being exposed to a powerful chemical mutagen. The group led by UCSD bioengineering professor Trey Ideker describe in the May 19 issue of Science an elaborate system of gene control that is triggered by chemical damage to DNA.


ESMO International Symposium On Sarcoma And GIST - Medical News Today 20/05/06

Medical science could soon yield improved therapies for a group of rare and hard to treat cancers known as soft tissue sarcomas, European doctors will hear this month at a highly innovative type of meeting organized by the European Society for Medical Oncology (ESMO).


Blood Test Predicts Success Of Quitting Smoking Using The Nicotine Patch - Medical News Today 20/05/06

A blood test may enable doctors to predict which smokers using the nicotine patch are likely to experience the least amount of cravings and have the highest probability of success in quitting cigarettes, according to the results of a study in the June issus of the Journal of Clinical Pharmacology and Therapeutics.


Potential New Treatment Strategy For Alzheimer's Disease And Other Brain And Spinal Cord Damage - Medical News Today 20/05/06

A study led by researchers at the San Francisco VA Medical Center and the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill has identified several new compounds that could play a role in preventing or treating Alzheimer's disease and other degenerative conditions of the nervous system.


Positive Results For ACRUX's Lead Product In US Phase 3 Trial Bedsores And Bald Hides: Novel Roles Revealed For A 'scaffolding' Protein - Medical News Today 20/05/06

Acrux (ASX: ACR), the pharmaceutical company with unique technology for delivering drugs through the skin, today announced positive results in a US Phase 3 clinical trial of Evamist, its daily skin spray for prevention of symptoms associated with menopause. The trial was conducted by its US commercial partner VIVUS Inc. (NASDAQ: VVUS), which will now proceed to file a marketing application with the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) in the second half of 2006.


Bedsores And Bald Hides: Novel Roles Revealed For A 'scaffolding' Protein - Medical News Today 20/05/06

A protein long thought to provide only mechanical support for keeping cells and tissues from literally falling apart turns out to have much wider utility. In a pair of reports, the protein K17 has been found to also influence wound healing and maintain the structural integrity of hair follicles, according to Johns Hopkins researchers.


Length Of Deprivation In Infants Affects Intellectual Development For Years - Medical News Today 20/05/06

Following the fall of the Ceau_escu regime in Romania, the world became aware of the dreadful plight of children who had been raised in profound deprivation in institutions. In response, many American and European families adopted these children. When these children left their institutions, most were severely malnourished and severely physically and psychologically delayed. Now a new study published in the May/June issue of the journal Child Development finds that despite having spent at least seven-and-a-half years in their adoptive homes and having had six years of schooling, the early experiences of profound institutional deprivation continue to exert marked adverse effects on the children's IQ even at age 11.


Some Maternal Stress May Enhance Fetal Maturation - Medical News Today 20/05/06

Contrary to popular belief, mild to moderate levels of maternal psychological stress during pregnancy may actually enhance fetal maturation, according to researchers from the Johns Hopkins University and the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development. The findings are contrary to expectations, generated primarily by animal studies, which have reported that stress during pregnancy interferes with normal development. The Hopkins study found that the opposite was true in a study of pregnant women and during a follow-up of their 2-year-old children. The study is published in the May/June 2006 edition of the journal Child Development.


Broccoli, Cauliflower And Genetic Cancer - Medical News Today 20/05/06

Need another reason to eat vegetables? A new study at Rutgers shows that certain vegetables - broccoli and cauliflower, in particular - have natural ingredients that may reduce the risk of developing hereditary cancers.


Autism Topic Of Upcoming Conference For Families, Professionals - Medical News Today 20/05/06

The daily transitions most of us negotiate with ease are particularly difficult for individuals with autism spectrum disorders (ASD). Parents and professionals play an important role in helping individuals with ASD make these transitions, whether they are working with children newly diagnosed with ASD, or advising the parents of young adults moving into independent living and work environments.


The Brain's Executive Is An 'event Planner' - Medical News Today 20/05/06

Studies in which monkeys were asked to manipulate computer cursors for fruit juice rewards have revealed that the brain's "executive" center plans behaviors not by specifying movements required for given actions, but rather the events that will result from those actions.


Environmental Tobacco Smoke Linked To Allergic Rhinitis,hay Fever, In Infants - Medical News Today 19/05/06

University of Cincinnati (UC) epidemiologists say it's environmental tobacco smoke--not the suspected visible mold--that drastically increases an infant's risk for developing allergic rhinitis by age 1.


Newly Discovered Protein, MCPIP, Could Hold Key To Preventing Heart Disease - Medical News Today 19/05/06

A newly discovered gene known as MCPIP could provide scientists with the key to developing treatments for preventing inflammation that can cause heart disease, University of Central Florida researchers have discovered.


Industry-Sponsored Research Produces More Favorable Results For Experimental Treatments, Study Finds - Medical News Today 19/05/06

Industry-sponsored medical research generated results favorable to experimental heart drugs or medical devices two-thirds of the time, according to a study published Wednesday in the Journal of the American Medical Association, Bloomberg/Arizona Daily Star reports. For the study, researchers from Harvard Medical School examined 324 comparison studies of cardiovascular treatments published between Jan. 1, 2000, and July 30, 2005, in JAMA, the New England Journal of Medicine and the Lancet. In trials funded by not-for-profit sources, 49% were favorable to new products, and studies that combined funding produced favorable results 57% of the time. Researchers found that tests of cardiovascular devices supported the experimental treatments 82% of the time when funded by for-profit companies, 50% when funded by not-for-profits and 69% of the time when funded jointly. For drugs, industry-funded research produced favorable results 66% of the time, 40% of the time in not-for-profit studies, and 54% when funded jointly. According to Bloomberg/Daily Star, the findings "are the latest to indicate funding bias in medical journal articles" (Bloomberg/Arizona Daily Star, 5/17). An abstract of the study is available online.


UC Davis Researchers Reveal Apples' Protective Ways - Molecular Mechanism Of Flavonoid-rich Fruit Discovered - Medical News Today 19/05/06

Doctors have long been encouraging Americans to add more fruits and vegetables to their daily diets. Now, UC Davis researchers have discovered one way in which flavonoid-rich apples inhibit the kinds of cellular activity that leads to the development of chronic diseases, including heart disease and age-related cancers.


'Pinball Protons' Created By Ultraviolet Rays And Other Causes Can Lead To DNA Damage - Medical News Today 19/05/06

Researchers have known for years that damaged DNA can lead to human diseases such as cancer, but how damage occurs--and what causes it--has remained less clear.


New Vaccines To Prevent Cervical Cancer- A Web-based News Conference, Tuesday, May 23, From 1 To 2 Pm EDT - Medical News Today 19/05/06

The National Network for Immunization Information and the University of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston will co-host a telebriefing about genital human papillomavirus infections and the HPV vaccines, expected to be approved by the FDA soon. Certain HPVs cause cervical as well as other cancers. Reporters may participate in the teleconference from their office or home computers and either email or phone their questions to experts. Experts on all aspects of the vaccine, including one of the inventors, will be available for Q&A.


Do Holes In The Heart Lead To Stroke? More Data Needed - Medical News Today 19/05/06

Broad interpretations exist on data related to patent foramen ovales (PFOs) and whether they cause stroke, writes a physician in the May issue of Mayo Clinic Proceedings. Lacking, he says, are good estimates of overall risks or variables that could affect prognosis.


Johns Hopkins University To Launch Global Health Center To Fight HIV/AIDS, Malaria, Other Diseases - Medical News Today 19/05/06

Johns Hopkins University on Monday announced plans to launch a new Center for Global Health, which will coordinate efforts to fight diseases such as HIV/AIDS, malaria, avian flu and heart disease, the Baltimore Sun reports (Kohn, Baltimore Sun, 5/15). The Center for Global Health will integrate the work of the university's medical school, nursing school and the Bloomberg School of Public Health (JHU release, 5/15). Thomas Quinn -- an infectious disease expert who has been studying HIV/AIDS in Africa, Asia and Latin America for 20 years -- will lead the center.


Polycystic Kidney Disease: MRI Provides An Early Alert To Progression - Medical News Today 19/05/06

A new method using magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) accurately tracks structural changes that predict functional changes earlier than standard blood and urine tests in people with autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease (PKD), according to a study funded by the National Institutes of Health (NIH). PKD is a common inherited condition characterized by cysts that grossly distort the kidneys and liver and by high blood pressure and brain aneurysms (bulges in arteries). Findings are in the May 18 issue of the New England Journal of Medicine.


Newborn Hearing Screening Programs May Benefit From The Standardization Of Testing Protocols - Medical News Today 19/05/06

Researchers have identified several changes that could be made to existing newborn screening tests for hearing defects that could advance the standard of care in detecting deaf infants, according to an article in the New England Journal of Medicine.


