Wednesday 15 June 2011

Medicine In The News (June 14, 2011)

Arizona sued over stalled process for medical pot dispensaries [Link]
AZ Central.com
Two prospective medical marijuana dispensary owners sued the Arizona Department of Health Services and its director Tuesday in hopes of forcing the state to launch the stalled permit application process. ...

U of M gets $51 million federal medical research grant [Link]
MinnPost.com
University of Minnesota officials report they've received a $51 million federal grant for medical research to "increase community involvement in the research process and the efficiency and speed at ...

Lawsuit puts 2 Goodyear medical-pot applicants on hold [Link]
AZ Central.com
Goodyear has received two medical-marijuana dispensary applications, but officials said it is unclear if they will open. That's because the Arizona Department of Health Services, the regulating authority of the ...

People: Justin Timberlake smokes out a rumor [Link]
AZ Central.com - Suzanne Condie Lambert - ‎Jun 14, 2011‎
Long-rumored blunt enthusiast Justin Timberlake is clearing the air. He does, in fact, inhale. "Absolutely," the singer-actor tells Playboy magazine when asked if he smokes pot. ...

Top 6 Health Care Myths From Yesterday's Republican Presidential Debate…In ... [Link]
Think Progress
The seven Republicans who took part in yesterday's presidential debate in New Hampshire all promised to repeal the Affordable Care Act without offering alternatives for expanding access to insurance or lowering ...

Health Insurance Companies on a Stock Buyback Binge [Link]
Minyanville.com
By The Center for Public Integrity Jun 14, 2011 8:00 am You might be surprised to learn that more and more of the dollars you pay for coverage are being sucked into a kind of black hole. Ever wonder what happens to the premiums you pay for your health ...

Bath Salts Abuse Gives Legit Businesses a Dirty Name [Link]
Portfolio.com
States scramble to ban components of illegal drugs marketed as “bath salts” as more and more problems emerge from their use, while legitimate bath-salts makers find sales taking a negative plunge. ...

Tags: Medicine In The News
Posted by Medicalchemy
Medicalchemy Group: Clinical Trials - History of Medicine - Images - Mnemonics - Syndromes - Tests - 

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Medicine In The News (June 15, 2011)

Massive Lead Poisoning, Report Says [Link]
FairWarning
Hundreds of thousands of children in China are suffering permanent mental and physical damage from lead poisoning, yet local officials are limiting blood testing, refusing treatment and covering up the scope of the ...


Researchers: A sunny drive can cause skin cancer [Link]
9NEWS.com
DENVER - It's a great feeling: Driving down the road with your window or convertible top down, the wind blowing around you as you just enjoy the day.


Olive oil lovers show lower stroke risk [Link]
Reuters
Olive oils are seen at ''Barcelona Degusta'' the 3rd edition of the consumer food show in Barcelona March 6, 2009.


Personal Genome Map Solves Calif. Teen's Illness [Link]
NPR
by AP Doctors couldn't figure out what was causing 14-year-old Alexis Beery to suddenly gasp for air. Her mother pushed scientists to check DNA - helping move genome mapping a step closer to its ultimate goal of customized medical care.


Parsing The Details Of New Sunscreen Regulations [Link]
NPR
Audio for this story from All Things Considered will be available at approx. 7:00 pm ET A woman applies sunscreen on her body on a beach in the Netherlands.


FDA Warns of Bladder Cancer Risk With Actos [Link]
MedPage Today
Patients taking pioglitazone (Actos) for more than a year may have an increased risk of bladder cancer, according to an FDA interim review of an ongoing epidemiological study.


DOH Fines 804 Restaurants For Hiding Their Grades [Link]
Gothamist
We knew that there were a fair number of restaurants around town who were hiding their letter grades, but the sheer number of them is still surprising.


Most tumors not within cell phone radiation range [Link]
Reuters
A technician examines a mobile phone in a test room at the Market Surveilance Laboratories of the Information and Communication Technologies Authority of Turkey, in Ankara June 9, 2011.


Sleeping on Back or Right Side May Increase Stillbirth Risk [Link]
Medscape
June 15, 2011 - Compared with pregnant women who sleep on their left side, those who sleep on their back may have double the risk of delivering a stillborn baby, and those who sleep on their right side also may have an increased risk, according to a ...


Docs Find Rise in Measles Cases a 'Tragedy' [Link]
ABC News
A young boy receives an MMR immunization at a health center in this Sept. 3, 2007 file photo in Glasgow. The first dose of the combination measles, mumps, and rubella vaccine is given to children 12 to 15 months old, ...


Can sexting be an illness? Experts are split [Link]
Stamford Advocate
DAVID B. CARUSO, AP, FRANK ELTMAN, Associated Press FILE - In this June 11, 2011 file photo, Rep. Anthony Weiner, DN.Y., carries his laundry to a laundromat near his home in the Queens borough of New York, Saturday, June 11, 2011.


