Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: 2006 + july + highlights  Related to the article below (Last Update: 12/1/2008)

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Bonnie Garcia's legislative highlights
The Desert Sun, CA - Nov 29, 2008
(2007) AB 2226: Requires schools, after July 1, 2010, to provide information sheets on diabetes to provide parents of incoming seventh-graders. Law. (2006) ...
UPDATE 4-Copper slides, Japan data highlights bleak outlook
Reuters - Nov 28, 2008
Battery material lead MPB3 fell to $1076 a tonne, its lowest since July 2006, as traders priced in falling demand from the auto sector, where sales have ...
Update: SAND Technology Announces Year End Results
FOXBusiness - Nov 28, 2008
(Dollars in Thousands (000's) except for Per Share Data and Rates of Exchange) >> << Fiscal Year Ended July 31, 2008 July 31, 2007 July 31, 2006 CA CA CA ...OTC:SNDTF - OTC:CMTX
New "Science of Nature" exhibit highlights Coyote Point Museum's ...
San Mateo County Times, CA - Nov 28, 2008
She noted that attendance was up 7 percent in the four-month period between July and October compared to the same period a year earlier, ...
BBC builders: Tom Scott, and the team behind /programmes and /music
guardian.co.uk, UK -
Scott joined the BBC in July 2006 with an unusually broad range of experience, from working as a biologist in a microscopy lab to information architecture ...
Highlights of Steinbrenner's Yankee career
International Herald Tribune, France - Nov 20, 2008
July 3, 1983 ? Fined $5000 by Kuhn for remarks about Chicago White Sox co-owner Jerry Reinsdorf. April 19, 1983 ? Fined $50000 by Kuhn for remarks during ...
Episode Title: (#2213) "Chicago Bears at Minnesota Vikings (Flex ...
The Futon Critic, CA - Nov 30, 2008
Complementing that stream are a number of extra features to enrich the viewing experience including additional camera angles, in-game highlights, ...
Statistical highlights: 5th ODI
Rediff, India - Nov 26, 2008
Nasser Hussain had made 115 at Lord's on July 13, 2002. # Pietersen is now the first English captain to register a hundred away from home. ...
Forterra Environmental Reports Third-Quarter 2008 Results
Canada NewsWire (press release), Canada -
Financial Highlights Forterra continues to be a developing-stage company and, as such, the progress that the company is making is not fully reflected in the ...CVE:FTE - TSE:X
Genta Incorporated Announces Third Quarter 2008 Financial Results ...
MarketWatch - Nov 6, 2008
Genasense in Chronic Lymphocytic Leukemia (CLL): In July 2009, the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) notified the Company that the amendment to its New ...OTC:GNTA
Source: Google News


 

Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: july 2006 + july 24 + health  Related to the article below (Last Update: 8/5/2008)


AFL-CIO
Workers Urge Democrats to Focus Platform on Employee Choice, Jobs ...
AFL-CIO, DC -
In July alone, the nation lost 51000 jobs, according to the US Department of Labor. Bloomberg reports that the combination of job losses and decreasing ...
J&J to pay $511000 in drug paperwork case
CNNMoney.com -
The company's McNeil unit acquired the plant when J&J bought Pfizer Inc.'s consumer health care unit in 2006. The settlement is dated July 24. ...

Dallas Morning News
Electricity use sets record for year on 105-degree day
Dallas Morning News, TX -
Although Texans weren't using enough power to break the all-time record of 62339 megawatts set in July 2006, the state's power grid was running hard. ...
Tomato Growers Seek Payback on Salmonella Scare: Cindy Skrzycki
Bloomberg -
He introduced a bill on July 24 that would compensate growers and packers for losses up to $100 million. ``There should be some compensation,'' said Mahoney ...
The week: Stories and photos from July 27 - Aug. 2
San Diego Union Tribune, United States - Aug 3, 2008
The impostor contacted the woman, who had been behind on her bill, outside her house on July 24. He told her that he was a city water department worker ...
BELLUS Health moves forward on nutraceutical and pharmaceutical ...
Canada NewsWire (press release), Canada -
As previously reported, effective July 1, 2007, the Company adopted the US dollar as its functional and reporting currency, as a significant portion of its ...BLUS
Congress Approves Medicare, Medicaid Changes
Mondaq News Alerts (subscription), UK -
In what is becoming an annual ritual, Congress on July 15, 2008, approved legislation (HR6331) that reverses a 10.6 percent reduction in Medicare payments ...
Government Gets a 'C' on Data Protection
TheStreet.com -
A 2006 investigation by the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee discovered 788 breaches between January 2003 and July 2006 at 17 federal ...
CASTLE Data Showed Boosted REYATAZ(R) (atazanavir sulfate) and ...
MarketWatch -
Women comprise half of all people living with HIV around the world, and in 2006, more than 25 percent of new HIV-1 infections in the US were in women. ...
Retail health set for fast decline in next quarter
SpringFair.com Marketplace, UK -
In April, RTT members claimed that the decline of the retail sector was akin to flu, rather than pneumonia, but at its July 24 meeting members of the panel ...
Source: Google News