Drug And Alcohol Addiction Treatment Should Take Front Seat, Australian Medical Association - Medical News Today 19/05/06

The treatment of people with drug and alcohol problems should not take a back seat to the enforcement of anti-drug laws, AMA President, Dr Mukesh Haikerwal, said today.


FDA Statement On Preliminary Bausch & Lomb Inspection Findings - Medical News Today 19/05/06

Yesterday, the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) issued Bausch & Lomb a report detailing its observations at the conclusion of the inspection of the Greenville, SC plant and a related facility as part of an investigation into a recent increase in Fusarium keratitis infections associated with contact lens wearers using the ReNu with MoistureLoc contact lens cleaning solution. Inspectional Observations (FDA 483) issued by the agency details the investigator's observations that were found to deviate from FDA quality system regulation.


Vioxx Starts Adversely Affecting Patients After 4 Months, Not 18 Months - Medical News Today 19/05/06

Merck had initially claimed that Vioxx begins to have adverse effects on the cardiovascular system after 18 months' use, but data the company submitted to the FDA last week shows this starts to happen after just 4 months, according to the Wall Street Journal.


2% Of Teens Wet The Bed At Night - Medical News Today 19/05/06

One in 50 teenagers still wet the bed and almost half of 19 year-olds who have a problem are wetting the bed every night, according to research published in the May issue of the urology journal BJUI International.


How Did Seven Family Members Get Infected With Bird Flu? - Medical News Today 19/05/06

We still don't know how seven members of the same family in Indonesia became infected with the H5N1 bird flu virus strain. Six of them have died. It is vital to know whether some of them infected each other. If they did, this would mean that the virus might be changing.


FDA Advisory Committee Recommends Cervical Cancer Vaccine - Medical News Today 19/05/06

The FDA Advisory Committee unanimously recommended that Gardasil, a vaccine that protects women against 70% of cervical cancers, should be approved. The FDA usually goes along with what the Advisory Committee recommends. The vote, in favour, was 13-0. The FDA is expected to make a final decision regarding approval on June 8.


‘Royalty Free Medical' Image Collection - Medical News Today 19/05/06

The world's leading niche stock photo agency specializing in biotech, medicine, science and healthcare imagery, Custom Medical Stock Photo announces the launch of a new collection of ROYALTY FREE stock images called “Royalty Free Medical.”


DMAA Initiative Produces First Definition Of Obesity With Co-Morbidities - Medical News Today 19/05/06

A new definition of obesity with co-morbid conditions--the first of its kind in the disease management community--provides the foundation for a developing Disease Management Association of America (DMAA) project that responds to the increasing prevalence of overweight and obesity in America.


Witnessing Intimate Partner Violence As Children Does Not Increase Risk Of Victimization As Adults - Medical News Today 19/05/06

There has been some evidence that witnessing Intimate Partner Violence (IPV) as a child might make someone more likely to be victimized as an adult. In a paper presented at the 2006 Society for Academic Emergency Medicine Annual Meeting, May 18-21, 2006 in San Francisco, researchers reported on the results of testing this hypothesis.

Vegan diet lowers odds of having twins - Reuters 21/05/06

Women who eat a vegan diet -- a strict vegetarian diet that excludes all animal products including milk -- are one-fifth as likely as other women to have twins, a U.S. researcher reported on Saturday.


Benadryl edges Clarinex for hay fever - Reuters 20/05/06

Diphenhydramine hydrochloride -- more familiarly known as Benadryl -- appears to be more effective than desloratadine, a.k.a. Clarinex, in relieving symptoms of moderate to severe hay fever, according to researchers.


WHO backs dual antiviral therapy for some bird flu cases - Reuters 20/05/06

Bird flu patients should receive Tamiflu as a frontline treatment, but doctors may also consider combining it with an older class of effective flu drugs, the World Health Organization (WHO) said on Friday.


Light shed on fatigue after breast cancer - Reuters 20/05/06

Breast cancer survivors often suffer from persistent fatigue, and now researchers think they may have a handle on what causes it.


Benzene found in some soft drinks, FDA says - Reuters 20/05/06

Government testing found the cancer-causing chemical benzene in some soft drinks but not at high enough levels to cause harm, U.S. regulators said on Friday.

High Benzene Levels Found In Some Soft Drinks - Medical News Today 20/05/06


Statins may help people with low cholesterol: trial - Reuters 20/05/06

Cholesterol-reducing statin drugs such as Lipitor and Zocor could benefit patients with a certain type of heart disease even if they don't have high cholesterol, according to newly analyzed data from a previously reported trial.


Ablation better than drugs for arrhythmia: trial - Reuters 20/05/06

A technique to treat irregular heart beats using a method known as ablation was substantially more effective than anti-arrhythmic drugs in a clinical trial.


J&J drug for Crohn's disease approved - Reuters 19/05/06

U.S. regulators approved wider use of Johnson & Johnson's drug Remicade on Friday but also said a new warning was being added about reports of an often-fatal lymphoma in a small number of users.


CDC report supports Bausch & Lomb recall - Reuters 19/05/06

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention issued a report on Friday that backed Bausch & Lomb Inc.'s decision to recall its ReNu with MoistureLoc contact lens solution, which has been linked to cases of a serious eye infection.


G8 leaders urged to take lead in TB battle - Reuters 19/05/06

Leaders of the G8 group of rich countries should take the lead and fill a funding gap in the global battle against tuberculosis, a World Health Organization (WHO) official said on Friday.


Migraine drug eases severe face pain - Reuters 19/05/06

One of the severest pains that can be experienced is trigeminal neuralgia, affecting nerves in the face, and few medications relieve the condition. Now, for people with treatment-resistant trigeminal neuralgia, a migraine medicine may provide some relief.


Few young cancer survivors get best follow-up - Reuters 19/05/06

Many survivors of childhood cancer are not getting the optimal follow-up care recommended for detecting the long-term consequences of cancer treatment, according to a study of Canadian patients.


Cheshire and Merseyside News

Centre 'to halve waiting times' - Warrington Guardian 20/05/06

A 10 MILLION state-of-the-art NHS orthopaedic treatment centre opening soon in Runcorn will halve waiting times.


Speak out - Warrington Guardian 20/05/06

RADICAL plans to close five wards at Halton Hospital and transfer acute medical services to Warrington are available for public consultation.


City hospitals in walk-out threat - Liverpool Echo 19/05/06

HOSPITALS in Merseyside could grind to a halt within three weeks if workers decide to strike over pay.


Ward to close in hospital shake-up - Chester Chronicle 19/05/06

CUTBACKS at the Countess of Chester Hospital have started to bite with the announcement of bed reductions and a ward closure.


Research the best way forward - Chester Chronicle 19/05/06

CHESHIRE County Council's Adult and Older People Social Care Services have signed up to a research organisation whose findings can help the way care is delivered to vulnerable people.


Report highlights rise in homelessness - Chester Chronicle 19/05/06

CHESTER district is facing a 25 per cent increase in homeless-ness, according to a report to city councillors.


European ruling will not 'open floodgates' - Chester Chronicle 19/05/06

A HEALTH watchdog believes a European decision allowing patients to be refunded for treatment abroad is not in the best interests of the NHS.


Caring for the carers is aim of the Trust - Chester Chronicle 19/05/06

A CHESTER woman was given the royal seal of approval when The Princess Royal attended Cheshire Carers Centre day at Tarporley's Portal Golf Club.


Shop sold diet pills to children
- Southport Visiter 19/05/06

A MOTHER is furious that her 13-year-old daughter was sold diet pills.


NHS shake-up to go ahead - Southport Visiter 19/05/06

SOUTHPORT and Formby and South Sefton Primary Care Trusts are being scrapped and replaced with a single Trust which will cover the whole of Sefton.


Festival promotes equality - Southport Visiter 19/05/06

MERSEYSIDE will host a range of activities next month when the North West celebrates equality and diversity.


NHS Direct may be axed - Southport Visiter 19/05/06

SOUTHPORT'S NHS Direct call centre could be axed.

NHS call centre staff are sacrificed with cuts - Chester Chronicle 19/05/06


Distress over ward closure - Southport Visiter 19/05/06

PATIENTS have spoken of their distress at the closure of the Bob Martin Ward for mental health patients.


Community drug centre opens its doors - Runcorn World 19/05/06

DRUG awareness events are being held across Halton this Tuesday.


Mum's bid to help Holly reach her full potential - Middlewich Guradian 19/05/06

THE mum of a Middlewich girl battling a complex form of epilepsy has spoken of her daughter's educational struggles in the hope of helping other sufferers.


Cumbria and Lancashire News

Miracle for horse kick mum - Carlisle News & Star 20/05/06

CLAIRE Halliday gently cradles the baby son she feared she may never see.


NHS Dentists: One check up a year claim - Carlisle News & Star 19/05/06

New NHS dental contracts provide for no more than one check up a year for each patient, the Liberal Democrats said today.


Escape From Health Merger Excellent - Lancashire Evening Telegraph 19/05/06

THE boss of an East Lancashire health authority says its escape from controversial merger plans is "excellent news".


