Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: medical + research + boom  Related to the article below (Last Update: 12/1/2008)

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Travel for Health and Beauty.
4Hoteliers, Hong Kong -
The USA has seen a huge boom in medical tourism, but Europe is also on the up. Germans in search of dental treatment or other healthcare are travelling in ...
Trinity Medical Center Opens New Patient Care Units
Wheeling Intelligencer, WV - Nov 28, 2008
The hospital industry is in the throes of a major building boom, Murdock noted. In the next decade, an estimated $200 billion will be spent on new hospital ...
Leaders gauge impact of president-elect?s policies on Clark County ...
The Columbian, WA - Nov 30, 2008
Joe Kortum, president and chief executive officer of Southwest Washington Medical Center, has no such fear. ?In terms of health care policy, I think we can ...
Will a medical school boom ease the doctor shortage?
DetNews.com, MI - Nov 14, 2008
College presidents may look to a medical school to boost the prestige of a university, spark economic development and better compete for research dollars. ...
Nigeria: Economy, Quick Fix And Enduring Solutions
AllAfrica.com, Washington -
The preceeding boom years saw our revenue profile increasing over sixteenfold since 1996, yet paradoxically, the standard of living and the international ...
Updated: New York couple who died in Tallahassee plane crash were ...
Tallahassee Democrat, FL - Nov 14, 2008
Hess is also listed as the chairman of the board for Hauptman-Woodward Medical Research Institute, which is a part of the Buffalo Niagara Medical Campus. ...
OP-ED: Closing the barn door
Charleston Regional Business, SC - Nov 26, 2008
... the SC Research Authority; the Noisette initiative in North Charleston; the Lowcountry Graduate Center; the growth of medical research at the Medical ...
Current and Future State of the US Nursing Workforce
Journal of American Medical Association (subscription), IL - Nov 25, 2008
In the 1960s and 1970s, when large numbers of women born in the baby boom generation entered their 20s, many chose to become RNs. ...
Geneticist prepares for pending wheat revolution
Capital Press (subscription), OR - Nov 27, 2008
"So we are trying to get ready for that boom because when things change, they change fast, but researchers are not ready to handle that change. ...

ABC News
Study: Ginkgo Biloba No Good To Prevent Alzheimer?s
eFluxMedia - Nov 19, 2008
About 5.2 million Americans live with the brain disorder, a number that is expected to grow as the baby boom generation ages. About 16 million people are ...
Study: Ginko doesn't cut dementia risk CNN
all 559 news articles »
Source: Google News


 

Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: research + medical + boom  Related to the article below (Last Update: 8/5/2008)

San Antonio plays to its strengths to survive
Dallas Morning News, TX - Aug 3, 2008
Because of such workplace diversity, "San Antonio doesn't go through the boom-or-bust cycle that so many cities experience," said Richard Butler, ...

Washington Post
Anthrax case raises worries about biodefense effort
Houston Chronicle, United States - Aug 2, 2008
By ERIC LIPTON and SCOTT SHANE New York Times A newsman reports Friday from Fort Detrick Army Medical Research Institute of Infectious Diseases in Frederick ...
AssociatedPress
Research on bioterrorism might make US less safe Kentucky.com
all 6,582 news articles »
Teachers converge in Cumberland Co
abc11tv.com, NC -
New housing areas are popping up all over Cumberland County and the area's population is expected to boom once the BRAC plan is completed. ...
Reports From China Publishes In-Depth Research On China's Medical ...
PR Web (press release), WA - Jul 30, 2008
Look for household medical devices as a major trend in the future. "The investment boom in Chinese medical and health industry has maintained its speed. ...
Traditional Tibetan medicine sees new boom in talent, R&D
Xinhua, China - Jul 12, 2008
... being expended on research and development. The Tibet Autonomous Region is authorizing the first group of distinguished Tibetan medical practitioners. ...
Alzheimer?s-related gene linked to reduced connectivity in brain
Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, WI - Aug 1, 2008
Reiman said the medical college research was an ?elegant study? that adds to the growing promise of a variety of imaging techniques being developed. ...
The Impending Health-Care Boom
MSNBC - Aug 4, 2008
Kinetic Concepts is a mid-size medical technology company that makes and sells products for wound care both in the US and internationally. ...
Over 65s fuelling exercise boom as Britain becomes more active
Telegraph.co.uk, United Kingdom - Jul 23, 2008
By Kate Devlin, Medical Correspondent Sporting levels have increased substantially since the middle of the last decade, official figures reveal. ...

