Posted on January 31, 2008 in Hot news by Adam GreenNo Comments »

Assuring the safety of medical products imported from China, including certain antibiotics and a popular statin, is the goal of a new agreement signed in Beijing by Health and Human Services Secretary Mike Leavitt and the head of China’s State Food and Drug Administration.

The two nations are embarking on a plan to build safety into importation from the start, Leavitt said in a Dec. 19, 2007, speech at the National Press Club in Washington, D.C. “We can’t inspect everything,” he noted. “We need to know who to trust.”
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Posted on January 8, 2008 in Hot news by Adam GreenNo Comments »

Demands to which tropical forests are devided out, cannot be patterned by the serious demonstration, according to new study of University of Diffractions of slow electrons.

This main thing, mind to the conditional reflectance, detection of unexpectedness of the study today published in US National Academy of Sciences by Dr Alan Grainger, Senior Lecturer in Geography and one of the world’s leading experts on tropical deforestation.
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Posted on December 20, 2007 in Hot news by Adam GreenNo Comments »

A 20-YEAR-OLD Warminster man who was slashed from his left ear to his mouth has been released from hospital.

The wounded, municipal centre, monitored to Regional hospital of Salisbury after an erroneous offence of a knife on Monday evening.
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Posted on December 20, 2007 in Hot news by Adam GreenNo Comments »

The limitations remaining placed on space to enact rejection from a deadly flu of the H5N1 bird flu have been lifted, Defra said.

The frame of the surveillance round two trusses where contaminated fowl were opened the last month and wider limiting frame, closing Suffolk and the bulk of Norfolk, has been remote.
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Posted on November 30, 2007 in Hot news by Adam GreenNo Comments »

The study population included all Oregon families enrolled in the federal food stamp program at the end of January 2005 with children who were also presumed eligible for publicly funded health insurance. Both programs require a household income of less than 185 percent of the federal poverty level and proof of a child’s U.S. citizenship. Of the 8,636 questionnaires sent, 2,681 were returned. About 25 percent of those responding reported gaps in coverage during the previous year.
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Posted on November 29, 2007 in Hot news by Adam GreenNo Comments »

American researchers are suggesting that antidepressant drugs may possibly lengthen a person’s lifespan.

The researchers from the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center, in Seattle have come up with this possibility following research with nematode worms which are a very basic life form. In the study the tiny worms were exposed to as many as 88,000 chemicals drug compounds before four drugs were found that extended life span by 20 to 30 percent.

One of these drugs was Mianserin, which belongs to a class of drugs known as tetracyclic antidepressants, which proved to be the most effective in that it extended the lifespan of the worms by almost a third. The drug apparently mimics the effects on the body of the only known animal long-life regime - virtual starvation.
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Posted on November 29, 2007 in Hot news by Adam GreenNo Comments »

Democratic presidential candidate Sen. Joe Biden (D, Del.) last month unveiled a plan to reduce the number of uninsured people by expanding federal health programs, offering a national insurance plan for catastrophic illnesses, and boosting funding and coverage for preventive care.

Biden would improve access to health insurance by expanding eligibility for the State Children’s Health Insurance Program to 300% of the federal poverty level, by allowing those 55 and older to enroll in Medicare and by letting the public buy coverage in SCHIP or federal employee health plans with sliding-scale premiums.

He also would require uniform billing and claim systems, and establish a panel to compare the effectiveness of medical devices, technology, treatment protocols and the management of chronic diseases.

Posted on November 29, 2007 in Hot news by Adam GreenNo Comments »

President Bush told lawmakers Oct. 30 he would not sign a reauthorization of the State Children’s Health Insurance Program with a tobacco tax increase, further widening the gulf on SCHIP between the president and Democratic and Republican SCHIP bill supporters.

The last two versions of the $60 billion reauthorization measure would raise $35 billion by increasing federal cigarette taxes by 61 cents, to $1. The Senate adopted the latest SCHIP measure 64-30 on Nov. 1, one week after the House passed it 265-142. The bill, like its predecessor, faces a presidential veto, despite revisions that would limit SCHIP eligibility to 300% of the federal poverty level and phase out coverage of adults in one year instead of two. SCHIP funding will run out on Nov. 16 unless new legislation is passed. At press time, House and Senate lawmakers were negotiating on a new SCHIP bill in an attempt to reach a veto-proof two-thirds majority in both chambers.