Friday, March 30, 2007

Another 15 Minutes...Health News from Fade



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National News


A class of drugs widely prescribed for people suffering from dementia is leading to the premature deaths of thousands of patients every year, according to research published today. Campaigners branded the continued use of the sedatives, called neuroleptics, a national scandal after a five-year study revealed that people with Alzheimer's disease and other forms of dementia are twice as likely to die if they are prescribed them.


Many NHS hospital staff would not be happy with the standard of care they would get if they were patients at the place they work, the government's health watchdog said today after the world's biggest survey of employee opinion. After interviewing more than 128,000 staff in NHS trusts across England, the Healthcare Commission survey found only 42% would be happy with standards at their own establishment. A quarter said they would be definitely unhappy and 34% did not have a view. The study, which showed continuing concern about lack of handwashing facilities and abuse of NHS staff, raised doubts about the effectiveness of the government's drive to create a patient-centred NHS.


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Staff wouldn't be treated at their own hospital - The Telegraph 30th March 2007


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Two in five NHS staff do not trust their own hospital - Daily Mail 30th March 2007


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NHS staff 'would not be patients' - BBC Health News 29th March 2007


A hospital has been fined £80,000 after a man who had recovered from leukemia died after contracting legionnaires' disease just days before he was due to be discharged. After months of chemotherapy, Daryl Eyles had been told he was in remission and could plan to leave hospital when he contracted legionnaires' disease from a hospital shower head and died.


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Hospital fined for Legionnaires death of patient - The Telegraph 30th March 2007


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Hospital fined over shower death - BBC Health News 29th March 2007


On April 1, much of the responsibility for the £6.2bn NHS National Programme for IT, parts of which are two years late, will pass from NHS Connecting for Health (CfH) to strategic health authorities (SHAs). The National Programme for IT local ownership programme will include the transfer of staff to SHAs from five super-regional "clusters" run by CfH as local delivery arms. According to a document released earlier this month by the North-East SHA, this might include redundancies.


I wish Marcel Berlins had been at the Lancet's launch of its report this week on adolescent health (G2, March 28). We did not conclude "that today's teenagers are the first in history to be less healthy than their parents". We did not add to the "avalanche" of negative media coverage (I hope). What our report tried to do was to present both the risks and opportunities young people face today. We argued that adolescents are an increasingly marginalised and neglected group in our society. Pilloried as a social threat by some and trivialised as in need of a good hug by others, we have stigmatised and patronised young people for too long.


Thicker and faster fall the hammer blows on Labour. Some wounds are strangely self-inflicted, but others are accidents. One hundred thousand more children falling back into poverty this week was an unexpected car crash, not just for poor families but for the politics of the moment. Here is even worse news: inequality grew again and is now back up to the level when figures were first collated (the Gini coefficient) back in 1961.


A leading cancer specialist has warned that NHS patients risk losing out on an imminent revolution in cancer treatment unless they are allowed to pay towards the cost of their care. Professor Karol Sikora, an expert in the management of cancer at Imperial College London, said at least six powerful cancer drugs would become available over the next year, costing at least £60,000 a year per patient. The "designer" cancer drugs, similar to Herceptin, are among the first to offer targeted therapy for cancers of the breast, lung, kidney and bowel.


To its supporters, a cup of green tea offers a worried world a welcome panacea. It protects the heart, cuts the risk of fatal illness, blocks cancer, boosts liver function and provides hope to Alzheimer's victims. It even helped Jade Goody slim down to a size 10. New research this week went so far as to suggest that it might one day be instrumental in the battle against HIV and Aids. But is it too good to be true?


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The head of the national crime agency has said UK's drugs strategy is "making no difference" and needs a radical new approach. Sir Stephen Lander, the chairman of the Serious and Organised Crime Agency (Soca) - described as Britain's answer to the FBI - admitted that when it comes to the fight against drugs "we are not winning so we must try something else as well".


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Five years ago Mal Sheldon became the first Labour mayor in Melton Mowbray's history. Mr Sheldon, 49, joined the Labour Party in 1994 and served on Melton Borough Council for 12 years, the last four as Labour group leader. He announced yesterday that he was defecting to the Conservatives, saying that it would be "dishonest" to campaign for Labour in May given his increasing anger at the party's record in government.


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Aircrew who endure jet lag repeatedly can suffer problems with menstrual cycles, a reduction of brain power and transient psychotic disorders, according to a review. Passengers who cross time zones less frequently are less likely to have serious problems, but they usually suffer sleep disturbance and changes in body function, a team from the Research Institute for Sport and Exercise Sciences at John Moores University in Liverpool say in The Lancet. Athletes often find that their performance is reduced after crossing multiple time zones.


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SUNDERLAND A local authority has been accused of an “outrageous abuse of power” by ordering staff to change their clothes if they want to smoke in public. The diktat has been issued by councillors in Sunderland as part of a crusade to turn the local authority into a smoke-free city.


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It is the answer to many a diner’s prayer in Britain and on the Continent: a way to eat chips and maintain a healthy heart. A new blend of cooking oil, which exploits the healthy properties of the grape seed, is being hailed by French scientists as a breakthrough in the quest for the fast-food industry’s holy grail.