Sydney Morning Herald
Debt before a fall
Sydney Morning Herald, Australia - Jul 29, 2008
Stefan Thurner, head of the Complex Systems Research Group at the Medical University of Vienna, and academics in the US have produced a computer model that ...
Oakland University med school faces obstacles
Detroit Free Press, United States - Jul 30, 2008
It would also augment Beaumont's and OU's already-strong resources in medical education and research. Equally important, experts say metro Detroit can ...
Source: Google News

Body mass index as indicator of standard of living in developing countries -
M Nube, WK Asenso-Okyere, GJM van den Boom - European Journal of Clinical Nutrition, 1998 - nature.com
... M Nub? 1,a , WK Asenso-Okyere 2 and GJM van den Boom 1. ... 2 Institute of Statistical,
Social and Economic Research (ISSER), University of Ghana, Legon, Ghana. ...

Self-management of asthma in general practice, asthma control and quality of life: a randomised … -
… Thoonen, TRJ Schermer, G van den Boom, J Molema, H … - Thorax, 2003 - pt.wkhealth.com
... Schermer, TRJ 1 ; van den Boom, G 1 ... 2 University Lung Centre Dekkerswald, University
Medical Centre Nijmegen ... Centre for Quality of Care Research, University of ...

A strategy for rapid and efficient DNA sequencing by mass spectrometry -
… Tang, DJ Fu, A Braun, D van den Boom, CL Smith, RJ … - Nature Biotechnology, 1996 - nature.com
Research Article. ... Hubert K?ster 1, * , Kai Tang 2 , Dong-Jing Fu 2 , Andreas Braun
3 , Dirk van den Boom 1 , Cassandra L. Smith 5 , Robert J. Cotter 4 & ...

The Economic Value of Medical Research -
KM Murphy, R Topel - … the Gains from Medical Research: An Economic Approach, 2003 - books.google.com
... health levels improve, and as the baby- boom generation ages ... the incentive to spend
on medical care and indirectly skew investments in research toward cost ...

Cerebral microbleeds in CADASIL -
… Lesnik Oberstein, R van den Boom, MA van Buchem, … - Neurology, 2001 - AAN Enterprises
... CADASIL Research Group* From the Departments of Clinical Genetics (Drs. Lesnik
Oberstein and Breuning), Radiology (Drs. van den Boom and van Buchem), Medical ...

MEDICINE: Effects of Medical Research on Health Care and the Economy -
H Pardes, KG Manton, ES Lander, HD Tolley, AD … - Science, 1999 - sciencemag.org
... MEDICINE: Effects of Medical Research on Health Care and the Economy. ... will be the
demographic shift caused by the aging of the "baby boom" cohorts (persons born ...

Formation of the hinge helix in the lac represser is induced upon binding to the lac operator -
CAEM Spronk, M Slijper, JH van Boom, R Kaptein, R … - Nature Structural Biology, 1996 - palgrave-journals.com
... AEM Spronk 1 , Monique Slijper 1 , Jacques H. van Boom 2 , Robert Kaptein 1, 3 &
Rolf Boelens 1 1 Bijvoet Center for Biomolecular Research, Utrecht University ...

Model of electrical conductivity of skeletal muscle based on tissue structure -
… BA Albers, KL Boon, W Wallinga-de Jonge, HBK Boom - Medical and Biological Engineering and Computing, 1986 - Springer
... A B - (26) St Medical & Biological ... Acknowledgement--This work has been supported
by the Nether- lands Organisation for the Advancement of Pure Research (ZWO). ...

Long-Term Trends in the Use of Complementary and Alternative Medical Therapies in the United States -
RC Kessler, RB Davis, DF Foster, MI Van Rompay, EE … - Annals of Internal Medicine, 2001 - annals.highwire.org
... years than the pre?baby boom respondents had ... and Center for Alternative Medicine
Research and Education, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Boston ...

The fundamental and medical impacts of recent progress in research on hereditary hearing loss -
V Kalatzis, C Petit - Human Molecular Genetics, 1998 - Oxford Univ Press
... it has only been in the last 2 years that the remaining genes were cloned, illustrating
the recent boom in interest and ... MEDICAL IMPACT OF DEAFNESS RESEARCH. ...

Source: Google Scholar
 

   
   

Public Support Fuels Boom in U.S. Medical Research

September 20, 2005 08:41:06 PM PST
Total U.S. investment in biomedical research has more than doubled in a decade, rising from $37 billion annually in 1994 to more than $94 billion by 2003, a new report shows.

The statistic should please most Americans: According to a second report, close to 80 percent of people consistently support medical research as one of the nation's top spending priorities.

"Americans want to be on the cutting edge and they want to be the leader, we see that in the research as well," said Stacie Propst, director of science policy at the nonprofit advocacy group Research!America, which lobbies in support of increased investment for biomedical research.