Laura Is Regions Top Drug Worker - Lancashire Evening Telegraph 19/05/06

A BURNLEY mum-of-two who works to tackle drugs and alcohol misuse was today named as the best in the North West.


Nurses Shunt After Drinks - Blackburn Citizen 19/05/06

A 56-year-old nurse crashed into a neighbour's van and shunted it into his BMW as she returned from the shops.


View Plans For Health Centre - Chorley Citizen 17/05/06

Plans for a new health centre next to Friday Street, Chorley, are to go on view to patients and members of the public from 3pm-7pm on Wednesday, June 7.


Greater Manchester News

Hospital misses A&E waiting times target - Bolton Evening News 20/05/06

WAITING times at the Royal Bolton Hospital's Accident and Emergency department are among the worst in the country, according to new figures.


Children will go on the scales at school - Bolton Evening News 20/05/06

CHILDREN are to be weighed in a bid to tackle obesity in Bolton under plans announced by health bosses.


New bid to put fluoride into our water - Manchester Evening News 20/05/06

HEALTH chiefs have ordered United Utilities to work out the cost of adding fluoride to tap water in Greater Manchester.


Dentist is 'forced into going private' - Manchester Evening News 20/05/06

A DENTIST whose NHS clinic opened to huge queues in a glare of publicity claims a lack of funding has forced him to turn private after just five months.


Our baby died after hospital delays - Manchester Evening News 19/05/06

SHOCKING medical notes reveal how an unborn baby died and her twin suffered multiple organ failure.


Downing Street Mums Breastfeed Shock - Prestwich and Whitefield Guide 19/05/06

THIS was the moment Stella Onions was asked to stop breastfeeding her son by an armed policeman as she sat on the Prime Minister's doorstep.


Memorial Stone For Former Patients - Prestwich and Whitefield Guide 19/05/06

FORMER patients of Prestwich Hospital can finally be laid to rest on Sunday with the installation of a memorial stone.

Friday, May 19, 2006

Contents

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International News
Cheshire and Merseyside News
Cumbria and Lancashire News



National News


Overspending on new hospitals lifts bill by £3.5 billion - The Times 19/05/06

A NEW generation of hospitals will overshoot its original budget by at least £3.5 billion because of unrealistic planning and expensive delays, The Times has learnt.





Grandmother dies after scratch from gorse on dog walk - The Telegraph 19/05/06

A dog walker who was believed to have scratched her arm on a gorse bush died less than two weeks later from the flesh-eating bacterium necrotising fasciitis.





New fears over vCJD - The Telegraph 19/05/06

The human form of BSE could affect more people than originally feared after scientists discovered a second genetic group was prone to the condition.





Junk food banned in school meals - BBC Health News 18/05/06

School dinners in England will be free from chocolate, crisps, fizzy drinks and "low-quality" meat from the autumn, the government has announced.





'Super hospital' failure slammed - BBC Health News 19/05/06

A "super hospital" PFI project, which ran up £15m costs before being abandoned, has been criticised by the National Audit Office (NAO).





Hope over 'new generation' drugs -BBC Health News 18/05/06

Scientists believe they may have found a way of protecting special cancer drugs which target troublesome genes.





'Targets' triggering NHS bullying - BBC Health News 18/05/06

The "target ethos" in the NHS is adding to a "survival of the fittest" culture where bullying is common, doctors leaders have warned.





Call for debate on public health - BBC Health News 18/05/06

Experts are calling for a debate about what restrictions and measures should be taken to protect public health.





Teen behaviour 'better than 1985' - BBC Health News 18/05/06

Modern teenagers are better behaved than their counterparts of 20 years ago, research suggests.





More babies for early-30s women - BBC Health News 18/05/06

Women in their early 30s are still the most likely group to have babies in England and Wales, official statistics have shown.





Rare Fatal Breathing Disorder Benefits From Teamwork, Skill And New National Funding - Medical News Today 19/05/06

Great Ormond Street Hospital for Children NHS Trust (GOSH) has recently secured long term funding for its life saving tracheal service, which treats children suffering from extremely narrow windpipes. (Long Segment Tracheal Stenosis)





International News


Bono vows to put pressure on G8 over Africa aid - Reuters 18/05/06

KIGALI (Reuters) - Rock star Bono promised on Thursday to keep up the pressure on the United States and other wealthy nations to make good on their promises of increased aid for Africa and to keep the funds rolling in.





Dating violence common among teens in US - Reuters 18/05/06

NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Nearly 1 out of 11 US high school students is subjected to physical violence from their boyfriend or girlfriend each year, the results of a nationwide survey suggest.





WHO seeks greater openness in clinical drug trials - Reuters 18/05/06

GENEVA (Reuters) - The World Health Organization (WHO) called on Friday for all clinical drug trials to be registered from the outset and to help prevent companies from hiding negative findings.





Safe sex messages in schools failing: study - Reuters 19/05/06

LONDON (Reuters) - Better strategies are needed to prevent unwanted pregnancies, HIV and other sexually transmitted diseases because safe sex messages in schools are not changing risky behavior, researchers in Mexico said on Friday.





More Americans should get flu shot: experts - Reuters 19/05/06

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is preparing its broadest and most ambitious vaccination effort yet for the coming influenza season, experts said on Thursday.





US advisers back Merck's cervical cancer vaccine - Reuters 19/05/06

GAITHERSBURG, Maryland (Reuters) - The first vaccine to protect young women and girls from a sexually transmitted virus that causes cervical cancer won unanimous support from U.S. advisers on Thursday, making approval likely next month.





New drug helps with diabetes control - Reuters 19/05/06

NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - An experimental diabetes drug, Pargluva, known generically as muraglitazar, appears to be effective in lowering blood sugar levels in people with type 2 diabetes who don't respond adequately to treatment with just the standard diabetes drug metformin, researchers report.





Isoflavones may help women after menopause - Reuters 19/05/06

NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Estrogen-like compounds derived from plants -- phytoestrogens -- seem to improve mental sharpness and mood for older women, a small study indicates.





HIV Prevalence Increases Among IDUs In Pakistan; Harm Reduction Policies Must Be Implemented, Report Says - Medical News Today 19/05/06

HIV prevalence among injection drug users in Pakistan is increasing and could reach an "alarming" rate if "harm reduction" services are not implemented across the country, according to a report released on Wednesday by the nongovernmental organization Nai Zindagi, Pakistan's Daily Times reports.





Reducing Brain Damage After Cardiac Arrest - Medical News Today 19/05/06

Much of the damage from cardiac arrest is neurological.





Should Defibrillators Be Made Available Everywhere? - Medical News Today 19/05/06

While the effectiveness of rapid defibrillation for cardiac arrest is undisputed, little is known regarding the cost-effectiveness of wide-scale implementation of public access defibrillation (PAD).





HIV-Positive Inmates In South African Prison To Receive Access To ARVs After Hunger Strike - Medical News Today 19/05/06

HIV-positive inmates at Westville Prison in Durban, South Africa, will receive identification documents required to access antiretroviral drugs after holding a hunger strike earlier this year to advocate for access to the treatment, Tebogo Motseki, correctional services chief deputy commissioner, said on Wednesday, IRIN/AllAfrica.com reports (IRIN/AllAfrica.com, 5/11).





Sharing Bad Gossip Promotes Closeness And Friendship - Medical News Today 19/05/06

An article published in the current issue of Personal Relationships finds the good in bad gossip.





Nuffield Council Seeks Views On The Ethics Of Public Health - Medical News Today 19/05/06

The Nuffield Council on Bioethics today launched a consultation on the ethical issues surrounding public health.





Is There A Risk Of Transmitting Genetic Disorders To Babies Conceived Through Fertility Procedures? - Medical News Today 19/05/06

As medical technology continues to advance, fertility procedures such as in-vitro fertilization and donor insemination are becoming more commonplace.





HIV Medicine Association Applauds Crucial HIV/AIDS Bill - Medical News Today 19/05/06

The HIV Medicine Association (HIVMA) is pleased to see a key Senate committee putting medical care first in a new bill to reauthorize the Ryan White CARE Act, the federal government's largest program for uninsured or underinsured people living with HIV/AIDS.





Healthy Human Immune System Cells Can Respond To HIV-1 - Findings Offer Hope For Vaccine Against AIDS - Medical News Today 19/05/06

AIDS patients' failure to clear HIV-1 might not be due to the inability of the human immune system to recognise the virus, as was previously thought.





Codeine May Be No Cure For Cough - Medical News Today 19/05/06

Scientists at the University of Manchester's North West Lung Centre have found that codeine - a standard ingredient in cough remedies - could be no more effective than an inactive placebo compound at treating cough.





Bob Wilson Declared SimBaby ‘alive' - Medical News Today 19/05/06

Today former football star, Bob Wilson, unveiled SimBaby, a life-like manikin which will be used to train healthcare students and professionals and stressed the importance of these facilities in saving and extending lives.