Weighing Cancer Risks, From Cellphones To Coffee [Link]
NPR
by AP Enlarge AP A unidentified man uses a cell phone in Oakland, Calif., Tuesday, June 14, 2011. Despite all the recent news about possible cancer risks from cellphones, coffee, styrene and formaldehyde in building materials, most people face little ...


Medicaid kids denied medical care, says study [Link]
msnbc.com
AP CHICAGO - Children on public insurance are being denied treatment by doctors at much higher rates than those with private coverage, according to an undercover study that had researchers pose as parents of sick kids seeking an ...


TV time tied to diabetes, death [Link]
Reuters
NEW YORK (Reuters) - People who spend more hours in front of the television are at greater risk of dying, or developing diabetes and heart disease, with even two hours of television a day having a marked effect, according to a US study.


A Tale of Two Fathers [Link]
Pew Social and Demographic Trends
The role of fathers in the modern American family is changing in important and countervailing ways. Fathers who live with their children have become more intensely involved in their lives, spending more time with ...


Regeneron in play ahead of FDA meeting [Link]
MarketWatch
BOSTON (MarketWatch) -- Shares of biotech group Regeneron Pharmaceuticals were in play Wednesday ahead of a key regulatory meeting that could determine the fate of its experimental eye drug VEGF Trap-Eye.


Montel Williams' fight [Link]
Sacramento News & Review
“There won't be a cure for MS in my lifetime. Period. It's not happening.” Montel Williams, who was diagnosed with multiple sclerosis in 1999, accepts this.


David Cameron's NHS reforms are now a 'car crash,' says Alan Milburn [Link]
Telegraph.co.uk
David Cameron's watered down health reforms are “the biggest car crash in NHS history” a government advisor warns today. By Andrew Porter, Political Editor In a devastating critique published in The Daily Telegraph, Alan Milburn says that the changes ...


Research crisis in brain diseases a 'withdrawal of hope' [Link]
Telegraph.co.uk
Red tape and a lack of funding could put research into Alzheimer's disease and depression back by a whole generation, claims a new study.


Hey, You! Get Off Of My Ward [Link]
Sky News (blog)
The Prime Minister was left in an awkward situation when a visit to a London hospital turned sour for his following press pack. David Cameron was with a camera crew, producer and small group of photographers at Guy's Hospital when the media with him ...


An insulin nasal spray for diabetes? [Link]
NHS Choices
Researchers have developed a “nasal spray vaccine” that might stop children developing diabetes, the Daily Express has reported.


Why I'll keep opening the door for women [Link]
Telegraph.co.uk
Sexism is civilised - whatever the Society for the Psychology of Women might think, says Stephen Bayley. I always hold the door open for women.


Older women 'most at risk of falling' [Link]
Barchester Healthcare
New statistics have shown that women over the age of 80 are at the highest risk of falling. Older women may want to use home care after it was revealed that females over the age of 80 are the most vulnerable to falling.


Pet sheep 'alerted British woman to cancer' [Link]
BBC News
A woman from Wiltshire discovered she had cancer after her sheep butted her in the breast. Emma Turner told BBC Radio 5 live Drive's Peter Allen "It's not a good way to get your breast cancer diagnosed.


Nurses warned over 'cleavage at work' [Link]
Telegraph.co.uk
Nurses have been banned from showing cleavage or baring midriffs after NHS trust warned they must uphold hospital standards. East and North Hertfordshire NHS Trust has issued a strict new uniform policy for all staff after a series of complaints from ...


Tags: Medicine In The News
Posted by Medicalchemy
Medicalchemy Group: Clinical Trials - History of Medicine - Images - Mnemonics - Syndromes - Tests - 

Acute Medicine - Anaesthesiology - Anatomy - Anthropology - Biochemistry - Cardiology - Dentistry - Dermatology - Drug ADR - Drugs Duplication Sites - Embryology - Emergency Medicine - Endocrinology Epidemiology - Family Medicine - Forensic Medicine - Gastroenterology Genes - Genetics - Geriatrics - Gynecology - Haematology - Health Informatics - Hepatology - Immunology - Infection - Intensive Care - Medical Dictionary - Medical Education - Medical Geography - Medical Statistics - Metabolic Medicine - Microbiology - Nephrology - Neuroanatomy - Neuroscience Nuclear Medicine - Nutrition - Obstetrics - Occupational Health - Oncology - Ophthalmology - Orthopaedics - Otolaryngology - Paediatrics - Palliative Care - Parasitology - Pathology - Pharmacology Physiology - Proteomics - Psychiatry - Public Health - Radiology - Respiratory - Rehabilitation - Rheumatology - Sports Medicine - Surgery - Toxicology - Tropical Medicine - Urology - Vascular - Virology