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One child in 25 at secondary school in England has taken cocaine, heroin or another class A drug, according to a report commissioned by the Department of Health. The figures would mean 128,000 pupils aged 11 to 15 have been involved with the drugs.


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Fewer teens using drink and drugs - BBC Health News 29th March 2007


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GPs and consultants should have their salaries cut if they fail to achieve targets or increase productivity, an economist said yesterday. Alan Maynard, professor of health economics at York University, argued that "demerit awards" do "concentrate people's minds".


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Doctors 'should face salary cut' - BBC Health News 29th March 2007


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The senior surgeon who has presided over the system for appointing junior doctors has been reported to the General Medical Council (GMC). Prof Alan Crockard, an eminent neurosurgeon, has been the national director of the Department of Health's programme, Modernising Medical Careers (MMC) and its online application service, the Medical Training and Application Service (MTAS), since 2004.


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Having spent all day searching in vain for an NHS dentist, I listened with interest to the responsible minister on the Jeremy Vine show. I was amazed to hear her telling the nation that everything was fine and that we all had access to NHS dentistry. Does the Government know anything at all about what is going on in the country?


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Sales of a £17 Boots brand anti-ageing cream have soared by 2000 per cent following an independent study showing it reduces wrinkles. Many stores have run out of the 'No7 Protect & Perfect Serum' after the product was featured on a BBC Horizon programme on Tuesday.


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A university graduate died after doctors misdiagnosed the rare brain disease he was suffering from as a hangover, an inquest heard. Experts claimed John Mealey, 23, could have survived had medics realised he was suffering from herpes simplex encephalitis (HSE) - a rare virus which causes swelling of the brain.


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A hospital criticised for its "chaotic and despicable" care of three elderly patients had been deficient for a number of years, a report says. Coroner John Pollard attacked Tameside General Hospital following inquests into the deaths of three patients.


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Conservatives have promised better hospitals and schools and more affordable homes in their Welsh assembly election manifesto. Tory leader David Cameron joined party assembly leader Nick Bourne for the launch near Mold, Flintshire.


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Aberdeen Royal Infirmary is offering counselling to victims of domestic abuse and one woman, a 32-year-old professional woman, tells north east reporter Ken Banks how she escaped an abusive marriage. Silhouette of woman Victims are being encouraged to seek help at hospital I was married for 10 years and, with hindsight, there were warnings before we got married.


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Durex has launched its first UK recruitment drive for thousands of condom testers. The condom maker wants a panel of 5,000 people who are single, married, or in couples to report their experiences of using its condoms and lubricants.


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Frequent flyers 'risk own health' - BBC Health News 29th March 2007


Frequent air travellers, such as cabin crew who repeatedly take long-haul flights, risk ill health, a study says. As well as the obvious jet lag encountered with crossing multiple time zones, an out-of-kilter body clock can trigger psychotic and mood disorders.

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International News

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A new combination vaccine for meningitis and five other diseases affecting children in the developing world is to be filed with European medicine regulators. The vaccine is part of a drive by the World Health Organisation to encourage greater investment and research by Western drugs companies to defeat killer diseases in poor countries.


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Fish oil appears to add an extra benefit against heart attack, above that given by statins, research in Japan has shown. The addition of the fish oil supplement, that contains eicosapentaenoic acid (EPA), to the daily diet of more than 9,000 older people with elevated cholesterol reduced the risk of a heart attack by 19 per cent.


Many chemicals currently used in hair dyes could be a health risk, experts warned yesterday. Scientists advising the European Commission tested 46 hair dye ingredients and found a "considerably high proportion" were "skin sensitisers" and could trigger allergies.


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Untried cancer drug bought on web - BBC Health News 29th March 2007


Patients are buying an experimental cancer drug over the internet, it has been reported. The drug, called DCA, has been shown to shrink tumours in rats but tests on humans are years away.

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Cheshire and Merseyside News

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A MAN died after doctors at Merseyside’s top brain hospital mistook a bug for the after-effects of booze. John Mealey, 23, was suffering from the rare brain-attacking virus herpes simplex encephalitis (HSE) when he was admitted to Fazakerley hospital.

Ten doctors mistook killer brain disease for hangover - Daily Mail 29th March 2007


A SOUTHPORT hospital which has looked after patients for 112 years finally shuts its doors this week. General hospital care at Southport general infirmary will cease to exist on Saturday as the last three departments move out of the historic building.


DOZENS of vital hospital jobs could be transferred to India and the Philippines. Bosses at Southport and Ormskirk trust are considering farming out the medical secretary posts to Asia as they battle a £15m deficit.


A HIGH percentage of Halton's primary school children are at risk of being dangerously over-weight. Widnes and Runcorn is included in a list of towns in Cheshire and Merseyside which have the highest obesity rates - a staggering 17.43% of all Halton children measured are over-weight.


Aircrew who endure jet lag repeatedly can suffer problems with menstrual cycles, a reduction of brain power and transient psychotic disorders, according to a review. Passengers who cross time zones less frequently are less likely to have serious problems, but they usually suffer sleep disturbance and changes in body function, a team from the Research Institute for Sport and Exercise Sciences at John Moores University in Liverpool say in The Lancet. Athletes often find that their performance is reduced after crossing multiple time zones.


