Wednesday, August 31, 2011

PCTs delay practice LES income in savings push

By Susie Sell, 01 September 2011

Dr Morley: easy pickings seen

Dr Morley: easy pickings seen

Northumberland LMC secretary Dr Jane Lothian said a PCT locally had failed to introduce the new local enhanced services in April, instead introducing them around four months into the financial year.

Concerns have also been raised about PCTs clamping down on payments as they try to make efficiency savings.

Dr Lothian said the problem had arisen because 'half the PCT has now disappeared', leaving an 'impossible burden' on remaining staff. 'When all the ground managerial talent has gone there is nobody left to do the work,' she said.

A spokeswoman for NHS North of Tyne said it is not aware of any 'significant delays' in sign up for enhanced services.

Dr Robert Morley, executive secretary of Birmingham LMC, said his PCT was 'micro-managing practices'. 'PCTs are looking to make easy savings through enhanced services and QOF performance,' he said. 'These are seen as easy pickings.'

'It seems we are having more and more practices that PCTs are looking at and more and more disputes. They seem to be going over everything with a fine-toothed comb.'

GPC deputy chairman Dr Richard Vautrey said he would be 'very concerned' if PCTs were using such tactics as cost-saving measures.

'We have heard stories from PCTs for a number of years where individuals have been nitpicking and obstructing payments,' he said. 'It's always a concern where PCTs make problems for practices.'

Source: http://www.gponline.com/channel/news/article/1087623/pcts-delay-practice-les-income-savings-push/

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Vaccines for Teens: Still Room for Improvement

Rates of HPV Shots Among Teens Lag Behind Other Recommended Vaccines

By Denise Mann
WebMD Health News

Reviewed by Laura J. Martin, MD

Aug. 25, 2011 -- More teens are getting their recommended vaccines, but there is still room for improvement. The numbers are especially low for human papillomavirus (HPV) or cervical cancer vaccines among U.S. girls, the CDC reports.

The recommended vaccines for all teens include:

Girls should also get three doses of an HPV vaccine to protect against genital warts, cervical cancer, and other cancers caused by HPV.

The flu vaccine is recommended annually for all people 6 months old and older.

Compared with 2009, vaccine rates among teens were up across the board in 2010.

  • Tdap rates increased from 55.6% to 68.7%
  • MenACWY rates increased from 53.6% to 62.7%.
  • Rates for one or more doses of HPV among females increased from 44.3% to 48.7%

The rate of increase in teen HPV vaccine rates was less than half of what was seen with the other vaccines.

Three doses of the HPV shot are needed to be fully effective. The shots should be given over a six-month period. Among females who had enough time to get all three, just 30.4% did. Teens who were black, Hispanic, and those who lived below the poverty line were among the least likely to get all three HPV shots.

About 20 million Americans are infected with HPV today. Each year, 12,000 women develop cervical cancer, the CDC states.

Bad News: Too Many Girls Not Getting HPV Shots

"U.S. girls are not getting the HPV vaccine that we know can prevent cervical cancer," the CDC's Melinda Wharton, MD, MPH, said during a teleconference. Wharton is deputy director for the National Center for Immunization and Respiratory Diseases.

This is "bad news" and "so very disappointing to us." But "the good news is that we can do better," Wharton says.

Cervical cancer is most often seen in women in their 30s and 40s. The HPV shot helps protect girls before they become infected with the types of genital warts linked to cervical cancer.

Why are rates of HPV trailing behind other teen vaccines?

Parents may not be aware of the HPV vaccine and what it does. They also may not be getting a strong enough recommendation from their daughter's pediatrician, Wharton says.

Also, HPV is given as three shots. "It is harder to get three doses in than one," Wharton says.

Some parents may have questions about their 11- or 12-year-old daughters getting a shot that prevents a sexually transmitted disease. But "this is a preventive vaccine, not a therapeutic one, and it won't work unless given prior to onset of sexual activity," Wharton says.

There was some pushback from parents in the early days of the vaccine because of potential side effects, but this vaccine is safe, Wharton says.

Jeff Levi, PhD, executive director of the Trust for America's Health, is also disheartened by the number of girls not getting HPV shots. "These rates are nothing short of tragic," he says in a written statement. "We could be sparing an entire generation from HPV, which can lead to a range of STDs, cervical cancer, and other cancers."