Cheshire and Merseyside News


Are we eating, drinking and smoking ourselves into an early grave? - Runcorn Weekly News 18/05/06

ALARMING statistics suggest hundreds of people in Halton could be helping themselves into an early grave.





Cumbria and Lancashire News


Hospital jobs in jeopardy - Skelmersdale Advertiser 18/05/06

ORMSKIRK & Southport Hospital Trust's chief executive has said he cannot rule out compulsory redundancies as an eventuality.





Police Waiting To Quiz Doctor - Lancashire Evening Telegraph 19/05/06

POLICE are still waiting to speak to a doctor' who treated his ex-wife's cancer using alternative therapy after he travelled to America following her death four months ago.





Oaps Miss Vital Flu Outbreak Jab - Lancashire Evening Telegraph 19/05/06

THOUSANDS of elderly people are at greater risk from a flu outbreak because they haven't had a vital jab in addition to the usual flu jab, health bosses have warned.

Thursday, May 18, 2006

Contents

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International News



National News


Doubt cast over drug trial safety - BBC Health News 17/05/06

The adverse side effects that occurred in a drug trial that hospitalised six healthy volunteers could have been predicted, experts have told the BBC.





Doctor in lover's abortion denial - BBC Health News 17/05/06

A doctor accused of trying to carry out an illegal abortion on his married lover has told the General Medical Council he did not offer a termination.





GP surgeries 'bursting at seams' - BBC Health News 17/05/06

Three-quarters of GP practices are "bursting at the seams" and will soon be unsuitable for care, a survey says.





Training reforms 'risk patients' - BBC Health News 17/05/06

Nearly two out of three doctors fear changes to medical training put patient safety at risk, a poll suggests.





Private GP deal faces court test - BBC Health News 17/05/06

A judicial review is to start into how a US health firm won the race to run GP services in Derbyshire.





Cancer concern over shop snacks - BBC Health News 18/05/06

Chocolates and bagged snacks are being taken off shop shelves after the discovery of potentially cancer-causing toxins in a batch of rice flour.





International News


Probiotic restores immune response in athletes - Reuters 18/05/06

NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Production of the natural virus-fighter, interferon, is decreased in fatigued athletes, but it can be restored to normal levels with a "probiotic" pill containing the beneficial microbe Lactobacillus acidophilus, findings from a new study indicate.





Caffeine helps preemies' breathing - Reuters 18/05/06

NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Caffeine therapy for the first few days of life helps resolve breathing difficulties in babies born prematurely, according to a report in this week's New England Journal of Medicine.





Vioxx risk seen with short-term use: report - Reuters 18/05/06

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Merck & Co. Inc. has provided new data to U.S. regulators showing that all patients who took the arthritis medicine Vioxx were at increased risk of heart attacks, strokes and other complications, National Public Radio reported on Wednesday.





70 percent of docs more worried about drug safety: survey - Reuters 18/05/06

NEW YORK (Reuters) - Seven in 10 physicians are more worried about the safety of drugs they prescribe after high-profile scares involving several medicines such as the withdrawal of arthritis pill Vioxx, a survey said on Thursday.





Cervical cancer vaccine faces review - Reuters 18/05/06

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A new vaccine to protect women and girls from a sexually transmitted virus that causes cervical cancer comes under scrutiny on Thursday when a U.S. advisory panel considers whether to back approval.





'Big brother' informs baby talk - BBC Health News 17/05/06

Every movement, gurgle and chuckle made by a newborn baby in the first three years of its life is being recorded by a scientist in the US.





NEJM Examines Brazil's Success In Preventing Spread Of HIV - Medical News Today 18/05/06

Fighting HIV - Lessons from Brazil," New England Journal of Medicine: Susan Okie, a contributing editor of NEJM, examines the factors that have contributed to Brazil's success in slowing the spread of HIV/AIDS in the country.





U.N. Urges Lawmakers Worldwide To Strengthen Policies On Caring For Children Affected By HIV/AIDS - Medical News Today 18/05/06

U.N. officials on Wednesday urged lawmakers worldwide to strengthen their policies on caring for children affected by HIV/AIDS, Xinhua/ANDNetwork.com reports.





Mild Asthmatics Should Take Medication On A Regular Basis - Medical News Today 18/05/06

Mild asthmatics should take preventer medication on a regular basis, rather than take it intermittently when their symptoms worsen, a new Australian study has found.





Manchester Plays Host To International Genetics Network - Medical News Today 18/05/06

Manchester is hosting an international conference on genetic counselling, with 75 delegates from professional organizations, universities and clinics all over the world, including countries such as France, Italy, India, Japan, Australia, South Africa, Canada, Cuba and the US.





Malaria Study Goes To The Desert - Medical News Today 18/05/06

Scientists studying malaria-carrying mosquitoes and the effects of the disease on people are about to undertake a unique experiment in West Africa.





Acetaminophen Safe To Use After Heart Attack But Doesn't Protect The Heart - Medical News Today 18/05/06

Acetaminophen is safe to use as a pain reliever and fever reducer after a heart attack, but it does not protect the heart muscle, a new study using sheep and rabbits concluded.





No Evidence Of 'Iraq War Syndrome', The Lancet - Medical News Today 18/05/06

UK researchers have found no evidence for a new Iraq War syndrome in male armed forces personnel deployed to the 2003 conflict.

Wednesday, May 17, 2006

Contents

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National News


Brain to blame for food cravings - the Daily Mail 17/05/06

Scientists have discovered why some people cannot resist rushing out to the shops after watching food adverts on TV. They have a particular kind of brain, shared with drug addicts, that makes it impossible for them to ignore mouth-watering images of chocolate cake or ice cream.





Alert over contact lens solution - BBC News 17/05/06

A commonly used contact lens solution has been withdrawn from sale amid concerns linking it to eye infections.





DVT flying risk 'in doubt' - the Daily Mail 17/05/06

Reduced air pressure and oxygen levels experienced on long-haul flights do not increase the risk of deep vein thrombosis (DVT), a study suggests. Researchers who simulated air travel found the risk of blood clots in the legs was chiefly caused by sitting down for too long.





Stress may be good for the unborn - BBC News 17/05/06

Moderate stress during pregnancy does not harm the unborn child but can instead aid its later advancement, US research suggests.





Snorers breathing easy with high-tech pillow - the Daily Mail 16/05/06

A high-tech pillow that pumps air into the mouth is the latest treatment for sleep apnoea, the dangerous snoring condition that affects three million people in Britain. The foam pillow is a miniature version of the equipment used in sleep clinics. Called BreatheX, the battery-powered device resembles an inflatable travel pillow. But it contains a tiny computer-powered motor that pumps pressurised air through a tube and into the mouth.





NHS Direct cuts jobs to salvage £15million - the Daily Mail 16/05/06

NHS Direct is cutting hundreds of jobs and closing 12 call centres to try and balance its books. The nurse-led telephone helpline, which provides a 24-hour advice service to patients across England needs to save £15million.





Is this the cure for ME? - the Daily Mail 16/05/06

A drug used to treat herpes infections has produced a dramatic improvement in patients severely affected by ME, or fatigue syndrome. Sufferers who for years had been unable to leave their homes now report being able to resume normal life.





Confusing food labels banned by EU - the Daily Mail 16/05/06

Food manufacturers are to be forced to introduce clearer branding on products following a new EU law banning misleading claims on labels. Under the new guidelines, food health claims must be checked by the European Food Safety Authority within five months before being sold.





Can the right diet prevent breast cancer? - the Daily Mail 16/05/06

The spectre of breast cancer strikes fear into women all over the world - and in Britain rates are staggeringly high. One in nine women is likely to develop the disease and, though survival rates are improving and scientists continue to develop drugs to prolong life, women in Britain die from it every year.





'Tomatoes are lifesavers' - the Daily Mail 16/05/06

Scientists have found a substance in tomatoes that can help prevent heart attacks and strokes. It works by helping to stop blood becoming sticky and forming clots that can cause potentially blockages in arteries and veins.





More jobs go with health cuts - The Times 17/05/06

A FRESH round of NHS redundancies was signalled yesterday as the number of Primary Care Trusts (PCT) was cut by half and NHS Direct, the 24-hour telephone service, announced sweeping changes.





More jobs go with health cuts - The Times 17/05/06

A FRESH round of NHS redundancies was signalled yesterday as the number of Primary Care Trusts (PCT) was cut by half and NHS Direct, the 24-hour telephone service, announced sweeping changes.





You can get quick surgery abroad - and charge the NHS, court rules - The Times 17/05/06

PATIENTS who are forced to wait longer than doctors would advise for NHS treatment can travel abroad for care and reclaim the cost after a landmark court ruling.





International News


Acidity In The Brain Could Hold The Key To Stroke Treatment - Medical News Today 17/05/06

Development of a new technique for detecting brain damage caused by stroke has been boosted up by a £1m grant to scientists at The University of Manchester. Professor Gareth Morris of the School of Chemistry and Professor Risto Kauppinen of the University of Birmingham are to lead the development of a new non-invasive technique which measures acidity (pH) in the brain.