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Frequent flyers 'risk own health' - BBC Health News 29th March 2007

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Cumbria and Lancashire News


HEALTH bosses have decided to build a new mental health hospital to serve central and West Lancashire – but they don’t know where yet. It could be placed in any area including Ormskirk, Skelmersdale, Chorley or Preston.


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THE group behind plans for a new children’s respite centre in Wigton have stressed that it will not be a hospice. Instead, the Siskyn centre will provide overnight respite care for children with long-term disabilities, including autism.


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Children’s hospice fears competition from rival - Carlisle News & Star 28th March 2007


ORGANISERS of the high-profile Jigsaw Appeal fear a new children’s hospice planned for Wigton will pose direct competition for the centre they are building. Sheila Goodliffe, chief executive of the Eden Valley Children’s Hospice in Carlisle, is calling for urgent talks with representatives to ensure services are not duplicated.

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Greater Manchester News

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NEW homes for medical staff are to be created next to the Royal Bolton Hospital as part of a new housing development. Bolton Council is inviting tenders for a new development on the site of former sheltered flats for homeless families at Clare Court, in Exeter Avenue, Farnworth.
YOUNGSTERS on a hospital children's ward had their playtime fun washed away after a burst water pipe destroyed thousands of pounds worth of toys. The pipe burst in the playroom at Fairfield General Hospital in Bury where all the ward's toys and play equipment are stored, including a television, DVD player, DVDs and games consoles along with specialist equipment for children with special needs.


A FURTHER 27 beds at Fairfield Hospital are to be axed as the Pennine Acute Trust continues to battle multi-million pound debts. The total number of beds which have closed at the Rochdale Old Road hospital will total 55 following the closure of 28 beds last year.


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Last push to back the baby unit - The Bolton News 29th March 2007


BACK the baby unit once again - that is the plea from Bolton's health chiefs. The review panel responsible for making the final decision on whether Bolton will be named as one of three super-centres in Greater Manchester for neonatal, maternity and children's services are calling for local people to have their say.

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Thursday, March 29, 2007

Another 15 Minutes...Health News from Fade



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National News

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The prospect of Patricia Hewitt having to fulfil a promise to resign was virtually eliminated yesterday as officials at the Department of Health became increasingly certain that the health service in England will be in surplus when the financial year ends on Saturday. The NHS chief executive, David Nicholson, ordered the dispersal of £450m from a contingency reserve to bolster the balance sheets of hospitals and primary care trusts. He expects the last-minute injection of resources to push scores of NHS organisations into surplus.


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NHS bosses charged with delivering the much-delayed £6.2bn IT upgrade to health trusts throughout England have launched a £100m-plus drive for "additional" IT suppliers to meet "immediate business needs". Separately, the Guardian has learned that the Australian group IBA Health is close to abandoning talks over a potential all-share takeover of cash-strapped software supplier iSoft, which is contracted to provide systems for 60% of the NHS's troubled National Programme for IT (NPfIT).


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Together we stand Public service institutions need to better collaborate with each other and with the citizens they serve to tackle today's big social issues, write Simon Parker and Niamh Gallagher


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G2 columnist Dina Rabinovitch was diagnosed with breast cancer in June 2004. Since then the disease has recurred - and spread. As a book based on her experience is published, she reflects on her anger, the drugs and long afternoons in bed


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Jerry Hall is right to say that dyslexia does not have to be a problem, it is a gift. Like Hall and her three children with Mick Jagger, I am dyslexic, as are all my children. It is one of the gifts you pass on. Society treats dyslexia as a problem. There is always this idea that we can "cure" it, with vitamins or pink glasses or special lessons. I did not learn to read until I was 14. It was in the dark ages then. I was asked to leave many schools - they said I had a head like a sieve and any information put into it would fall out, and I was told I could only do jobs where I would not need reading and writing. I went into publishing thinking I could do illustrating because I liked drawing, but everyone said, "You're a storyteller!" I told them about my dyslexia, and they said, "We don't see it as a problem." That, to me, was revolutionary. So I started writing children's books 10 years ago. And, finally, I found what I really loved.


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Scientists have developed the first non-drug therapy for asthma in the biggest advance in treatment of the condition for a decade. Researchers who treated patients with moderate to severe asthma by inserting a probe into their lungs and "burning" the muscle tissue found it cut their asthma attacks by a half.


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Drug-free treatment aids asthma - BBC Health News 29th March 2007


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Tony Blair pledged at the Labour Party conference in 1999 that everyone would have access to an NHS dentist. Last week, more than seven years later, the Department of Health slipped out figures showing that 55.7 per cent of adults and 70.5 per cent children had been seen by an NHS dentist in the previous 24 months. Yesterday, a report from the National Association of Citizens Advice Bureaux revealed that 77 per cent of the 4,000 respondents to their survey said they could not find an NHS dentist prepared to accept them. There is still a very long way to go to meet Tony Blair's pledge.


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Thousands left without access to NHS dentists - The Telegraph 29th March 2007


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Dentists 'forced to take holiday' because of NHS cash crisis - Daily Mail 28th March 2007


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My 'dentists forced to take holidays' - BBC Health News 28th March 2007


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More than half of working mothers complain that employers do not know how to manage pregnant staff, says an Equal Opportunities Commission report. The two-year survey of more than 2,000 women also found that the majority did not know what their rights were while they were pregnant or when they returned to work after giving birth.