Boys may also get the HPV shot to prevent genital warts, but it's not part of the CDC's official vaccine recommendations. Just 1.4% of male teens got the HPV shot in 2010.

Teen Vaccine Rates Vary by State

Vaccine coverage rates also varied widely by states, the study showed.

Massachusetts, Rhode Island, and Virginia had the highest rates. More than 65% of teens got at least one dose of all three recommended teen vaccines in these states. These numbers still fall short of goals set by the government in its HealthyPeople 2020 campaign.

Overall, teen vaccine rates were lower for teens living in the Southeastern U.S. compared with other areas.

Teen vaccine rates based on the type of vaccine also varied by state -- sometimes by dozens of percentage points -- the study showed.

So why are some states doing so much better than others? School vaccination programs, reminders, and good communication between doctors and local public health officials may make a difference, the study suggests.

The CDC has tracked teen vaccine rates since 2006. The new findings appear in the CDC's Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report.

SOURCES: CDC teleconference, Aug. 25, 2011.Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report, Aug. 26, 2011; vol 60: pp 1018-1023.Jeff Levi, PhD, executive director, Trust for America's Health.Melinda Wharton, MD, MPH, deputy director, CDC's National Center for Immunization and Respiratory Diseases, Atlanta. �2011 WebMD, LLC. All Rights Reserved.


Source: http://www.medicinenet.com/guide.asp?s=rss&a=148684&k=Womens_Health_General

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Qaddafi son vows to fight, says dad OK

(CBS/AP)�

TRIPOLI, Libya - Moammar Gadhafi's son Seif al-Islam vowed Wednesday to fight to the death, insisting nobody still loyal to the regime would surrender to the rebels. He said he was speaking from the suburbs of Tripoli and insisted his father was fine.

Loyalist leaders, meeting in the Gadhafi stronghold of Bani Walid have insisted "We are going to die in our land," Seif al-Islam said in an audio statement was broadcast on Al-Rai television station. "No one is going to surrender."

His statement came shortly after another statement by his brother, al-Saadi. Al-Saadi offered a softer tone, saying he's ready to mediate talks with the rebels in order to stop the bloodshed.

"The most important is to stop the bloodshed," al-Saadi told Al-Arabiya.

Libya rebels give Qaddafi loyalists an ultimatum

A rebel commander in Tripoli, Abdel Hakim Belhaj, said earlier Wednesday that al-Saadi was trying to negotiate terms for his own surrender. When asked about that report, al-Saadi said he had talked to Belhaj and several other rebel officials, but there was confusion over the exact details of the offer. He said he was ready to surrender but only to stop the bloodshed.

Eyewitness to Qaddafi's last moments in charge
AU: Libya rebels killing black workers
Special section: Anger in the Arab World

The dueling audio statements came as the rebel forced pressed toward two of the loyalist main strongholds, Gadhafi's hometown of Sirte and the desert town of Bani Walid. The rebels also say they are closing in on the elder Gadhafi, who has been on the run since rebels swept into the capital last week. Belhaj said earlier that Moammar Gadhafi is most likely no longer in Tripoli.

The rebels gave pro-Qaddafi forces in Sirte a deadline of Saturday ? the day after the end of the Muslim holiday ? to complete negotiations and surrender. After that, the rebels will "act decisively and militarily," said Mustafa Abdul-Jalil, the head of the rebels' National Transitional Council.

Qaddafi loyalists negotiate fate of his home town

His deputy, Ali Tarhouni, said in Tripoli that "sometimes to avoid bloodshed you must shed blood, and the faster we do this, the less blood we will shed."

In an overnight phone call to AP headquarters in New York, Qaddafi's chief spokesman, Moussa Ibrahim said the rebels' ultimatum would be rejected.

"No dignified honorable nation would accept an ultimatum from armed gangs," he said. Ibrahim reiterated Qaddafi's offer to send his son al-Saadi to negotiate with rebels and form a transitional government.

Source: http://feeds.cbsnews.com/~r/CBSNewsMain/~3/zvq8uMOpRc8/main20099988.shtml

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FDA Approved Lung Cancer Drug

Source: http://www.medicaldaily.com/news/20110831/7073/xalkori-fda-genetic-alk-lung-cancer-diagnostic-test.htm

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Lies, Damn Lies and Surveys about Foreign Aid

By

Charles Kenny (author of the highly optimistic book Getting Better) examines the chronic misunderstanding and inaccurate view most Americans have when it comes to foreign aid. The big problem, Kenny notes, is that many think we spend a lot and, well, we don?t really. Most polls show Americans believe in spending on foreign aid.