[BOOK] The unified software development process -
I Jacobson, G Booch, J Rumbaugh

Frequent attendance at religious services and mortality over 28 years -
WJ Strawbridge - American Journal of Public Health, 1997 - Am Public Health Assoc
... Pharm., January 15, 2006; 63(2): 169 - 173. ... Older Adults Journal of Applied Gerontology,
August 1, 2005; 24(4): 337 ... Cardiol., July 5, 2005; 46(1): 184 - 221. ...

[BOOK] Applied multivariate statistical analysis -
RA Johnson, DW Wichern - 1998 - Prentice Hall Upper Saddle River, NJ
... and clustering, Decision Support Systems, v.42 n.1, p.375-389, October 2006. ...
real-time lighting design, ACM Transactions on Graphics (TOG), v.24 n.3, July 2005. ...

Drugs in Pregnancy and Lactation -
GG Briggs, RK Freeman, SJ Yaffe - Family Practice News, 2008 - journals.elsevierhealth.com
... GIDEON KOREN Family Practice News 1 January 2006 (Vol. ... 31, Issue 24, Page 16) Full
Text. ... and Neurodevelopment Gideon Koren Family Practice News 15 July 2001 (Vol ...

The relationship of patient reading ability to self-reported health and use of health services -
DW Baker - American Journal of Public Health, 1997 - Am Public Health Assoc
... Start Intervention Health Promot Pract, January 1, 2006; 7(1 ... and AB Bindman Association
of Health Literacy With Diabetes Outcomes JAMA, July 24, 2002; 288(4 ...

A prospective study of dietary glycemic load, carbohydrate intake, and risk of coronary heart … -
S Liu, WC Willett, MJ Stampfer, FB Hu, M Franz, L … - American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, 2000 - Am Soc Nutrition
... S. Liu Lowering Dietary Glycemic Load for Weight Control and Cardiovascular Health:
A Matter of Quality Archives of Internal Medicine, July 24, 2006; 166(14 ...

Making large-scale support vector machine learning practical -
T Joachims - 1999 - portal.acm.org
... of the 2006 international conference on Digital government research, May 21-24,
2006, San Diego ... language processing in the biomedical domain, p.1-8, July 11-11 ...

Muscle weakness is related to utilization of health care resources in COPD patients -
M Decramer, R Gosselink, T Troosters, M … - European Respiratory Journal, 1997 - Eur Respiratory Soc
... Nihilism to Evidence-based Optimism Proceedings of the ATS, March 1, 2006; 3(1 ... Care
Med., July 1, 2005; 172(1): 19 - 38. ... J., November 1, 2004; 24(5): 846 - 860. ...

Under the shadow of Tuskegee: African Americans and health care -
VN Gamble - American Journal of Public Health, 1997 - Am Public Health Assoc
... with ideas from sociology Health (London) , July 1, 2006 ... Public Health Emergency
In Four Countries Health Aff., March ... Oncol., February 20, 2006; 24(6): 904 - 909 ...

The Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapy scale: development and validation of the general measure -
DF Cella, DS Tulsky, G Gray, B Sarafian, E Linn, A … - Journal of Clinical Oncology, 1993 - jco.ascopubs.org
... Home page S Basu and N Nair Stable disease and improved health-related quality of
life (HRQoL) following fractionated low ... Oncol., July 20, 2006; 24(21): 3438 ...

Source: Google Scholar
 
 

Health Highlights: July 24, 2006

Here are some of the latest health and medical news developments, compiled by the editors of HealthDay:

Sunscreen That Blocks UVA Radiation Okayed for U.S.

Anthelios SX, a sunscreen that's reportedly better at blocking ultraviolet A (UVA) radiation than other sunscreens currently sold in the United States, has been approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration.

The product, made by the French cosmetics company L'Oreal SA, contains an ingredient called ecamsule, and has a sun protection factor (SPF) of 15, the Associated Press reported.

Ecamsule is more effective against UVA radiation than ingredients (which block mainly ultraviolet B radiation) contained in sunscreens currently sold in the United States. Ecamsule has been an ingredient in L'Oreal's sunscreens sold in Europe and Canada since 1993.

The FDA noted that UVA is a deeper penetrating radiation than UVB. There's a suspected link between UVA and long-term effects such as wrinkles, basal and squamous cell cancers and melanoma, the AP reported.

 

FDA Approves First Treatment for Hunter Syndrome

A drug called Elaprase (idursulfase) on Monday became the first treatment for Hunter syndrome to be approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration. Hunter syndrome is a rare, inherited disease that can cause premature death.