In their review, Propst and co-researcher Mary Woolley collected data on Americans' attitudes toward health-related research, gleaned from 88 state and federal surveys conducted between 1996 and 2005.

The surveys also revealed increasing pessimism among Americans as to the quality and cost of the health care they receive, with 60 percent now saying the United States does not have the best health-care system in the world.

Those and other findings appear Sept. 21 in a special themed issue of the Journal of the American Medical Association devoted to trends in biomedical research.

One study found the financial health of biomedical research to be sounder than ever. The report's authors examined public-sector and private-industry records on investment from government, industry and private foundations between 1994 and 2004.

The result: "We've seen growth and a real doubling of funding in all sectors," said lead researcher Dr. Hamilton Moses, of the North Garden, Va.-based Alerion Institute. "The proportions are really unchanged over the decade, with roughly 60 percent coming from industry and the remainder coming from government and foundations."

The federal government's main health research branch, the National Institutes of Health (NIH), supplied about 28 percent of funding by 2004, increasing its investment from $1.8 billion in 1994 to more than $2.5 billion by 2003. Overall, the U.S. government allotted about 5.6 percent of its total 2004 health budget to biomedical research, the report found.

The recent surge in funding from both the public and private sectors has been driven by "public support and commercial need," Moses said.

"Without question, medicine and biomedical science has captured the public's attention and their awareness of new treatments that are dependent on science -- and that's translated into funding," he said.

Part of this enthusiasm has stemmed from recent scientific advances, especially the completion of the human genome. "That pushed us in the 1990s to do what became at that point technologically feasible," Moses explained. "It added to the momentum."

"On the commercial side, clearly all of the three major types of companies -- traditional pharmaceutical companies, biotechnology companies and medical device companies -- view health and medicine as a growing market," Moses added. He said medical device companies, especially, are being boosted by an influx of venture capital that just wasn't there before.

And yet the study did uncover one sobering statistic: Despite the doubling in research investment, the number of new drugs receiving U.S. Food and Drug Administration approval actually dropped over the past decade -- from an average of 35.5 a year between 1994-1997 to just 23.3 annually by 2001-2004.

There appear to be a number of reasons for that slowdown, Moses said. "For one thing, the clinical trials process is much more expensive and laborious, and more has to be done now to prove the safety and efficacy of drugs," he said. "And the trials themselves are more involved -- they require more attention to science, larger numbers of patients and a longer duration," all of which add to the cost of research without guaranteeing a marketable product.

And Moses said the gap between new discoveries in basic science and their translation to a drug or device ready for use by patients has always been a long process. Starting with advances like insulin and penicillin in the early part of the last century, "it takes, on average, two decades for the science to be assimilated into new therapies," he said.

But according to poll numbers tabulated by Research!America, Americans still have faith in the promise of biomedical research. Some of the main findings:

  • 94 percent of Americans said medical and health research is important to the U.S. economy, and 79 percent said the federal government should support such research "even if it brings no immediate benefit."
  • 67 percent of Americans are willing to pay $1 a week more in taxes to support additional medical research; but many (61 percent) believe there are "too many regulatory barriers" to research.
  • When asked what type of research was more valuable -- research aimed at preventing or curing disease -- nearly half (48 percent) said preventing illness should be the priority.
  • Embryonic stem cell research garnered support from a majority (58 percent) of Americans, with 34 percent saying they strongly favored it. Of the 29 percent who object to this type of research, more than half (57 percent) cited religious reasons. Just 1 percent of those surveyed objected to the use of animals in health-related research.

Americans are much less enthusiastic about the quality of the health care they receive, however. Six out of 10 Americans polled in 2005 say the U.S. system is no longer the best in the world, and more than half (55 percent) say they are dissatisfied with the quality of the nation's health care. That number is up sharply from the 44 percent reported in 2000.

Still, the public's support for health-related research hasn't dimmed, Propst said.

"About 80 percent of Americans -- in both state and national polls -- say they do support research funding as a priority, and that's been consistent over the past decade," she said.

According to Moses, with funding levels at an all-time high, the challenge now is to spend that money more wisely -- especially when the mechanisms driving diseases such as AIDS, Alzheimer's and cancer are so complex.

"Everyone has to do a better job," he said. "The burden on scientists is to be more discriminating, to pick questions that are important, not just interesting. We need to do a better job of saying, 'Here is where we are blocked, here's what we really just don't understand. Let's work on understanding it and devote our resources to that' -- and then move on."

More information

For more on Americans' views on health-related issues, visit Research!America.

 

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