See the original post:
Lies, Damn Lies and Surveys about Foreign Aid

Related posts:

  1. Foreign aid cuts popular in budget battle, but not much there to cut
  2. Where, and to what, does foreign aid money go?
  3. OPINION: Recognizing The Success Of Foreign Aid
  4. U.S. foreign aid: Less than you think
  5. Majority Of Americans Favor Foreign Aid Cuts, Poll Finds
Posted by on Aug 31 2011. Filed under Aid, Aid & Development, Hub Selects, Humanosphere. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0. You can leave a response or trackback to this entry

Source: http://www.globalhealthhub.org/2011/08/31/lies-damn-lies-and-surveys-about-foreign-aid/

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County bans elective Caesareans

Pregnant womanThe PCT said elective C-sections were more dangerous than natural births

Hospital bosses in North Yorkshire have banned elective caesarean sections in a move they say will reduce health risks for mothers and babies and save cash.

North Yorkshire and York Primary Care Trust (PCT) said 114 women had C-sections for non-medical reasons during the 2010-2011 financial year.

The trust said natural deliveries were safer for women and their babies.

C-sections were also more costly, it said, at �2,539 for a routine operation compared to �1,174 for a natural birth.

There were a total of 1,738 caesareans performed in North Yorkshire during the 2010-2011 financial year, at a cost of �5,210,258.

If the 114 women who had C-sections for non-medical reasons had had a natural birth instead, it would have saved the PCT �155,610.

Dr David Geddes, medical director for primary care, said women did not generally opt for caesarean sections because of the higher risks involved.

But where a woman was requesting to have a c-section with no medical reason he said the PCT "shouldn't be supporting that" because the procedure was more "dangerous" than natural childbirth.

Dr Geddes denied the move was simply a cost-cutting exercise.

He said: "It's the reverse. it's about making sure the delivery of babies is done in as safe a way as possible.

"There's some concern about the frequency with which people are having caesarean sections because caesarean sections cause problems for the baby quite often, it's not a natural way for a baby to be born so therefore there are complications for the baby, there are certainly complications for a woman... and there are complications for subsequent deliveries and subsequent pregnancies as well.

"All in all it's something where there's a safer, natural alternative which is obviously what the medical profession would prefer to have."

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/go/rss/int/news/-/news/uk-england-york-north-yorkshire-14724940

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Faster Way to Treat Partners of Women With STDs Urged: Experts

THURSDAY, Aug. 25 (HealthDay News) -- When a woman is diagnosed with a sexually transmitted infection such as chlamydia or gonorrhea, her doctor should be able to pass along antibiotics to her male partner without examining him, to cut both partners' odds of re-infection, experts say.

The new physician guideline was issued this week by the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG), the nation's largest group representing ob/gyns.

In a new committee opinion, the ACOG panel of experts stated that doctors who diagnose their female patients with these infections should pass along a prescription for antibiotics to the male partner -- a practice called "expedited partner therapy."

"Evidence indicates that [this type of approach] can decrease re-infection rates" compared to the more standard practice of simply referring the patient's partner for examination and treatment, Dr. Diane F. Merritt, chair of ACOG's Committee on Adolescent Health Care, said in a news release from the college.

"Of course, it's preferable that a physician examine a patient in-person before prescribing medication," she added, but the benefits of the expedited response -- in getting otherwise reluctant partners to get treated -- probably outweigh the risks.

Although they are the two most commonly reported sexually transmitted infections in the United States, chlamydia and gonorrhea often cause only vague symptoms, and some women may not have any symptoms at all. As a result, the re-infection rates for these conditions are high. For example, ACOG noted the 12-month re-infection rate of chlamydia among teens and young women is as high as 26%. Untreated male sexual partners, the experts added, are often to blame.