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Britain's offices are full of employees who are in the wrong jobs because their personalities do not suit what they are doing, according to an internet survey. Misfits and anomalies thrown up by the survey include warm, sensitive people working in cold-blooded trades like banking, or strong, assertive types who have found their way into creative work in the arts instead.


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Tony Blair is right not to say we are sorry. It would be hypocritical to say so when his government (and probably the wider public) don't feel truly sorry at all. It would just be words, like the words of regret at the invitation-only church services held over the weekend which continued the practice of social exclusion that mitigates oppression of "the other".


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Muslim GPs fail to respect the confidentiality of Muslim women patients, Patricia Hewitt, the Health Secretary, has claimed. Ms Hewitt, who represents a constituency in Leicester with a large ethnic minority community, said: “I have had Muslim women give me chapter and verse on very distressing breaches of confidentiality by Muslim GPs.


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Muslim women 'cannot trust their GPs' - The Telegraph 29th March 2007


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Hewitt accuses Muslim doctors of betraying women's trust - Daily Mail 28th March 2007


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Health secretary in Muslim GP row - BBC Health News 28th March 2007


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A controversial decision to ban a drug that could prolong the lives of thousands of cancer patients has been overturned. The ruling that Velcade should not be prescribed on the Health Service to bone cancer victims in England caused outrage last year because it is available in Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland


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Ever since Napoleon Bonaparte picked a fight with the rest of Europe, there has been a popular belief that little men are more aggressive. But research suggests it is nothing more than a myth.


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Short men 'not more aggressive' - BBC Health News 28th March 2007


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Evidence that organic crops contain higher levels of important nutrients has been published by scientists. They said analysis of organic tomatoes, apples and peaches revealed greater concentrations of vitamin C, polyphenols, betacarotene and flavonoids.


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Poor and late hospital discharge information is putting patients at risk, GPs say. Hospitals are supposed to send doctors information on medicine and treatment as soon as a patient is released, in order to help in their follow-up care.


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Drinking green tea could help in the fight against HIV, research suggests. Scientists found a component called epigallocatechin gallate (EGCG) prevents HIV from binding to immune system cells by getting there first.


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One of the UK's leading surgeons in treating knife and gunshot injuries says patients are dying unnecessarily because many hospitals are not geared up to deal with such incidents. Surgeon Karim Brohi said many deaths could be prevented if doctors were given better training and resources, and hospitals were better prepared to deal with such major trauma incidents.


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UK scientists believe they have discovered why the spread of "good genes" throughout the population does not make everyone good-looking. If women select the most attractive men, the genes should quickly become commonplace, according to Darwin.


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Ninety patients have been offered booster jabs after it emerged that vaccinations at two GP practices were stored at the wrong temperature. Injections which were given as part of the childhood vaccination programme were among those affected.


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'Unfair' NHS debt rule scrapped - BBC Health News 28th March 2007


NHS managers and doctors have welcomed the decision to scrap the so-called "double whammy" penalty health trusts face when they fall into deficit. The government has announced it is to change the way hospitals are penalised when they fail to balance the books.

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International News


The United Nations yesterday urged all countries with devastating Aids epidemics to launch mass male circumcision programmes following evidence that the surgical procedure can protect against HIV infection. The World Health Organisation and UNAids, the joint UN programme on HIV/Aids, made the official recommendations after a meeting of experts in Montreux, Switzerland, to consider the evidence from three trials in Africa, which were stopped early when it became clear that men who had been circumcised were up to 60% less likely to get HIV than those who had not.


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Australia's obesity crisis has reached such proportions that health officials have been forced to introduce 'super-sized ambulances', according to reports. Air ambulances are also having to be remodified to cope with the bulge down under, the BBC has reported.


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She's wowing audiences in the US version of Strictly Come Dancing and confounding her critics, but is Heather Mills an inspiration or irritation for other amputees? The spectacle of Heather Mills, amputee, activist and estranged wife of Sir Paul McCartney, shaking a (prosthetic) leg on the US television show Dancing with the Stars is shaping up to be the American TV hit of the spring.


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Young girls in Germany are to be vaccinated against the virus that causes cervical cancer. Italian health officials have also recommended 12-year old girls are immunised against human papillomavirus.


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Three people in Indonesia have died from bird flu, taking the country's death toll to 69, health officials say. The virus claimed the lives of a boy aged 15, a 22-year-old woman and a 40-year-old man in separate parts of the country, the health ministry said.


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Kickboxing 'causes brain damage' - BBC Health News 28th March 2007


Kickboxing can cause damage to the part of the brain which controls hormone production, a study has shown. Around a million people around the world take part in the sport.

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Cheshire and Merseyside News

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ADMINISTRATIVE work carried out by a Merseyside hospital trust could be done in the Far East under plans to save money. Southport & Ormskirk NHS Trust has admitted the idea is among the options it is looking at to make cost savings and improve the efficiency of its services.


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A WOMAN today told of a nightmare wait for a hospital bed for her critically ill husband. Deputy head Julian Fisher urgently needs help from specialists at the Royal Liverpool hospital.


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LEIGHTON Hospital in Crewe has been slammed after figures revealed it collected almost £1 million in controversial car park charges in nine months. Mid Cheshire Hospitals NHS Trust raised £988,000 from April last year to January - and less than half of it was spent on patient care.


