Monthly Archives: March 2012
March 30, 2012
Should patients undergoing genome sequencing be screened for a minimum set of disease-causing mutations, and should adults and children receive different types of genetic results? (Nature News)
March 30, 2012
The Obama administration is ordering a government-wide review of scientific research that could raise biosecurity concerns in the wake of fierce controversy over some man-made strains of the deadly bird flu. (ABC News)
March 30, 2012
Consumer Reports advises patients to do their homework before having medical devices implanted in their bodies. Â Companies that sell defibrillators, stents or other such products can get approval from the Food and Drug Administration without their undergoing rigorous testing, Consumer … Read More
March 30, 2012
The UK Biobank, the most comprehensive health study in the UK, is opening its doors to researchers. (BBC News)
March 30, 2012
So far, researchers using aborted fetal cell lines haven’t been able to cure paralysis or reverse the effects of Parkinson’s disease, but they may be able to make diet sodas taste better. (Washington Times)
March 29, 2012
A new method of obtaining organs for transplantation is raising a host of ethical questions, including whether the donors are technically “dead.” (NPR)
March 29, 2012
The former medical director of the British Pregnancy Advisory Service said doctors routinely signed off on abortions for women they never met. (UPI)
March 29, 2012
Medical student Gregory Shumer studied the electronic health record and scooted his laptop closer to the diabetic grandfather sitting on his exam table. “You can see,” he pointed at the screen — weight, blood sugar and cholesterol are too high … Read More
March 29, 2012
Autism cases are on the rise again, largely due to wider screening and better diagnosis, federal health officials said Thursday. (Washington Post)
March 29, 2012
Two thought provoking and disturbing studies out Wednesday raise major questions about conduct of the “War on Cancer.†One examines the quality of basic research and the other concludes that half of current cancer deaths could be prevented. (MSNBC)
March 28, 2012
Stem cells derived from a patient’s bone marrow can help treat severe heart failure, but the results are even better when they are taken from fat, a leading researcher said, citing his experience in a number of studies. (Chicago Tribune)
March 28, 2012
The Supreme Court’s liberal justices went head to head with their conservative counterparts Wednesday morning in an effort to protect the Obama administration’s health law, suggesting that most of the measure should be kept even if the requirement to carry … Read More
March 28, 2012
When fortysomething Chicago native Ellie Lavi became a mother two years ago, she was a poster girl for creative baby-making. Lavi, a dual citizen of Israel and the United States, visited an Israeli clinic that helped her conceive twins from … Read More
March 28, 2012
Young women with cancer often aren’t counseled about the risk of losing their fertility due to treatment or their options for saving their eggs, a new study from California suggests. (Fox News)
March 28, 2012
Enter a set of labs at Imperial College in London and at first sight there is nothing exceptional: pale grey work surfaces, collections of bottles, racks of test-tubes. (BBC News)
March 27, 2012
Should teens get extra points for being thin? Dr. Pierre Dukan, the French founder of the controversial Dukan Diet, thinks so. The diet guru is now facing an ethics hearing for suggesting that high school students in France be rewarded for … Read More
March 27, 2012
The pump that kept Dick Cheney’s blood flowing while he waited for a heart transplant has seen a surge in popularity, a trend credited in part to the 71-year-old’s successful 20-month stretch with the device. (ABC News)
March 27, 2012
Doctors at the University of Maryland Medical Center performed the most extensive full face transplant to date, replacing everything from the hairline to the collar bone of a 37-year-old man, including the upper and lower jaw bones, teeth, and a … Read More
March 27, 2012
The Vatican has abruptly cancelled a controversial stem-cell conference that was set to be attended by the Pope next month. (Nature News)
March 27, 2012
The Supreme Court on Monday ordered an appeals court to reconsider its decision to uphold patents held by Myriad Genetics on two genes associated with a high risk of breast and ovarian cancer. (NY Times)
March 26, 2012
Even though it’s legal for 17-year-olds to get the so-called morning-after pill, a new study shows that pharmacy employees often dole out the wrong information, telling the teens they’re not allowed to have the drug. (MSNBC)
March 26, 2012
Amid ongoing shortages of critical drugs, 60 percent of hospital pharmacists surveyed said they’ve been forced to trash life-saving or expensive medications because of misguided government rules, a new poll shows. (MSNBC)
March 26, 2012
After three years of trying to conceive, a married couple in the Netherlands in their early 30s learned they could not have a child because the husband produced no sperm. They did not want to use sperm donated from a … Read More
March 26, 2012
India’s inadequate government-run tuberculosis treatment programs and a lack of regulation of the sale of drugs that fight the disease are responsible for the spiraling number of drug-resistant cases that are difficult to treat, health activists said Friday. (Washington Post)
March 26, 2012
Doctors say it is unlikely that former Vice President Dick Cheney got special treatment when he was given a new heart at age 71 that thousands of younger people also were in line to receive. (Washington Post)