Many people who have a sexually transmitted infection are not aware of it and pass it to their partners, added Merritt. Left undiagnosed and untreated, these infections "can cause scarring and damage a woman's ability to become pregnant when she's ready to have a baby," Merritt said. "Fortunately, chlamydia and gonorrhea can be quickly diagnosed with a simple urine test and treated with a short course of antibiotics. "

U.S. doctors can only legally prescribe antibiotics to people who are not their patients in 27 states. Rules governing the practice are unclear in 15 states, and non-patient prescriptions are prohibited in 8 states. The ACOG panel concluded that physicians in these states should push for the enactment of laws clearly supporting the practice to help curb rates of re-infection with sexually transmitted diseases.

-- Mary Elizabeth Dallas

MedicalNewsCopyright � 2011 HealthDay. All rights reserved.

SOURCE: American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, news release, Aug. 22, 2011


Source: http://www.medicinenet.com/guide.asp?s=rss&a=148662&k=Womens_Health_General

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Tough Times for Rurals

By Haydn Bush August 29, 2011

Will new federal incentives for health IT and physician recruitment help rural hospitals negotiate tricky terrain?

While perusing the health care headlines Sunday afternoon after a weeklong vacation, I stumbled across an alarming article in the Columbia, S.C.-based State newspaper on troubling times for South Carolina's rural hospitals. The article found, via an analysis of CMS data, that only half of the beds in South Carolina's 30 rural hospitals were filled on an average day between 2007-09. Overall, occupancy rates fell by 8 percent during that period, the newspaper found.

The rest of the article detailed the reasons for the decline, which it characterized as a "vicious cycle" marked by lagging volume that makes it difficult for rurals to afford the capital investments in health IT and infrastructure, trouble recruiting physicians and reductions in Medicare and Medicaid payments. It was a sobering, well-researched read, and one with implications far beyond South Carolina, since finding cash for capital investments and recruiting physicians are ever-present concerns for rural providers.

Earlier this month, as part of a wide-ranging White House initiative focusing on the rural economy, HHS announced two new programs aimed to alleviate some of that pressure. The first would give rural hospitals and clinicians access to two existing capital loan programs currently administered by the USDA. The Community Facilities Program, which offers loans for community facilities projects, could be used to help offset the costs of EHR implementation; the Distance Learning and Telemedicine Grant Program is available to spur the growth of telehealth.

In addition, HHS is preparing to expand the National Health Service Corps loan repayment program to allow participation by critical access hospitals, which would be able use the loans to recruit physicians to their facilities.

It will take more, of course, than two relatively small federal programs to solve the major financial and structural crises facing rural providers. But amid the bleak picture for rural providers in South Carolina and many other states, it's heartening to see some movement to address those concerns.

Send your thoughts on what might help rurals to hbush@healthforum.com

Haydn Bush is the senior online editor for Hospitals & Health Networks magazine.

The opinions expressed by authors do not necessarily reflect the policy of Health Forum Inc. or the American Hospital Association.

in general. All comments will be reviewed by a moderator before being posted.

Please note: Your browser cookies must be enabled to leave comments and remember your login information. If you are having trouble posting a comment please enable your browser cookies or email us your comment at hhndaily@healthforum.com.

Source: http://www.hhnmag.com/hhnmag/HHNDaily/HHNDailyDisplay.dhtml?id=374000388

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CLINICAL RESEARCH NURSE ? INST FOR SURGICAL ADVANCEMENT ? ORLANDO ? FT -?

|

By

US ? Orlando/FL/USA, Please See Above GENERAL SUMMARY: Under limited supervision, the Clinical Research Nurse plans, coordinates, evaluates, and manages nursing care of participants and data for assigned research project

Read more here:
CLINICAL RESEARCH NURSE ? INST FOR SURGICAL ADVANCEMENT ? ORLANDO ? FT -?

Related posts:

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Posted by on Aug 30 2011. Filed under Careers & Opportunities. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0. You can leave a response or trackback to this entry

Source: http://www.globalhealthhub.org/2011/08/30/clinical-research-nurse-inst-for-surgical-advancement-orlando-ft/

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Blood sugar check with eye tests call

finger prick testA finger prick test checks for high blood sugar but does not diagnose diabetes

Opticians should offer blood sugar checks alongside eye tests to help spot patients with undiagnosed diabetes, experts propose.

A simple finger prick blood test in this setting could identify hundreds of thousands of people with type 2 diabetes, according to researchers.

A pilot study in northern England found the targeted screening picked up one case for every 100 people tested.