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THE ageing inpatients block at Northwich's Victoria Infirmary (VIN) could be replaced by a state of the art community hospital. It would have 10 more beds and will cater for patients with intermediate, rehabilitation and palliative or end of life care needs. It would replace the existing 20-bed unit and provide a range of other medical services still being developed.


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Doctor found guilty of groping patients - Warrington Guardian 28th March 2007


A DOCTOR who worked at Warrington Hospital has been found guilty of groping two young female hospital patients. Dr Shakir Laher, from Blackburn, is now waiting to hear if his professional career is in tatters as a result of the General Medical Council misconduct committee ruling on Monday.

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Cumbria and Lancashire News

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‘Violent patient’ list for ambulance staff - Carlisle News & Star 28th March 2007


AMBULANCE chiefs have drawn up a blacklist of potentially violent patients across Cumbria as part of their efforts to protect staff. The system means that control room staff within the North West Ambulance Service, including those working in Carlisle, will automatically request a police escort for staff attending addresses where problem patients live.


Infirmary is to lease 26 beds in private complex - Carlisle News & Star 28th March 2007


A PRIVATELY-built health complex at the entrance to the Cumberland Infirmary will provide 26 additional beds for NHS patients. Bosses at the Carlisle hospital have agreed to lease the two-storey building over a three-year period.


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Plans for £3m dental academy submitted - Carlisle News & Star 28th March 2007


AMBITIOUS plans to establish a £3m dental academy at Carlisle’s Cumberland Infirmary have taken a significant step forward. Hospital bosses have now submitted a formal planning application to the city council and hope to start tendering for contractors next month.


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Grope doctor guilty - Lancashire Telegraph 28th March 2007


A DOCTOR from Blackburn has been found guilty by a General Medical Council of groping two young female hospital patients. Dr Shakir Laher, of Pringle Street, is now waiting to hear if his professional career is in tatters as a result of the misconduct committee ruling.


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Anger at private operations plan - Lancashire Telegraph 28th March 2007


A COUNCIL leader has slammed health bosses for approving plans to have thousands of operations done by a private company. Burnley Council leader Gordon Birtwistle said he was unhappy at the move which came at the same time as the town's general hospital was losing its ability to handle blue light emergencies to the Royal Blackburn Hospital.


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Forget Napoleon, taller men have the shorter fuse - Daily Mail 28th March 2007


Ever since Napoleon Bonaparte picked a fight with the rest of Europe, there has been a popular belief that little men are more aggressive. But research suggests it is nothing more than a myth.


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Short men 'not more aggressive' - BBC Health News 29th March 2007


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Wednesday, March 28, 2007

Another 15 Minutes...Health News from Fade



Another 15 Minutes is currently experiencing navigation issues as a result of software changes, as soon as we identify a solution the navigation menu will return, we apologise for any inconvenience this causes.

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National News

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For supporters of the embattled Labour government, the progress made in tackling poverty has been the strongest reason to keep the faith. After the long Conservative era, in which the poor lagged further behind each year, the signs had been that Gordon Brown's stealthy levelling was starting to narrow the gap. But official figures yesterday showed that both overall inequality and penury went up last year. Just weeks after a Unicef report on the wellbeing of youngsters found that Britons were bottom of the heap, a particularly heavy blow was dealt by news that the count of poor children had edged up. For the pledge to end child poverty has been the most concrete expression of hopes that Britain is being made steadily fairer.


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Setback for Labour as child poverty rises for the first time since 1997 - The Independent 28th March 2007


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A new-style "11-plus" to assess the risk every child in Britain runs of turning to crime was among a battery of proposals unveiled in Tony Blair's crime plan yesterday. The children of prisoners, problem drug users and others at high risk of offending will also face being "actively managed" by social services and youth justice workers. New technologies are to be used to boost police detection rates while DNA samples are to be taken from any crime suspect who comes into contact with the police.


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'Problem' children to be monitored for signs of criminality - The Independent 28th March 2007


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Children face criminal checks from the cradle - The Telegraph 28th March 2007


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Charity attacks 'disgrace of child poverty con trick' - The Times 28th March 2007


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Children could be monitored for signs of criminal behaviour - Daily Mail 27th March 2007


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Patricia Hewitt, the health secretary, will tell the annual conference of the mental health charity Mind today about the "next stage" of reform in mental health. She will outline how the government aims to put a greater emphasis on the wellbeing of society as a whole by tackling widespread problems such as mild or moderate anxiety and depression.


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Death rates during and just after surgery at a leading heart unit are higher than average, but fall within acceptable bounds, an inquiry finds today. Oxford Radcliffe's heart unit has had a turbulent history. In 2000 a regional NHS inquiry which concluded that the unit was "on its knees and riven by internal conflict". It called for the surgeons, some of whom are leading figures in the field, to put aside their differences and work together as a team.