Combining Work And Motherhood Is Good For Women's Health - Medical News Today 17/05/06

Holding down a job and being a mum in a steady relationship helps keep women healthy and in good shape over the long term, suggests research in the Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health.





Smell Of Success For Nanobiosensors - Medical News Today 17/05/06

Modern-day doctors may soon start using smell to detect the early warning signs of different illnesses thanks to technology that replicates - and improves upon - the human olfactory system thanks to tiny bioelectronic sensors.





Breast-feeding curbs obesity in at-risk kids - Reuters 17/05/06

NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Women who develop diabetes during pregnancy are liable to have large babies, which in turn can lead to obesity in childhood -- but that chain of events may be interrupted if the mother breast-feeds, researchers report.





Heart disease risk factors may bring on menopause - Reuters 17/05/06

NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Women with more risk factors for cardiovascular disease tend to enter menopause earlier than women without cardiovascular risk factors, according to an analysis of data from the Framingham Heart Study.





Cheshire and Merseyside News


Giant new ambulance service 'will be faster' - Daily Post 17/05/06

A SINGLE ambulance service stretching from Crewe to Carlisle will allow paramedics to reach emergencies even faster, the Government pledged yesterday.





Cumbria and Lancashire News


Booze Patients Take Up 4 500 Beds - Lancashire Evening Telegraph 17/05/06

MORE than 4,500 hospital beds are being taken up by drunks every year in East Lancashire, shock figures show. Alcohol-related overnight admissions in A&E and habitual drinkers who have damaged their bodies through years of boozing are using vital resources, according to the findings.





Mercy Crews Concerned At Planned Change - Lancashire Evening Telegraph 17/05/06

PARAMEDICS have "very serious concerns" about plans to move serious emergency cases to Blackburn, Burnley MP Kitty Ussher told a public meeting in her town last night.





NHS call centre jobs are axed - Lancashire Evening Post 16/05/06

Shock plans have been unveiled to axe two Lancashire NHS Direct call centres, which could see 176 jobs lost. Health bosses have announced plans to close 12 centres nationally with the loss of 800 jobs, a move which would see staff in Preston and Chorley made redundant.





Greater Manchester News


City leads the way in tackling abuse - Manchester Evening News 16/05/06

MANCHESTER is leading the way in drawing together agencies that deal with sexual abuse of both children and adults. St Mary's Hospital has been dealing with adult abuse - and acute cases of child abuse - since 1986, but in February this year a new Children's Sexual Assault Referral Centre was opened.

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National News


Brain to blame for food cravings - the Daily Mail 17/05/06

Scientists have discovered why some people cannot resist rushing out to the shops after watching food adverts on TV. They have a particular kind of brain, shared with drug addicts, that makes it impossible for them to ignore mouth-watering images of chocolate cake or ice cream.





Alert over contact lens solution - BBC News 17/05/06

A commonly used contact lens solution has been withdrawn from sale amid concerns linking it to eye infections.





DVT flying risk 'in doubt' - the Daily Mail 17/05/06

Reduced air pressure and oxygen levels experienced on long-haul flights do not increase the risk of deep vein thrombosis (DVT), a study suggests. Researchers who simulated air travel found the risk of blood clots in the legs was chiefly caused by sitting down for too long.





Stress may be good for the unborn - BBC News 17/05/06

Moderate stress during pregnancy does not harm the unborn child but can instead aid its later advancement, US research suggests.





Snorers breathing easy with high-tech pillow - the Daily Mail 16/05/06

A high-tech pillow that pumps air into the mouth is the latest treatment for sleep apnoea, the dangerous snoring condition that affects three million people in Britain. The foam pillow is a miniature version of the equipment used in sleep clinics. Called BreatheX, the battery-powered device resembles an inflatable travel pillow. But it contains a tiny computer-powered motor that pumps pressurised air through a tube and into the mouth.





NHS Direct cuts jobs to salvage £15million - the Daily Mail 16/05/06

NHS Direct is cutting hundreds of jobs and closing 12 call centres to try and balance its books. The nurse-led telephone helpline, which provides a 24-hour advice service to patients across England needs to save £15million.





Is this the cure for ME? - the Daily Mail 16/05/06

A drug used to treat herpes infections has produced a dramatic improvement in patients severely affected by ME, or fatigue syndrome. Sufferers who for years had been unable to leave their homes now report being able to resume normal life.





Confusing food labels banned by EU - the Daily Mail 16/05/06

Food manufacturers are to be forced to introduce clearer branding on products following a new EU law banning misleading claims on labels. Under the new guidelines, food health claims must be checked by the European Food Safety Authority within five months before being sold.





Can the right diet prevent breast cancer? - the Daily Mail 16/05/06

The spectre of breast cancer strikes fear into women all over the world - and in Britain rates are staggeringly high. One in nine women is likely to develop the disease and, though survival rates are improving and scientists continue to develop drugs to prolong life, women in Britain die from it every year.





'Tomatoes are lifesavers' - the Daily Mail 16/05/06

Scientists have found a substance in tomatoes that can help prevent heart attacks and strokes. It works by helping to stop blood becoming sticky and forming clots that can cause potentially blockages in arteries and veins.





More jobs go with health cuts - The Times 17/05/06

A FRESH round of NHS redundancies was signalled yesterday as the number of Primary Care Trusts (PCT) was cut by half and NHS Direct, the 24-hour telephone service, announced sweeping changes.





More jobs go with health cuts - The Times 17/05/06

A FRESH round of NHS redundancies was signalled yesterday as the number of Primary Care Trusts (PCT) was cut by half and NHS Direct, the 24-hour telephone service, announced sweeping changes.





You can get quick surgery abroad - and charge the NHS, court rules - The Times 17/05/06

PATIENTS who are forced to wait longer than doctors would advise for NHS treatment can travel abroad for care and reclaim the cost after a landmark court ruling.





International News


Acidity In The Brain Could Hold The Key To Stroke Treatment - Medical News Today 17/05/06

Development of a new technique for detecting brain damage caused by stroke has been boosted up by a £1m grant to scientists at The University of Manchester. Professor Gareth Morris of the School of Chemistry and Professor Risto Kauppinen of the University of Birmingham are to lead the development of a new non-invasive technique which measures acidity (pH) in the brain.





Combining Work And Motherhood Is Good For Women's Health - Medical News Today 17/05/06

Holding down a job and being a mum in a steady relationship helps keep women healthy and in good shape over the long term, suggests research in the Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health.





Smell Of Success For Nanobiosensors - Medical News Today 17/05/06

Modern-day doctors may soon start using smell to detect the early warning signs of different illnesses thanks to technology that replicates - and improves upon - the human olfactory system thanks to tiny bioelectronic sensors.





Breast-feeding curbs obesity in at-risk kids - Reuters 17/05/06

NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Women who develop diabetes during pregnancy are liable to have large babies, which in turn can lead to obesity in childhood -- but that chain of events may be interrupted if the mother breast-feeds, researchers report.





Heart disease risk factors may bring on menopause - Reuters 17/05/06

NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Women with more risk factors for cardiovascular disease tend to enter menopause earlier than women without cardiovascular risk factors, according to an analysis of data from the Framingham Heart Study.





Cheshire and Merseyside News


Giant new ambulance service 'will be faster' - Daily Post 17/05/06

A SINGLE ambulance service stretching from Crewe to Carlisle will allow paramedics to reach emergencies even faster, the Government pledged yesterday.





Cumbria and Lancashire News


Booze Patients Take Up 4 500 Beds - Lancashire Evening Telegraph 17/05/06

MORE than 4,500 hospital beds are being taken up by drunks every year in East Lancashire, shock figures show. Alcohol-related overnight admissions in A&E and habitual drinkers who have damaged their bodies through years of boozing are using vital resources, according to the findings.





Mercy Crews Concerned At Planned Change - Lancashire Evening Telegraph 17/05/06

PARAMEDICS have "very serious concerns" about plans to move serious emergency cases to Blackburn, Burnley MP Kitty Ussher told a public meeting in her town last night.





NHS call centre jobs are axed - Lancashire Evening Post 16/05/06

Shock plans have been unveiled to axe two Lancashire NHS Direct call centres, which could see 176 jobs lost. Health bosses have announced plans to close 12 centres nationally with the loss of 800 jobs, a move which would see staff in Preston and Chorley made redundant.





Greater Manchester News


City leads the way in tackling abuse - Manchester Evening News 16/05/06

MANCHESTER is leading the way in drawing together agencies that deal with sexual abuse of both children and adults. St Mary's Hospital has been dealing with adult abuse - and acute cases of child abuse - since 1986, but in February this year a new Children's Sexual Assault Referral Centre was opened.

Tuesday, May 16, 2006

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National News


Skin cancer deaths soar as men spurn doctor - the Daily Mail 16/05/06

The number of men dying of skin cancer has soared. And the rise could be largely down to their reluctance to go to the doctor. Fatalities have risen by a third in ten years. The disease now claims more male victims than female, even though more women are diagnosed. But doctors say men may only have themselves to blame.