This would capture people who do not routinely visit their GP, experts say.

The Department of Health said people in England aged 40 to 72 were offered a check for diabetes alongside other vascular diseases as part of the NHS Health Check programme.

Under-diagnosed

In the UK, 850,000 people are thought to have type 2 diabetes without knowing it, while another 2.5 million people are diagnosed.

While universal screening is not currently recommended, Durham University researchers say there is a case for targeted screening.

In their study, published in the British Journal of General Practice, they asked five optometry practices to start offering finger prick tests to any customers attending for an eye check who had one or more risk factors of diabetes, such as increased body mass index or being aged over 40.

Out of nearly 2,000 customers, two-thirds were offered the blood test, and about half consented and had the check.

Of the 1,000 tested, a third were found to have abnormally high sugar levels in their blood suggestive of diabetes and were advised to visit their doctor for further tests.

162 people took the advice and went to see their GP, and of these 138 said they were sent for more investigations.

And this led to nine people being diagnosed with pre-diabetes and seven with diabetes.

Dr Jenny Howse, who led the research along with colleagues at The James Cook University Hospital in Middlesbrough, said: "The screening test is less invasive and time consuming than fasting blood glucose and oral glucose tolerance tests.

"Already pharmacists and chiropodists have shown it is feasible to offer screening in their practices, here in the UK as well as in Australia and Switzerland.

"In the US, 60% of adults visit dentists at least once a year for standard check-ups and those practices could be suitable locations to screen for diabetes.

"In the UK, our initial results show screening for diabetes in opticians is a feasible option but we now need to look at the practicalities of delivering it, including liaison between opticians and GPs and the time costs for opticians."

'Can be misleading'

But the charity Diabetes UK does not recommend finger prick tests for risk assessment.

A spokesman said: "Finger prick tests on their own can be misleading.

"Blood glucose levels can vary in all individuals during any given day, and these tests also do not factor in other risk factors for developing Type 2 diabetes, such as having a large waist or a family history of the condition.

"People with one of more risk factors may be falsely reassured if they have a normal glucose reading.

"Also, a positive diagnosis can cause anxiety if someone does not have access to information and advice provided by a trained healthcare professional at hand."

But he said a commitment to finding new ways of diagnosing diabetes early was "always positive".

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/go/rss/int/news/-/news/health-14717837

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Rare 9/11 video of underground search

(CBS News)�

NEW YORK - CBS News Justice correspondent Bob Orr was given special access to video captured by FEMA in the days following the attacks of 9/11/01.

FEMA had exclusive access, and spent eight months documenting the scene in lower Manhattan. The video begins with the desperate search for survivors.

Firefighters dug through the debris and cadaver dogs were ferried on zip lines in and out of narrow pockets inside the wreckage.

On the surface, searchers faced a seemingly insurmountable task - picking through one and a half million tons of twisted steel and broken concrete. But, an equally daunting challenge loomed below. The six stories beneath the collapsed Twin Towers were pitch black.

(Left, VIDEO: 9/11 rescue crews look for survivors)

Guided by periodic shafts of light, a rescue team from Miami carefully tracked subway lines looking for people who might have taken refuge when the Twin Towers were hit.

A group of fellow searchers from Washington State is seen inching towards another possible shelter.

"Office Depot over here," on searcher said. "This opens into a large space - we may want to take a look."

While some stairwells remained accessible, many pathways and escalators were cut off by immoveable rubble. Often rescue crews had to travel along pipes and then squeeze through narrow conduits.

The subterranean search turned up no miracles, and no survivors. But, there were so many strange, even haunting discoveries.

Newspapers were found untouched on their stands trumpeting the big stories from the morning of September 11th, 2001. An arrest in a bank heist topped the New York Daily News. An election story headlined the New York Post.

WATCH: 9/11 Fla. rescue team scours NYC subways

Searchers also found dusty merchandise stacked on store shelves - right where it was when the clerks ran to safety. At least one subway train was found crushed in the cave-in. Parked cars were tossed around their underground garage.

The clocks on one wall were were frozen in time - just before 10 a.m. - the precise moment the North Tower collapsed.