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Surgery unit hobbled by rows between consultants - The Independent 28th March 2007


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A campaign has been launched by Tameside council, Greater Manchester, to alert young people and their families to the illegality and the potential life-threatening risks of having a tattoo under the age of 18, as children as young as 12 seek to copy celebrities such as the Beckhams and Britney Spears. The move comes after the discovery that an unregistered tattooist was targeting young people and had tattooed more than 100 local teenagers, for as little as £5 a time. The campaign, How Much Did Your Tattoo Really Cost?, stresses that not only is tattooing an under-18 illegal, but HIV, hepatitis and septicaemia could be the tragic consequences of a visit to a tattooist working without arrangements for clean needles.


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An independent inquiry began today into the deaths of nearly 2,000 haemophilia patients exposed to HIV and/or hepatitis C through contaminated blood and blood products, described as the worst treatment catastrophe in NHS history. "The purpose of the inquiry is to unravel the facts, so far as we are able, and to point to the lessons that may be learnt," former Labour MP Lord Peter Archer, who is heading the inquiry, said in his opening statement.


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The newspapers have been telling us that equality makes us ill. We've heard it all before, says Zoe Williams


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The NHS says it wants to really understand the experiences of mental health service users. So what, asks Clare Allan, is this pointless questionnaire doing on my desk?


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I am a wheelchair user and have been for many years, and as such was not impressed by Prejudice extends to disabled people, which was based on a report from City University, London. I teach disability awareness and one of the parts of my presentation is a strong emphasis on the fact that disabled people have exactly the same expectations as the rest of the population - they go to work, school, form relationships, do their washing, eat, get angry, pay taxes, laugh, cry, vote, plan and dream like everybody else. They also have prejudices.


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Cherelle is 19, slight, weary, and pregnant. And now she is homeless. Her family has chucked her out - not in anger, but with regret. With her parents and three brothers already in a two-bedroom council flat, there was simply no room for Cherelle and her baby. Although the family put in for a transfer to somewhere larger six years ago, they knew the truth: the level of overcrowding in their part of London means that the baby would be an adult before a four-bed property came up.


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The co-founder of iSoft, the embattled IT company at the heart of the government's troubled £6.2bn NHS IT upgrade project, was sacked yesterday after being suspended since the beginning of August. The company said Steve Graham, former commercial director, had been "removed as a director" and had "ceased to be an employee of iSoft." This move follows his suspension on full pay of £385,000 from August 8, "following an initial investigation into possible accounting irregularities in the financial years ended 30 April 2004 and 2005." Another employee was suspended alongside Mr Graham, but the company refused to disclose their identity. A spokesman for the company said the financial terms for Mr Graham's departure had not yet been agreed, but added: "It is not our intention to pay any compensation."


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Helping patients leaving hospital to cope at home and dramatically reducing social services referrals - it's business as usual for one voluntary organisation


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The Texan model Jerry Hall has revealed that all her children with the lead singer of the Rolling Stones, Mick Jagger, have dyslexia. Elizabeth, 23, a model, James, 21, Georgia May, 15, and nine-year-old Gabriel all have the learning difficulty, said Hall, who has herself been diagnosed with dyslexia. "They all take after me. Being dyslexic is difficult at the very beginning but as you get older you learn to cope with it and I think it's great."


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Every suspect in contact with the police faces having their DNA placed on a national database under government plans for a huge extension of “Big Brother” Britain announced yesterday. All children will also undergo regular compulsory checks to discover if they are at risk of turning into criminals. They would face the crime test at key stages of their development, including when they start school and at 11.


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Britain risks falling behind nanotechnology rivals because ministers have not delivered on a three-year-old promise to fund research into its potential effects on human health and the environment, the Council for Science and Technology said.


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Scientists take Government to task - The Telegraph 28th March 2007


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Connecting through talking activates the pleasure centres in a teenage girl’s brain. Sharing secrets that have romantic and sexual implications activates those centres even more. We’re not talking about a small amount of pleasure. This is huge. It’s a major dopamine and oxytocin rush, which is the biggest, fattest neurological reward you can get outside of an orgasm. Dopamine is a neurochemical that stimulates the motivation and pleasure circuits in the brain. Oestrogen at puberty increases dopamine and oxytocin production in girls. Oxytocin is a neurohormone that triggers and is triggered by intimacy. When oestrogen is on the rise, a teen girl’s brain is pushed to make even more oxytocin — and to get even more reinforcement for social bonding. Intimacy releases more oxytocin, which reinforces the desire to connect, and connecting then brings a sense of pleasure and wellbeing.


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Most divorces after the age of 50 are initiated by women. Why? In a new book, Dr Louann Brizendine explains how changes caused by the menopause weaken women’s instinct to hold a family together and liberate them from the need to put up with the failings of second-rate husbands


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A growing number of children in care are being sent to “single-place” residential homes costing £6,000 a week with only staff for company. Despite the vast weekly expense, which would cover a term’s fees at some leading public schools, employees at “single care” homes are poorly trained and less competent than those in standard residential homes, a report says.


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Plans to shrink the size of chocolate bars, crisp packets and other snacks were unveiled yesterday by the Government's food watchdog in a bid to tackle obesity in Britain. The Food Standards Agency [FSA] wants manufacturers to make smaller portions more widely available. Currently, smaller packets of crisps and confectionery are usually restricted to supermarket multi-packs and come at a price premium, the agency said.#


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More than 72,500 teenagers and people in their early twenties have serious drug problems, regularly using crack cocaine and heroin, warns an official report today. Hundreds of thousands more - as many as one in 10 children and young people - are vulnerable to becoming addicts, says the National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence (Nice).