The condition is caused by a defect in the body's ability to produce a chemical required to break down complex sugars. It can cause growth delay, joint stiffness, respiratory and cardiac problems, liver and spleen enlargement, neurological defects, and death.

The FDA designated Elaprase an orphan product, which are generally developed to treat rare diseases or conditions that affect fewer than 200,000 people in the United States. Hunter syndrome is diagnosed in about one out of 65,000 to 132,000 births.

The FDA approval was based on a study of 96 Hunter syndrome patients. It found that patients treated with Elaprase showed an improved ability to walk. Side effects included potentially fatal hypersensitivity reactions including respiratory distress, drop in blood pressure, and seizure.

Under the Orphan Drug Act, a company has exclusive seven-year marketing rights for its product. Elaprase is made by Shire Human Genetic Therapies, Inc. of Cambridge, Mass. The company plans to have the drug available within 30 days, and treatment is expected to cost about $300,000 per patient per year, the Associated Press reported.

 
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Guidelines Issued for Justice System's Handling of Drug Addicts

Research-based guidelines on how the U.S. criminal justice system should deal with drug addicts were released Monday by the National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA).

The 13 guidelines are based on the understanding that drug addiction is a brain disease that affects behavior, the Associated Press reported. The guidelines state that drug addiction requires carefully monitored and personalized treatment and that offenders may need access to addiction medications, such as methadone, after their release.

Offenders should be pressured into treatment as a condition of probation and they should have to undergo urine testing during treatment to detect and prevent relapses, the guidelines recommended.

Dr. Nora Volkow, director of the NIDA, noted that every $1 spent on drug treatment programs saves an estimated $4 in crime costs. Drug crimes cost the United States. an estimated $107 billion a year, the AP reported.

-----

Breakthrough Cancer Drug Gleevec May Hurt Heart: Study

Gleevec, the cancer wonder drug, may be toxic to the heart and lead to heart failure in patients, researchers reported Sunday in an analysis of the drug.

The findings, published online in the journal Nature Medicine, detail how Gleevec inadvertently targets a protein maintaining cells that contract the heart muscle and help to force blood through the body. The implications of the study call into question a whole class of new cancer drugs that work in a similar way, the Philadelphia Inquirer reported.

The study followed up on 10 patients who developed severe heart failure after taking Gleevec. Those cases were first reported in 2004 by the University of Texas M.D. Anderson Cancer Center in Houston.

Scientists, however, do not know why Gleevec caused the heart to fail. "This finding is a big surprise," Thomas L. Force, a cardiologist researcher who led a Thomas Jefferson University team and conducted the study with Jean-Bernard Durand of the Texas cancer center, told the Inquirer. Gleevec is the first of a new class of cancer drugs designed to focus on a single cancer protein and avoid many side effects of previous cancer drugs.

Novartis, which makes Gleevec, called the side effect rare, and said that patients who show symptoms are easily treated with standard medications. The company said it had already reported the 10 cases of heart failure to health officials and that the side effect is now included on the drug's warning label, the Inquirer reported.

-----

FDA to Tighten Rules for Drug Advisory Panelists

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration said Monday it plans to tighten guidelines for outside scientists and doctors who serve on agency advisory panels that make recommendations on drugs and medical devices going to market.

The new guidelines are expected to specify when panelists should be disqualified because of conflicts of interest and to make public panelists' financial disclosures, Bloomberg News reported Monday.

Scott Gottlieb, the FDA's deputy commissioner for medical and scientific affairs, told Bloomberg the new restrictions are designed to "make sure that the current system is rigorous, consistent and transparent."

Congress and public advocacy groups have in the past criticized the FDA for appointing doctors and scientists who have financial or other relationships with the companies whose products they are asked to consider. The House has already approved legislation that seeks to prevent the FDA from allowing those with conflicts to serve on advisory panels, Bloomberg reported.

-----

Sharon's Condition Deteriorates, Medical Experts Say

Former Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon's kidneys are failing and changes have been detected in his brain, medical experts said Monday.

Sharon, 78, has been in a coma at The Sheba Medical Center near Tel Aviv since suffering a severe stroke in January. A hospital spokeswoman refused to say whether his life was threatened by his deteriorating condition, the Associated Press reported.

But Dr. John Martin, a cardiovascular expert at London's University College, told the AP that the kidney failure and changes in the brain membrane that Sharon suffered in the past two days indicate that the former leader's life was in danger. His comments were echoed by other physicians quoted in Israeli media.

Kidney dialysis and drugs to treat what appears to be cerebral edema could lead to an improvement in Sharon's condition within hours, Martin said.

Sharon had a small stroke in December and was put on blood thinners before suffering a severe brain hemorrhage in January. The Israeli leader underwent several brain surgeries to stop the bleeding, and many independent experts doubted he would ever recover, the AP reported.

 

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