Back above ground, the FEMA cameras recorded other memorable scenes. A rescue dog fitted with a camera on its collar is sceen scouring the ground. A crushed fire truck is identified when someone wrote "E-34" for Engine 34 in its dust. American flags were planted amid the wreckage as symbols of hope in our national time of despair. Small pieces from the American Airlines Flight 11 - the first jetliner to hit the Twin Towers are seen on the ground.

Perhaps the most defining image was the panorama of destruction - and the last skeletal remains of the World Trade Center being brought down.

A decade later, the pictures resonate and take us back to that horrible day which is still so unimagineable.

Watch below: 9/11 aftermath: Eerie subway tour

Source: http://feeds.cbsnews.com/~r/CBSNewsMain/~3/Xyf14glaESk/main20099509.shtml

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'Gimme' Kids Often Grow Into 'Gimme' Adults

By Jenifer Goodwin
HealthDay Reporter

MONDAY, Aug. 29 (HealthDay News) -- Kids who have trouble resisting temptation are more likely than patient preschoolers to grow into adults who lack self-control, a new study suggests.

"What we're seeing is that there are some individuals who consistently presented as high or low delayers," lead study author B.J. Casey, a cognitive neuroscientist at the Sackler Institute for Developmental Psychobiology at Weill Cornell Medical College in New York City, said.

Prior research has shown that people who have trouble delaying gratification have lower SATs scores on average, higher body mass indexes (BMIs), higher divorce rates and a higher risk of substance abuse, Casey said.

Forty years ago, researchers put a group of 4-year-olds through a classic test designed to measure self-control. The kids were left in a room with a cookie or a marshmallow treat (whichever they preferred). An adult told the children if they could wait for him to return, they could have two cookies or two treats instead of just one.

Kids also had the option of ringing a bell on a desk while the adult was away, in which case the experimenter would run back, and the child could eat one treat but not the second.

The kids were then rated as either having low, average or high self-control depending on how long they could wait to eat the treat.

Followed through adolescence and into adulthood, many of the original 500 participants provided assessments of their self-control in their 20s and 30s. In their mid-40s today, 59 of them took another test to measure their self-control and ability to delay gratification.

In the new test, reported in the Aug. 30 issue of Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, the adults were shown images of either smiling, fearful or neutral faces, and instructed to press a button based on the facial expression.

The concept is that a smiling face is more enticing than a neutral face. For adults, reaction to faces is a better way of testing self-control than the promise of a cookie or marshmallow.

"As we get older, we're conditioned to respond to positive and negative social cues, so smiling faces are very alluring," said Casey.

The study found that the kids who lacked self-control grew into adults who had a harder time resisting the urge to act when they saw the smiling face than kids who had more self-control as preschoolers.

Researchers also did brain scans of 26 participants and found differences in activation of the ventral striatum, a region involved with reward and implicated in addiction.

Researchers found no difference in the responses when participants were shown only neutral faces, which presumably were less enticing.

Casey said the findings suggest that those who are able to delay gratification may be less susceptible to the pull of "alluring information" -- in this case, the sweet or the smiling face.

"What it tells us is that it's not that they can't control their impulses, like in ADHD. It's probably more associated with their overall sensitivity to how alluring the cue is to them, in terms of the difficulty in not being able to withhold a response," she said.

Sometimes, this trait can be advantageous, Casey said. "Any time you take risks or you're a novelty seeker, sometimes it's going to pay off and sometimes it won't. If you're not a risk taker, you may not take advantage of all opportunities."

Dr. Andrew Adesman, chief of developmental and behavioral pediatrics at the Steven and Alexandra Cohen Children's Medical Center of New York in New Hyde Park, said the study is both unique and significant in that researchers were able to follow up with people over a 40-year span.

Yet he cautioned against drawing firm conclusions about how likely a lack of self control at age 4 is to persist into adulthood. The original research included several hundred kids. In this paper, researchers "cherry picked" those who were on either end of the spectrum at age 4 and continued to have that trait as they reached their 20s and 30s.

While that can help researchers detect differences in brain scans, it leaves out kids who may have had difficulty with delaying gratification and improved over time. Nor does the research get at the role of parenting or education in helping kids learn self-control, he added.

"The findings here are not surprising in that they do show there is stability in some individuals of these traits and there are neurobiological differences underpinning it," he said. "But you have to be careful presuming that the way kids are at 4 is the way they are going to be at 40."