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Lucinda is married to John, 46, an engineer, and lives in London. She says: As the tears welled in my doctor's eyes, I knew my precious baby was dead. "I'm so sorry, Lucinda," she told me, "your baby is gone." It was my first miscarriage, so you might think the doctor would try to reassure me that I could try again, but looking at her face, she appeared to know what I was already thinking - that at 41 there was little chance of me ever having a baby of my own.


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Every year, around 400 kidney patients who need organ transplants are unable to have the life-saving treatment because their bodies produce too many antibodies. Former Olympic triple jumper Eric McCalla, 46, was one of them. Here Eric, now a maintenance electrician, tells his story to FIONA DUFFY while, below, his surgeon explains how they tackled the problem


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When Erika Maude was just 11 years old, her mother noticed she had a slight hump on her right shoulder. The family's GP said it was nothing to worry about but the hump worsened over time and six months later she was diagnosed with scoliosis - where the spine bends to the side and becomes twisted, often pulling the rib cage with it so the shoulder blade sticks out.


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Louise Jameson had everything to live for: two small sons, and a glittering career which began at the RSC and hit a glamorous TV high as Dr Who's assistant Leela and Jersey detective Jim Bergerac's girlfriend. But writhing in agony after suffering a burst appendix, she would have given anything to be released from her torment.


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Nine million people in the UK suffer from painful joints. These products can help, says TANIA ALEXANDER.


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Every Tuesday, Britain’s leading nutritionist explains how to eat your way to health. Today she explains which foods can help heal a bed sores and the benefits of cranberry juice: My mum has just come out of hospital, having suffered a fractured hip and is staying with us until she feels strong enough to move back home. Although her hip seems to be on the mend, she is quite weak and suffering from a bad pressure sore on her heel. Which foods will help it heal and give her a boost?


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You might be feeling virtuous as you zip up your gym bag and head off home after that strenuous workout. But you could be walking off with more than just feel-good endorphins. Experts are warning that sports gear - and even your gym bag - can harbour a host of unpleasant bacteria. FIONA DUFFY reports on the germs lurking in your kit.


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Once we went to the doctor only if something was wrong. But now private health clinics are encouraging the 'worried well' to put their minds at rest - or potentially discover a deadly disease before symptoms emerge - by having a thorough check-up. A six-minute appointment with your GP is barely enough time to discuss your backache or flu, let alone your family history of heart disease or breast cancer.


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Selling fattening snacks in smaller pack sizes could be key to tackling the obesity epidemic, say watchdogs. The Food Standards Agency is urging the industry to cut the size of chocolate, crisps and snacks to improve the nation's health.


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At first Annette Armstrong wasn't planning to have her mother present at her baby's birth. But she came round to the idea - after all it would be nice to hold her hand during the labour. It turned out to be the 'best decision' of Annette's life. For it was her mother who ended up having to deliver the baby - without her, says Annette, there is a chance her baby could have died.


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After six decades together, Eric and Betty Dunnell looked forward to continuing their loving relationship into their twilight years. But the devastated couple face being torn apart because of a local authority ruling.


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Eating disorders can affect children as young as six years old, the first ever national figures show. Over 13 months, 206 children under 12 years were treated for an eating disorder in Britain and Ireland - including one six-year-old girl.


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More than 160 Devon women who had abnormal cervical smear tests results may not have had appropriate follow up treatment, it has been revealed. Devon Primary Care Trust (PCT) cannot be sure that 161 women who had an abnormal result had been recalled for repeat tests or treatment.


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Health bosses in Nottinghamshire have issued a warning after a laptop containing information on about 11,000 young children was stolen. The laptop was one of three taken from an office at King's Mill Hospital in Sutton-in-Ashfield on 21 March.


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We all develop wrinkles with age, and we've all seen the adverts for products that claim to reduce them. But what's the science behind them and do they really work? The first and most important rule is don't immediately be impressed by scientific sounding words. "These emollients are specially formulated with aqua and humectants" can be non-scientifically translated as "these lotions and creams contain water and moisturisers". Not nearly so exciting, but basically the same thing.


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Most children love blood, gore and guts. They never fail to be entertained by burping, farting and snot.


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Computer-based therapy should be available to all patients in England from April, says the government. Patients with mild depression or anxiety should receive therapy instead of drugs, but there are long waiting lists around the country.


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NHS dental contract attacks mount - BBC Health News 27th March 2007


People are finding it no easier to see an NHS dentist a year after radical reforms of NHS dentistry came into effect, according to two reports. A British Dental Association poll of 394 dentists found the majority did not think the reforms had improved access.

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International News

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Pregnant women who eat too much beef from cattle treated with growth-promoting hormones may be damaging the future fertility of their unborn sons, scientists suggested yesterday. New research has shown that men from the United States whose mothers ate beef at least once a day are likely to have lower sperm concentrations than usual, potentially affecting their ability to have children.


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Eating beef could threaten sons' fertility - The Telegraph 28th March 2007


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Sunday roasts 'could have hit male fertility' - Daily Mail 27th March 2007


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Beef diet 'damages sons' sperm' - BBC Health News 27th March 2007


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Some three million teenage girls in Germany are to be urged to take part in a mass vaccination campaign to help to stamp out cervical cancer. The go-ahead for the jabs — in effect Germany’s first nationwide anticancer immunisation — is likely to nudge other EU countries, including Britain, to consider similar steps. Germany is Europe’s largest market for medicines and pharmaceuticals.