EU: NHS must pay for treatment abroad - the Daily Mail 16/05/06

NHS patients facing an 'undue delay' in getting treatment should be reimbursed for getting the operation done elsewhere in the European Union, the European Court of Justice in Luxembourg ruled today

NHS waits for EU treatment ruling - BBC News 16/05/06





Count your chocolate gifts, nurses told - the Daily Mail 16/05/06

A debt-ridden hospital trust which is about to axe 300 jobs has ordered nurses to count how many gifts they receive from patients.

Sweet count NHS trust criticised - BBC News 15/05/06

Chocolates are the latest measure of satisfaction with the NHS - The Times 16/05/06





Help for troops suffering psychiatric problems from war - Independent 16/05/06

Reservists from the armed forces suffering from psychiatric problems after serving in Iraq and Afghanistan are to be offered official medical help, the Government announced in a major policy shift yesterday.

Army reservists offered more help - BBC News 16/05/06





Trust criticised over HIV warning - BBC News 15/05/06

Health leaders in Cornwall are being accused of generating panic after revealing a number of HIV cases in seaside resort St Ives.





Mothers demand breastfeeding law - BBC News 15/05/06

Mothers are demanding a law is introduced allowing women throughout the UK to breastfeed in public.





Deaths 'show malaria drug need' - BBC News 15/05/06

Britons travelling to exotic locations are being warned of the risks of contracting potentially fatal malaria by health experts.





Body parts shows to need licences - BBC News 15/05/06

Shows like the controversial Bodies Exhibition which put human tissue on display will have to be licensed from this autumn, regulators have said.





Ex-health boss justifies new firm - BBC News 15/05/06

A former health chief accused of defrauding the NHS out of £250,000 has defended his decision to set up a company recruiting overseas nurses.





Hospital trust 'spending to save' - BBC News 15/05/06

An NHS trust which is axing hundreds of jobs in a bid to save £25m is spending £100,000 a month on advisers telling it how to save the cash, it has emerged.





Chemists 'quicker to supply pill' - BBC News 15/05/06

It takes young women less than half as long to get the morning-after pill from a pharmacy than a family planning clinic, a survey claims.





Doctors warn on coroners reforms - BBC News 15/05/06

Reforms to the coroners' system in England and Wales cannot succeed without a major increase in resources, says the British Medical Association.





Mothers 'let down by depression care' - the Daily Mail 15/05/06

Mothers who suffer depression during and after their child's birth are being failed by mental health services. The majority are given drugs instead of offered counselling, a leading charity has found.





Midwife cuts threaten homebirth plans - the Daily Mail 15/05/06

Women who wish to give birth at home will be given every encouragement under Government plans to shake up maternity care. Ministers want to move away from the long-held assumption that hospital is always the safest place to deliver babies.





Heart disease costs Britain billions - the Daily Mail 15/05/06

Heart disease is costing the UK economy £29billion a year and the situation looks set to get worse, researchers say. The NHS spends a fifth of its budget on treating the condition, which is more than any other EU country. Poor diet and rising obesity levels are driving the costs higher.





'Holidays for plastic surgery' firm under fire - The Guardian 16/05/06

Britain's largest provider of cosmetic surgery was yesterday attacked by leading plastic surgeons for offering patients holiday vouchers worth up to £200 and a "loyalty card" for repeat operations.

Cosmetic surgeons condemn cut-price 'beach body' operations - The Times 16/05/06





NHS Direct to close 12 call centres and axe 1,000 jobs - The Guardian 16/05/06

NHS Direct, the nurse-led health helpline, will today axe more than 1,000 staff in a comprehensive restructuring of branches and business objectives, the Guardian has learned. Proposals will be presented for consultation with staff unions to close 12 call centres across England and shed more than a quarter of the workforce to avert a forecast £15m deficit for 2006-07.





Sat-nav sends ambulance on scenic route to crash - The Times 16/05/06

AN AMBULANCE took almost two hours to take an injured girl to hospital after it was misdirected to the scene of the accident by its satellite navigation system.





International News


Why Exercise Protects Against Skin And Bowel Cancers - Medical News Today 16/05/06

Two studies have shown that exercise can protect against skin and bowel cancer, and they have identified new mechanisms that could be responsible for this effect.*





Well-functioning Lungs Reduce Risk Of Dementia - Medical News Today 16/05/06

A middle-aged woman with well-functioning lungs runs less risk of developing Alzheimer's disease. A new study carried out at the Sahlgrenska Academy in Göteborg, Sweden, shows a strong statistical correlation between lung capacity and dementia.





Study To Examine Effects Of New Dietary Supplement On Joint Injuries In College Athletes - Medical News Today 16/05/06

An ongoing clinical study designed to show the effects of a unique new product, CH-Alpha(TM), is being conducted at Penn State University. CH-Alpha(TM) is made from natural collagen, an essential building block of the body's joints.





Frogs Can Play Key Role In Stem Cell Research - Medical News Today 16/05/06

It sounds like one of those curiosities which pops up in wildlife documentaries, but the African clawed frog could prove a powerful ally for scientists working in the key area of stem cell research. Researchers at the University of Edinburgh have discovered that the distinctive species - which has become popular in recent years as a domestic pet - shares with humans the same genetic mechanism that enables embryonic stem cells to divide without limit.





Animal Model For Treating Devastating Head And Neck Cancers - Medical News Today 16/05/06

An Oregon Health & Science University Cancer Institute research laboratory has developed a novel mouse model designed specifically to study the often devastating head and neck squamous cell cancers. Xiao-Jing Wang, M.D., Ph.D., and colleagues report their research breakthrough in the May 15 issue of Genes & Development.





New Treatment For Specific Type Of Leukemia - Medical News Today 16/05/06

Leukemia - or cancer of the bone marrow - strikes some 700 Belgians each year. Chronic Eosinophilic Leukemia (CEL), a specific form of leukemia, is currently treated with Glivec. However, recent research has shown that prolonged usage can cause resistance to Glivec, rendering this chronic form of leukemia untreatable.





FDA sets strong warnings for asthma drug labels - Reuters 16/05/06

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - The U.S. Food and Drug Administration said on Monday that product labels for three popular asthma medications have been updated to state that the drugs could increase the chance of severe asthma attacks that could result in death.





UK male deaths from melanoma skin cancer rising fast - Reuters 16/05/06

LONDON (Reuters) - Male deaths in Britain from melanoma skin cancer have risen 31 percent in the past decade to more than 1,000 a year, according to figures released on Tuesday.





Cheshire and Merseyside News


Private centre will serve NHS - Daily Post 16/05/06

MERSEYSIDE and Cheshire's health service will take its biggest step yet towards privatisation when the region's first independently-run treatment centre opens next month.





Cumbria and Lancashire News


Burnley Hospital Sees Ae Cases Fastest - Lancashire Evening Telegraph 15/05/06

BURNLEY General Hospital is lifting the standard of poor A&E statistics at East Lancashire's hospitals, it has been revealed. Burnley's A&E is outperforming Black-burn's Queen's Park Hospital, figures show.





14 2m Hospital Unit Work Starts - Lancashire Evening Telegraph 15/05/06

WORK on a new £14.2million medium secure unit at a mental health hospital is under way. The project at Calderstones Hospital, Mitton Road, Whalley, marks the biggest single investment at an East Lancashire mental health hospital.




Greater Manchester News


Mothers demand right to breastfeed in public - Manchester Evening News 15/05/06

FOUR in every five mothers want UK-wide laws to protect their rights to breastfeed in public, according to a poll published today.

Monday, May 15, 2006

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National News


Hayfever symptoms will peak in May - the Daily Mail 15/05/06

Hayfever sufferers can expect their worst symptoms at exactly 6.02pm on Monday, May 29, experts claim. Number-crunching allergy specialists have created a special formula to find the time when most of the UK's 12million allergy sufferers will be sneezing and suffering runny noses and itchy eyes.





Working mothers are fighting fit - the Daily Mail 15/05/06

Working mothers stressed out by juggling office deadlines with child care and housework may be surprised to learn they are the healthiest women. They stay in better shape over the long-term while homemakers have a higher chance of obesity and ill-health, a study has found.





Britain: The sick heart of Europe - Independent 15/05/06

Heart disease, the most preventable health threat facing Britain today, is costing the economy £29bn a year.





Government to promote home births - BBC News 15/05/06

Women will be given every encouragement to give birth at home if that is their preferred option.

Home births plan welcomed - the Daily Mail 15/05/06





Sickness leave levels 'dropping' - BBC News 15/05/06

Working days lost through sickness absence are at their lowest level in 20 years, a CBI report suggests.





Fish oil 'boosts pupil performance' - the Daily Mail 14/05/06

Pupils' GCSE results improved dramatically after they were given fish oil supplements as part of a nutrition study. The 15 and 16-year-olds took capsules containing Omega-3 fish oil for 12 weeks in the critical run up to their exams last year.