MedicalNewsCopyright � 2011 HealthDay. All rights reserved.

SOURCES: B.J. Casey, Ph.D., director, Sackler Institute and the Neuroscience Graduate Program, Weill Cornell Medical College, New York, N.Y.; Andrew Adesman, M.D., chief of developmental and behavioral pediatrics at the Steven and Alexandra Cohen Children's Medical Center, New Hyde Park, New York; Aug. 30, 2011, PNAS


Source: http://www.medicinenet.com/guide.asp?s=rss&k=DailyHealth&a=148790

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Tuesday, August 30, 2011

Saffron Can Help Prevent Liver Cancer

Source: http://www.medicaldaily.com/news/20110829/7068/saffron-spice-saffron-spice-inhibit-liver-cancer-hepatocellular-carcinoma-fight-against-liver-c.htm

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Clinical senate influence on commissioning groups to be diluted, predicts NHS Alliance

By Susie Sell, 30 August 2011

Dr Dixon: it would be inappropriate if clinical senates were able to ?wrong foot? CCGs? decisions.

Dr Dixon: it would be inappropriate if clinical senates were able to ?wrong foot? CCGs? decisions.

NHS Alliance chairman Dr Michael Dixon said the DoH and government now recognise that the plans to introduce clinical senates will not work if they are able to hinder the progress of CCGs. �

Dr Dixon said clinical senates must instead take on an advisory and support role, as it would be inappropriate if they were able to ?wrong foot? CCGs? decisions. �

He said: ?I think that?s the way things are moving very fast. In the early days there was talk of clinical senates having a role in approving CCGs and being able to veto commissioning plans.

?The debate has now moved on and people are beginning to realise that it wouldn?t be workable and would be demoralising for CCGs who want to make a difference in the re-design of services.?

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Source: http://www.gponline.com/channel/news/article/1087530/clinical-senate-influence-commissioning-groups-diluted-predicts-nhs-alliance/

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Gene Mutation Found in Uterine Fibroids

Discovery May Lead to Targeted Therapies for These Common, Benign Tumors

By Matt McMillen
WebMD Health News

Reviewed by Laura J. Martin, MD

Aug. 25, 2011 -- Mutations in a single gene MED12 occur in about 70% of uterine fibroids, Finnish researchers find.

"This is a giant step toward understanding why fibroids arise -- but toward design of targeted therapies it is a very early step," study leader Lauri A. Aaltonen, MD, PhD, of the University of Helsinki, says in a news release. "Let's hope that this journey has begun."

Fibroids, also known as leiomyomas, are noncancerous growths of the uterus. As many as 60% of women develop fibroids by age 45.

In about half of all cases, fibroids cause problems. This may be because of their size, their location in the uterus, or the number of fibroids. Symptoms can include abnormal vaginal bleeding, painful menstruation, abdominal pain, and pain during sex. They can also lead to infertility. Fibroids are the most common reason for hysterectomy -- surgical removal of the uterus.

Previous research has linked several genetic changes to fibroids. But these occur only in a minority of cases, so Aaltonen's team searched for much more common genetic alterations.

They examined 18 fibroids collected from 17 patients. Using a technique called exome sequencing, they compared all protein-coding genes in the fibroids to those of normal tissue. Ten of those 18 fibroids displayed a mutation.

When the researchers examined an additional 207 fibroids from 80 patients, their analysis confirmed the "striking frequency" of the genetic mutations of MED12. Based on their findings, they conclude that such mutations likely play a key role in the development of fibroids.

Their findings appear in today's online issue of the journal Science.

SOURCES: M�kinen, N. Science, published online Aug. 25, 2011.News release, University of Helsinki.American Congress of Obstetricians and Gynecologists: "Uterine Fibroids." �2011 WebMD, LLC. All Rights Reserved.


Source: http://www.medicinenet.com/guide.asp?s=rss&a=148688&k=Womens_Health_General

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Cancer Drug Shortages Getting Worse, FDA Says

By Steven Reinberg
HealthDay Reporter

WEDNESDAY, Aug. 24 (HealthDay News) -- Since 2010, the number of drugs either in short supply or not available at all has risen dramatically, according to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration.

Most of these are generic drugs given by injection and used in hospitals to treat serious conditions such as breast and testicular cancer. These shortages are putting patients at risk and compromising their care, experts say.