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The maker of the popular children's drink Ribena was fined today after admitting in court it had misled generations of parents about the drink's vitamin C content. GlaxoSmithKline was forced to plead guilty to the fact that its ready-to-drink Ribena - which it claimed had 7mg of vitamin C per 100ml and was aimed at school lunchboxes - in fact had no detectable vitamin C.


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NZ vitamin C row hits Ribena firm - BBC Health News 27th March 2007


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It's the answer to a foodie fan's prayer - nutritional scientists have come up with a recipe for the perfect healthy pizza. The secret lies in the dough. A team of US chemists found using wholewheat dough fermented and baked under specific conditions produced a pizza packed with health-giving antioxidants.


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Doctors have discovered the world's first known case of 'semi-identical' twins. The two young children in America are identical on their mother's side but share only half the genes of their father's side.


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Semi-identical twins discovered - BBC Health News 27th March 2007


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A tropical worm disease that has plagued people since ancient times could be eradicated in less than two years, experts predict. The World Health Organisation said Guinea worm disease, or dracunculiasis, now only affects around 25,000 people in nine countries.

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Cheshire and Merseyside News

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LIVERPOOL’S new Arena and Convention Centre has won another prestigious contract – with 800 nurses heading to the city for the AGM of the Royal College of Nursing. The event, in October next year, could also precede an even bigger coup with the potential for the RCN Congress, which attracts 5,000 delegates, to also be staged at the Mersey waterfront centre.


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PATIENTS in Liverpool are waiting months longer than they should be for appointments, new figures show. Three times too many in-patients are waiting longer than the four-and-a-half month deadline for treatment.


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Robert Thorpe, 42, and his partner Ann Tuffy, 37, were drunk when they started behaving violently in Whiston hospital, Liverpool crown court heard. Desmond Lennon, prosecuting, told the court they went to the hospital at 2.30am on May 3 last year after Thorpe had harmed himself.


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Smoke-free Wirral - Wirral Globe 27th March 2007


THERE are less than 100 days to go before Wirral - along with the rest of England - goes smoke-free. Going smoke free means that smoking in virtually every enclosed public place and workplace will no longer be allowed from 6am on Sunday, July 1.

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Cumbria and Lancashire News

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A MARYPORT woman is calling for the Department of Health’s 30 year policy of adding artificial fluoride to the west Cumbrian water supply to be suspended until research into its effects is carried out. Dianne Standen, of pressure group Cumbrians Against Fluoridation, fears it could be leading to untold damage to the health of thousands of west Cumbrians, who have been drinking the water since they were children in the late 1960s.


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Advice on smoking ban - Carlisle News & Star 27th March 2007


ALLERDALE people will be able to learn more about the effects of the smoking ban in England, which starts in less than 100 days, at a series of workshops. The ban on smoking in all public places and work spaces begins on July 1 and Allerdale Council has arranged drop-in sessions in Wigton, Silloth, Maryport and Aspatria.
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Greater Manchester News

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A STAY in hospital is no laughing matter - unless you are visited by a clown doctor. Clown doctors are professional artists who entertain sick children at their bedside each week with magic tricks, balloons, jokes and fun.


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UNITED star Ole Gunnar Solskjaer has unveiled a new £400,000 scanner at a Manchester hospital. The machine will carry out scans four times faster than standard equipment and produce much more detailed images of the inside of the body. And hospital bosses say the new computerside tomography or CT scanner will help the private Bupa Hospital, in Whalley Range, lead the way in treating sporting injuries.


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BOLTON health chiefs are to go into partnership with a developer to build a series of modern health super centres, to replace rundown GPs' surgeries. The Eric Wright Group will build the centres and then lease them back to the Primary Care Trust.


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DAVID Fielding hopes to move a step closer to discovering how haemophilia sufferers became infected with hepatitis C or HIV during the 1970s and 1980s. The 51-year-old will give evidence to an independent inquiry, chaired by the former Solicitor General Lord Archer, which convenes in London today.


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Bolton's dental crisis exposed - The Bolton News 27th March 2007


BOLTON is in the grip of a dental crisis. None of the borough's 32 dental practices are accepting new NHS patients - less than 12 months after a new system was introduced to create more places. People hoping to become an NHS dental patient have been told to try again in April when more places "could" be available.


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Bolton's dental health shame - The Bolton News 27th March 2007


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Illegal tattoos put young lives at risk - The Guardian 28th March 2007


A campaign has been launched by Tameside council, Greater Manchester, to alert young people and their families to the illegality and the potential life-threatening risks of having a tattoo under the age of 18, as children as young as 12 seek to copy celebrities such as the Beckhams and Britney Spears. The move comes after the discovery that an unregistered tattooist was targeting young people and had tattooed more than 100 local teenagers, for as little as £5 a time. The campaign, How Much Did Your Tattoo Really Cost?, stresses that not only is tattooing an under-18 illegal, but HIV, hepatitis and septicaemia could be the tragic consequences of a visit to a tattooist working without arrangements for clean needles.

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