Working mothers are fighting fit - the Daily Mail 15/05/06

Working mothers stressed out by juggling office deadlines with child care and housework may be surprised to learn they are the healthiest women. They stay in better shape over the long-term while homemakers have a higher chance of obesity and ill-health, a study has found.

Working Mothers Healthier Than Full-time Housewives - Medical News Today 15/05/06





Parents' 50-mile daily trek to see quads - the Daily Mail 15/05/06

With four newborn babies, Tracey Fry and Martyn Gibbs knew they would be run off their feet, but they didn't expect to cover 50 miles every day. Their quadruplets Chelsea, Ryan, Jack and Luke were delivered three months early at the Princess Anne Hospital in Southampton. Because the hospital could not provide specialist care for all four, the quads had to go their separate ways.





Health services failing depressed mothers - Guardian 15/05/06

New mothers are being failed by mental health services, according to research which claims that doctors lack knowledge of how to treat postnatal depression, and women are made to wait months to receive basic services.





UK Victims Of Rape, Especially Children, Failed By Lack Of Referral Centres And Experienced Doctors - Medical News Today 15/05/06

A study published in the latest issue of the Journal of Clinical Forensic Medicine examined the availability of Sexual Assault Referral Centres (SARCs) in the UK and compared their services with each other and with non-SARC police victim examination suites. A SARC is a model service established to address the forensic and therapeutic needs arising following sexual assault.





Hospital Inputs Shipman Death Rates To See How Fast Audit System Would Raise The Alarm - Medical News Today 15/05/06

If convicted murderer Dr Harold Shipman had been working as a surgeon or anaesthetist at a specialist UK heart hospital in Cambridge, increased patient death rates would have alerted clinical audit staff after eight to ten months, according to research in the latest issue of Anaesthesia.





International News


A Bone Of Contention In Drug-induced Osteomalacia - Medical News Today 15/05/06

Long-term therapy with some antiepileptic drugs and antibiotics can cause osteomalacia, a condition marked by softening of the bones that is usually the result of vitamin D and calcium deficiency. However, the molecular mechanism of drug-induced osteomalacia remains unclear. In a study appearing online on May 11 in advance of print publication in the June issue of the Journal of Clinical Investigation, Kenneth Thummel and colleagues from the University of Washington report that the adverse effect on bone mineral density of these drugs occurs through their activation of the steroid and xenobiotic receptor (SXR), which induces expression of the enzyme CYP3A4 that breaks down vitamin D, diminishing its beneficial effects on bone, and resulting in osteomalacia





Dysfunctional Cyp4a10 Enzyme Causes Dietary Salt-sensitive Increases In Blood Pressure - Medical News Today 15/05/06

Both the volume of water and salt content of the body can affect blood pressure. The kidneys act to filter the blood and rid our bodies of excess salt or water and in doing so play a central role in the maintenance of normal blood pressure. In a study appearing online on May 11 in advance of print publication in the June issue of the Journal of Clinical Investigation, Jorge Capdevila and colleagues from Vanderbilt University show that a dysfunctional Cyp4a10 gene causes a type of high blood pressure in mice that is, like most high blood pressure in humans, sensitive to dietary salt intake.





Help For Elderly People To Spark New Research Ideas - Medical News Today 15/05/06

By 2050, elderly people aged between 65-79 years old are expected to make up almost a third of the population - a rise of 44 per cent compared to the start of the century. As for very elderly people (80 ), their share of the total population could grow by 180 per cent over the same period.This ageing population - due to the combined effect of increasing life expectancy and falling birth rates - poses enormous economic and social challenges for society.





IL-15 Therapy Restores T Cell Production In An Animal Model Of HIV Infection - Medical News Today 15/05/06

The preferred targets of the HIV virus are effector memory T cells that constitute the CD4 T cell population in extralymphoid sites like the intestine, lung, and vaginal mucosa. HIV infection causes massive depletion of this cell population and their regeneration is inefficient, even in individuals receiving antiretroviral therapy (ART).





Infamous Proto-oncogene, C-myc, Turns Up In A New Role - Medical News Today 15/05/06

c-myc, a gene commonly involved in cancer onset, has been found to have a role in the immune system's normal function according to a study published in the journal, Blood. The surprising finding, by a Swiss research team led by investigators from the Lausanne Branch of the international Ludwig Institute for Cancer Research (LICR), showed that c-myc functions in the immune system's ‘memory' of previous infections.





MCP-1: The Missing Link Between Obesity And Insulin Resistance - Medical News Today 15/05/06

Individuals diagnosed with metabolic syndrome often have excessive fatty tissue in and around their abdomen, high cholesterol, elevated blood pressure, and an inability to utilize insulin or blood sugar (insulin resistance) - symptoms that put them at high risk of coronary heart disease and stroke. The molecular mechanisms that link obesity and insulin resistance are the subject of intense investigation and are not completely understood.





Mechanism Of Lithium Action For The Treatment Of Bipolar Disorder - Medical News Today 15/05/06

Calcium is a common intracellular signaling molecule with a wide range of functions in the brain, and the regulation as well as dysregulation of calcium signaling via the principal intracellular calcium release channel, InsP3R1, has been linked to many normal cellular processes as well as neurological diseases.





Sens. Reid, Rodham Clinton Argue Health Bill Would Decrease Women's Access To Contraceptives - Medical News Today 15/05/06

Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) and Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton (D-N.Y.) on Wednesday said a proposed health insurance bill (S 1955) could reduce women's access to contraceptives and might lead to an increase in the number of abortions in many states, the Washington Times reports (Fagan, Washington Times, 5/11).





Studies Shed New Light On Why Exercise Can Protect Against Skin And Bowel Cancers - Medical News Today 15/05/06

Two studies published today (Saturday 13 May) have shown that exercise can protect against skin and bowel cancer, and they have identified new mechanisms that could be responsible for this effect.





Unitika Confirms That L-arabinose Helps Inhibit Obesity And Diabetes - Medical News Today 15/05/06

Unitika announced on May 9 the results of its recent research on L-arabinose, a monosaccharide extracted from sugar beet. The research has found that L-arabinose demonstrates a potential to inhibit obesity and type 2 diabetes. Specifically, in a mice experiment, the company confirmed that a 19-week administration of L-arabinose prevents weight gain, reduces the rise of the fasting blood sugar level and the insulin resistance index.





Cheshire and Merseyside News


Ex-glass man's idea fights MRSA - St Helens Reporter 15/05/06

A Pilkington Glass product sparked an idea for a superspray that could combat superbug MRSA. Researchers at Salford University have developed a durable coating that not only kills bacteria but can regenerate itself to keep fighting dirt for years.





Cumbria and Lancashire News


A MOTHER is taking a drugs manufacturer to court after her two children were born with severe learning disabilities - Lancaster Guardian 15/05/06

My child had withdrawal symptoms from my epilepsy drug hours after he was born, says mum who is taking its manufacturers to court





'A&E safe' as bosses act to end rumours - Chorley Guardian 15/05/06

THE future of Chorley hospital's A&E department is secure. Health bosses say an unfounded whisper campaign about A&E services is putting staff off from coming to the town. The debate was ignited by the decision to transfer an ICU bed to Preston, but two senior medical staff have gone on the offensive to reaffirm the future of A&E.





Demand to curb coin-op tan salons - Lancashire Evening Post 15/05/06

LANCASHIRE MPs are calling for curbs on unstaffed, coin operated tanning salons amid fears that children may be putting their health at risk for the sake of a tan.




Greater Manchester News


Peers kick out right-to-die law - Manchester Evening News 15/05/06

TERMINALLY-ill patients were denied the right to end their lives when the Lords blocked right-to-die legislation at the end of an impassioned seven-hour debate.





Fish oil 'boosts pupil performance' - Manchester Evening News 15/05/06

PUPILS' GCSE results improved dramatically after they were given fish oil supplements as part of a nutrition study. The 15 and 16-year-olds took capsules containing Omega-3 fish oil for 12 weeks in the critical run up to their exams last year.





Trust in 'cash for patients' storm - Wigan Observer 15/05/06

Wigan's GPs are being offered cash incentives to send NHS patients for surgery at a private centre. Ashton Leigh and Wigan Primary Care Trust, was today blasted by both the British Medical Association and the General Medical Council, for paying doctors £30 for each patient they refer to a private treatment centre in Trafford, south Manchester.

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National News


Mental health crisis hits UK troops - The Observer 14/05/06

Iraq conflict is causing record levels of depression and post-trauma stress


The bump: a short history - The Observer 14/05/06

Sexual intercourse may have begun in 1963 but the baby bump didn't go public until decades later. Here are some recent iconic moments...

We've come a long way, baby - The Observer 14/05/06


Northern children are top TV fans - The Observer 14/05/06

Children in Northern Ireland aged eight to 15 are the biggest television addicts in the UK. Media watchdog Ofcom has found that they watch for 16 hours every week.