"FDA has been monitoring shortages for the last six years, and in 2010 we saw a large spike in shortages, which was a large jump from the year before," said Valerie Jensen, associate director of the Drug Shortage Program in FDA's Center for Drug Evaluation and Research. "That's what we are continuing to see in 2011. We are still seeing these large numbers of injectable drug shortages."

Dr. Richard Schilsky, past president of the American Society of Clinical Oncology, said "this is very serious, particularly the shortage of cancer drugs."

"Patients are being called everyday by their oncologist being told that they have to delay their treatment because the drug isn't available," Schilsky noted. "We have had to set priority lists of which patients are going to get treatment, because we don't always have an adequate drug supply. And it varies week-to-week; sometimes day-to-day."

There are several reasons for these ongoing shortages, Jensen said. Most are due to problems in manufacturing, ranging from contamination to late delivery of raw materials. Other problems include misprints in the drug's label or packaging and increased demand, she said.

Some people believe the FDA is causing part of the problem by not quickly inspecting plants to allow them to start producing the drug again, but Jensen challenged that notion.

"If the company is having a quality issue, the company doesn't have to wait for an FDA inspection to restart the manufacture," Jensen explained. The agency attempts to work with the companies to get drugs back into the market or tries to locate other sources for these drugs, she added.

However, Jensen noted that since most of these drugs are generic, companies don't make much money on them and may, in some cases, opt to discontinue them.

Joseph M. Hill, director of federal legislative affairs at the American Society of Health-System Pharmacists, said that, "from our members' perspective, it is kind of a crisis."

"We are seeing a shortage of critical drugs in the areas of cancer therapy, pain medications, including anesthetics, and some nutritional products. Some of these are products that people cannot do without," he said.

Another reason for the shortages, may be that companies are using them to increase prices, Dr. Otis Brawley, chief medical officer at the American Cancer Society, said.

"There is a pattern here. The drugs for which there is a shortage are the generic drugs, where the ability to make money is not as great," he said. "If the drug is off the market, they can reprice it."

While many of these delays are due to real manufacturing problems, "there are instances where I am certain that manufacture was stopped because they wanted to raise the price," Brawley said.

However, David Belian, a spokesman for the Generic Pharmaceutical Association, said that companies are not taking drugs off the market to raise prices.

"Shortages have been caused by everything from an insufficient supply of available raw materials to meet demand, to inadequate and delayed communications about shortages, both within the supply chain and also within and among the FDA's enforcement and drug shortages personnel," he said.

"FDA enforcement actions that delay or deter the production of certain products have also had an impact, as have changes in clinical practices that have altered volume production and use, as well as wholesaler stockpiling of critical medications," Belian said.

There are about a dozen commonly used cancer drugs that have been in and out of short supply for a year, Schilsky said. These include Doxil (doxorubicin), which is made exclusively by Janssen Products LP and used off-label to treat breast cancer.

"For some drugs there may be alternatives, but for some diseases there are not good substitutes," Schilsky said. "Some of these drugs are lifesaving drugs for patients. There is the potential that this could result in bad outcomes."

Another example of a drug that is in short supply is the leukemia drug cytarabine, where three makers of the drug are all experiencing delays.

"This is one of the bedrock treatments for acute leukemia and there is no suitable substitute for that," Schilsky said. "Patients with leukemia are patients who can't wait, they need treatment and they need it now."

Another chemotherapy drug, cisplatin, which is essential in the treatment of testicular cancer, is also in short supply. While the drug can be substituted in some disease, for testicular cancer it is the "curative therapy and the best possible therapy," Schilsky said. "Patients' lives are on the line here."

MedicalNewsCopyright � 2011 HealthDay. All rights reserved.

SOURCES: Valerie Jensen, R.Ph., associate director, Drug Shortage Program, Center for Drug Evaluation and Research, U.S. Food and Drug Administration; Richard Schilsky, M.D., past president, American Society of Clinical Oncology, and professor, medicine, University of Chicago; David Belian, spokesman, Generic Pharmaceutical Association; Otis Brawley, M.D., chief medical officer, American Cancer Society; Joseph M. Hill, director, Federal Legislative Affairs, American Society of Health-System Pharmacists


Source: http://www.medicinenet.com/guide.asp?s=rss&a=148608&k=Womens_Health_General

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