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King Provides Additional Information On The REMOXY® NDA Resubmission Plan
King Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (NYSE: KG) announced additional information regarding the resubmission plan for the REMOXY® New Drug Application (NDA). The Company is not required by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to conduct clinical trials in order to provide additional safety or efficacy data in patients with moderate to severe chronic pain. However, as part of the resubmission plan, and in order to strengthen the NDA, King plans to conduct a likeability study and a pharmacokinetic trial in volunteers. The Company continues to anticipate the resubmission could occur mid-year 2010.

Obama Urges Groups To Stop Attacks
"President Obama, strategizing... with congressional leaders about health-care reform, complained that liberal advocacy groups ought to drop their attacks on Democratic lawmakers and devote their energy to promoting passage of comprehensive legislation," The Washington Post reports. "In a pre-holiday call with half a dozen top House and Senate Democrats, Obama expressed his concern over advertisements and online campaigns targeting moderate Democrats, whom they criticize for not being fully devoted to "true" health-care reform." In the call, "Obama said he is hoping left-leaning organizations that worked on his behalf in the presidential campaign will now rally support for "advancing legislation" that fulfills his goal of expanding coverage, controlling rising costs and modernizing the health system."
News of the day
For HCV-Positive Liver Transplant Recipients, Some Donor Factors Affect Outcomes
Two new studies address donor factors that could affect outcomes for liver transplant recipients, particularly those with chronic hepatitis C (HCV). One found that donor steatosis, or fat in the liver, does not affect liver disease progression or three-year survival in recipients with or without HCV. However, transplants from people higher on the Donor Risk Index did adversely affect the outcomes of HCV-positive recipients more than recipients without HCV.
Health Insurance

Fresh Vision Makes Mental Health The Priority For All Public Services

Police, teachers and other public sector workers should be trained in spotting signs of mental ill-health as a new report from a coalition of mental health groups sets out its vision for mental health services that spans across public services. The Future Vision coalition takes in the full range of mental health groups representing staff, NHS trusts, campaign groups and service users. Its report sets out a vision for good mental health across our society requiring responses from all parts of the public sector and calls for a cabinet level champion to make good mental health ingrained into government policy. The report shows that mental health is everyone"s business. It is estimated that mental ill health costs England ÷£77 billion a year. Nowhere is it a more important issue to address than in children with one report estimated that just one untreated case of childhood conduct disorder has lifetime costs of ÷£150,000. Steve Shrubb, director of the NHS Confederation"s mental health network which represents the majority of NHS mental health trusts and chairs the Future Vision coalition said: "The nature of mental health and that it will effect so many of us means it is time for all services to respond to the challenge and address the fact that good mental health is not only about NHS services and wards. "For the first time, we have brought together all the main mental health groups to make the case for tackling people"s needs across society - in schools, maternity care, through the Police, job seeking, at work and the armed forces." "Personalised services, advocacy and advance directives will all help put services users in charge of the support they get. And we need a new partnership between health and social care professionals and service users to empower users and to free workers to deliver the best possible care." Mind"s Chief Executive Paul Farmer said: "Poor mental health and wellbeing is one of the biggest drains, financially and in every other way, on our nation. But it doesn"t have to be, if we work together - and not just the health service, but teachers, town planners, housing authorities, the criminal justice system - mental health is everyone"s business. This document sets out what we know works, and what we believe is a achievable and affordable way to a mentally healthy society - this is the chance of a generation and we can"t afford not to do it." Sainsbury Centre Chief Executive Angela Greatley said: "Mental health services have changed almost beyond recognition over the last decade. But the lives people with mental health problems lead are still too often constrained by prejudice, discrimination and a lack of the right support. And too little is done to promote good mental health in schools, workplaces and communities. Our vision sets out a practical 10-year agenda to achieve better mental health for all and for better life chances for the one in four of us who will experience mental ill health in our lives." Paul Corry, Rethink Director of Public affairs, said: "We are calling on the government to fund an ongoing anti stigma and discrimination programme. Mental illness is one of our last great taboos. Even though one in four people will experience a mental health problem at some stage, the stigma and discrimination they face means many people are denied relationships, work, education, hope, and the chance to live an ordinary life that others take for granted." Policy recommendations from the report include: - Improving Access to Psychological Therapies should be rolled out nationally and extended to cover children, the elderly, prisoners and those with long term health problems - Incentives for employers to recruit, support and retain people who have experienced mental health problems. - The national anti-stigma campaign should get central guaranteed funding when the current Big Lottery Fund and Comic Relief based arrangements expire - Services need to work with schools, care homes, and the armed forces to promote good mental health among at risk individuals - Everyone using mental health services should get the support they need to make their lives better on their own terms, not just to control their illness. MIND


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