Two new cases in E. coli outbreak at nursery - The Observer 14/05/06

Two more children who attended a nursery in Dunfermline were found yesterday to be infected with E.coli 0157, making a total of seven affected by an outbreak of the potentially deadly bacteria, an NHS official said.


Alternative health - The Observer 14/05/06

Remedies for painful joints and mouth ulcers - and how to keep mosquitoes at bay without smelling like a chemistry experiment


Health panel: How can my mother avoid the MRSA bug? - The Observer 14/05/06

An elderly woman is about to have a hip replacement, but how can she maximise her chances of a speedy recovery? Our panel of experts offer their advice


Ruaridh Nicoll: It's easy to see one benefit of devolution - The Observer 14/05/06

The mistakes now occur with depressing regularity. A few weeks ago, it was a man I know quite well, a man I like, and I confused him with a bald, Green MSP. A Lib Dem sitting nearby gurgled with laughter

Factors that risk being left out of the equation - The Guardian 13/05/06

'Electromagnetic fields stemming from gadgets such as kettles, computers and microwaves contribute towards a cloud of unseen emissions - even when they are switched off." It's a sinister idea, and "electromagnetic hypersensitivity" is sweeping the nation, or at least the Independent and the Daily Mail last week. Symptoms include fatigue, tiredness, concentration difficulties, dizziness, nausea, heart palpitations, and digestive disturbances; and since these are real symptoms, causing genuine distress, the problem deserves to be considered seriously, and carefully.


Antidepressant linked to suicide risk in adults - The Guardian 13/05/06

Britain's bestselling antidepressant, Seroxat, can cause adults as well as children to become suicidal, according to the manufacturer, GlaxoSmithKline.

GSK admits Paxil linked to suicide bids - The Independent 13/05/06
Paxil Raises Suicide Risk For Young Adults - Medical News Today 12/05/06
US cites suicidal acts in adults on Glaxo's Paxil - Reuters 12/05/06


We love each other: David Gledhill & Tracey Wilkinson - The Guardian 13/05/06

David I was told about this eccentric woman who wore crazy clothes and had had a double lung transplant. I thought, I have to meet her. We were at her flat, getting in the mood, when she told me that people with double transplants sometimes don't live that long. I'm pretty reckless now, but I was really reckless then. We moved in within a month. People think the transplant ends worries; it just opens up another hellish room. The cystic fibrosis had completely fucked her lungs. Rejection was a big problem. She's had three bouts of serious rejections, but in the past year she's missed only one of our gigs through ill health. Most people don't know they're going to die - well, they do but they don't. We're always aware, so we enjoy the boring times, the normal. There have been some tense moments. The doctor once said to her, "There's nothing else we can do."


Oliver Robinson: Slaughterhouse blues - The Guardian 13/05/06

For poultry workers it has become a question of which comes first: H5N1 or P45s. A suspected outbreak of avian flu at a slaughterhouse in Norfolk has prompted calls for all UK poultry workers to be vaccinated. This week more than 50,000 leaflets were being delivered across a large area of Norfolk to give reassurances about bird flu.


Matt Keating: Question of the week - The Guardian 13/05/06

Chris Simmons is lucky to be alive. The computer programmer from Bristol collapsed after spending 12 hours at his computer. A few days later he started to cough up blood. An MRI scan showed he had a pulmonary embolism (PE) - a blood clot that had travelled from his leg and lodged in his lung.


Emma Mitchell: Are painful splits at the fingertip genetic? - The Guardian 13/05/06

Can you recommend a treatment for painful splits at the fingertip? My father suffered in the same way and his palms would split when he was older. Is it genetically influenced?


Seven new workouts to try - The Guardian 13/05/06

Bored with your regular yoga and Pilates classes? Maybe it's time to shape up to a different routine. Jini Reddy reports


Childbirth revolution: Mummy State - The Independent 14/05/06

More women should have babies at home, not in hospital, says Health Secretary

Home vs hospital: Where would you rather give birth to your baby? - The Independent 14/05/06


Charles tells doctors of the world to use alternative treatments - The Independent 14/05/06

Herbs and holistic remedies could replace conventional therapies, the Prince of Wales will say next week


Britain's oldest mother-to-be hits out at critics - The Independent 14/05/06

Patricia Rashbrook, who at 62 became Britain's oldest mother-to-be, last night hit out at critics of her decision to become pregnant through IVF treatment, saying the criticism was "extremely upsetting".

Let's grow up about babies - The Sunday Times 14/05/06


Study finds catalogue of failings at Britain's IVF clinics - The Independent 14/05/06

Fertility clinics are undermining women's chances of conceiving because of the stress suffered as a result of inadequate care, according to a new study.

Jeremy Laurance: When nature's weapon of mass destruction strikes - The Independent 13/05/06

For millions of Britons, the symptoms will be familiar: red, hot itchy eyes, a sore throat and a runny nose.


Fear and suspicion as St Ives awaits HIV results - The Independent 13/05/06

The crude police-style body outline daubed on the road behind the harbour is accompanied by a piece of scrawled, ungrammatical advice. "Should of worn a condom," the graffiti reads.


Church of England damns Labour on asylum and poverty - The Sunday Times 14/05/06

THE Church of England is to issue a withering attack on some of Labour’s highest- profile social policies, accusing the government of forcing asylum seekers into destitution and setting the minimum wage too low to relieve poverty.


Children ‘should sleep with parents until they’re five’ - The Sunday Times 14/05/06

ONE of Britain’s leading experts on children’s mental health has advised parents to reject years of convention and allow children to sleep in bed with them until the age of five.


Super-slimmer Winner reveals his ‘fat pig diet’ - The Sunday Times 14/05/06

HE SHED the first 16lb with a strict diet of caviar on toast and now Michael Winner, the bon vivant, is to disclose the full story of his slimming secrets.


Parents freeze umbilical cord cells for future spare part surgery - The Sunday Times 14/05/06

MORE than 11,000 British parents have paid to freeze stem cells from the umbilical cords of their newborn babies in order to grow body parts if their child becomes ill.


First baby in Britain designed cancer-free - The Times 13/05/06

A WOMAN is pregnant with Britain’s first designer baby selected to prevent an inherited cancer, The Times can reveal.


Peers wreck Bill to legalise euthanasia for terminally ill - The Times 13/05/06

PEERS refused to heed calls for a fresh debate on doctor-assisted euthanasia for the terminally ill yesterday after one of the most vociferous political lobbying campaigns in recent years.

The religious and the righteous unite in a moral crusade - The Times 13/05/06
Lords block assisted dying bill - BBC Health News 12/05/06
British parliament blocks assisted suicide law - Reuters 13/05/06


Screening will detect blindness gene in embryos - The Times 13/05/06

BELINDA PLOWMAN lost her left eye to retinoblastoma at 16 months and vowed that she would not have children who might have the disease.


Operation 21st century - The Times 13/05/06

Will the much-vaunted 6.2 billion NHS e-revolution work? Sam Lister visits the first hospital phasing it in


Dr Copperfield: inside the mind of a GP - The Times 13/05/06

According to the number- crunchers, patients who didn’t show up for their hospital outpatient appointments wasted 680 million of NHS money last year. Compared with the billions wasted by those who did show up this looks like small beer, but that’s another issue.


Flatly dangerous - The Times 13/05/06

FLAT-DWELLERS beware: you are far more likely to get injured or even poisoned than people who live in houses, according to a Welsh researcher’s study of more than 58,000 homes.


Junk medicine: altruistic donation - The Times 13/05/06

The widely reported move to allow embryo screening for genes linked to breast cancer was not the only controversial item on the agenda when the Human Fertilisation and Embryology Authority (HFEA) met in Belfast on Wednesday. The fertility regulator was also asked to consider whether women should be permitted to donate eggs purely for use in medical research.


Bliss! Hippy days are here again - The Times 13/05/06

Sixties survivor Donovan is back but this time, he tells John Naish, he really is going to change the world with transcendental meditation


Mum's having a ball - The Times 13/05/06

In this adaptation of the Cinderella story, the domestic drudge is the victim not of mean stepsisters, but of his own loving mother.


Protection factor - The Times 13/05/06

Before you reach for the sun cream, take a good look at the label, says Amber Cowan


Lunchtime fix: pedicure - The Times 13/05/06

With the weather hotting up it’s time to prepare to bare those feet. If calluses and corns are the bane of your life, a pedicure is the perfect way to turn you into a real twinkle-toes.

Bodylicious: dealing with callusses - The Times 13/05/06


Dish the dirt and clean up your act - The Times 13/05/06

Anna Shepard visits Ecover's HQ and wonders if we are we too hung up on hygiene

Working up a healthy lather - The Times 13/05/06
Green cleaners: we test them - The Times 13/05/06


Agony and ecstasy: sex advice - The Times 13/05/06

I am six months pregnant and my increasingly frustrated husband wants sex. I've heard it can harm the baby, is this true?


He's a little street fighter - The Times 13/05/06

We are worried about o