Popular Articles

Boston University Biomedical Engineer Wins Hartwell Foundation Grant To Create Pediatric Blood Vessel Grafts That Grow With The Child
Boston University Biomedical Engineer Joyce Wong will work to create engineered blood vessels aimed at correcting pediatric heart defects under a major grant from The Hartwell Foundation. Wong is one of just 12 researchers nationwide to win the foundation"s prestigious Individual Biomedical Research Award.
generic viagra online
St. Jude Medical Completes Implants In U.S. Study Of Deep Brain Stimulation For Parkinson's Disease
St. Jude Medical, Inc. (NYSE:STJ) announced the completion of patient implants in its U.S. pivotal clinical study of deep brain stimulation (DBS) for the symptomatic treatment of Parkinson"s disease, a neurological disorder affecting approximately 6.3 million people worldwide that progressively diminishes a person"s control over his or her movements. The announcement was made at the Movement Disorder Society"s 13th International Congress of Parkinson"s Disease and Movement Disorders in Paris.
News of the day
Foresight Biotherapeutics Announces Positive Results From An Open Label Pilot Study In Patients With Viral Conjunctivitis
Foresight Biotherapeutics, Inc. announced completion of a multi-center open-label pilot study of FST100 in the treatment of viral conjunctivitis. FST-100 is a novel formulation of dexamethasone that includes povidone iodine. The trial studied patients with clinical signs and symptoms of acute conjunctivitis who tested positive for adenoviral antigen by the RPS Adeno Detector® (RPS). Patients were enrolled in a single arm utilizing FST-100 topical ophthalmic suspension given 4 times daily for 5 days. The RPS Adeno Detector® test was performed at baseline and at each visit along with conjunctival swabs for adenoviral titers by quantitative PCR (qPCR) and cell culture with confirmatory immunoflourescence (CC-IFA). The primary endpoint of the study was clinical resolution of conjunctival injection and conjunctival discharge. These signs were scored on a scale from zero to three. Secondary endpoints included reduction of viral titers measured by qPCR and eradication of infectious virus determined by CC-IFA.
Nutrition

Washington Post Details Six Senators To Watch On Health Care; Politics Of Fear Gain Prominence

The battle over health care reform will happen in the Senate, even though President Obama keeps getting all the attention, The Washington Post"s The Fix reports. "Knowing this, the president and his inner circle have been working the issue for months -- seeking to identify strong, and, more important, weak spots among senators as well as testing out what sort of compromises are possible. Passage of a bill so fraught with so many sorts of political peril for so many senators is a gargantuan undertaking that requires a keen understanding not just of where each member of the world"s greatest deliberative body stands on the issue but also who they stand with and who they listen to." In the Senate, six keys players have emerged as shaping and deciding the fate of health care reform, including Utah Republican Sens. Bob Bennett and Orrin Hatch, both seen by Democrats as critical to winning in reform; Maine Sen. Olympia Snowe, a Republican in a Democratic state who will likely be pressured into accepting some form of reform; New Jersey Sen. Bob Menendez, a Democrat who has his eye on the political implications of the bill; Sen. Mitch McConnell, Ky., the Senate minority leader; and Sen. Edward Kennedy, the Massachusetts Democrat whose presence alone looms over the debate (Cillizza, 6/16). Roll Call reports that part of the debate, especially in the Senate, will hinge on the fear factor regarding the change - for better or worse - that reform will bring. It"s a debate starting to dominate as Republican senators and Obama trade fear-based talking points on reform. Sen. John Kyl, R-Ariz., said there"s a reason Obama says the time is now for reform: ""Because," Kyl said, "he knows that momentum will inevitably slow for something that will be extraordinarily costly, will deny people the coverage that they already have, will ration their health care and could provide some kind of government insurance company that"s going to drive out the private insurance companies."" Obama, in his speech to the American Medical Association, also engaged: "The president himself eagerly waded into the politics of fear. "Make no mistake: The cost of our health care is a threat to our economy"" (Koffler and Drucker, 6/16). This information was reprinted from kaiserhealthnews.org with kind permission from the Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation. You can view the entire Kaiser Daily Health Policy Report, search the archives and sign up for email delivery at kaiserhealthnews.org. © Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation. All rights reserved.


Add your comment:
Name:
Site address: http://
Your message:
Enter today\\\\'s date, 2 digits
(spam protection):