Popular Articles

Guardian Examines U.K. Offer To Help Provide Free Healthcare In 'World's Poorest Countries'
The Guardian examines British Prime Minister Gordon Brown"s offer "to help some of the world"s poorest countries to make healthcare free - starting with pregnant women and children - in a push to widen access to doctors across Africa and Asia." According to the newspaper, the "Department for International Development (DfID) is among the largest donors to many developing countries, and has pledged to spend 6 billion pounds [about $10.2 billion] on health by 2015. Brown hopes to use an expanding aid budget to influence the way public services are delivered on the ground."

Small Clinical Trial Examines Drug's Ability To Reduce HIV In Body
In the first human trial of GlaxoSmithKline"s (GSK) experimental HIV drug S/GSK1349572, the drug was able to reduce HIV to undetectable levels in 70 percent of the 35 patients taking the treatment for 10 days, according to findings presented at the International AIDS Society"s conference in Cape Town, South Africa, Bloomberg reports. The drug decreased the virus in the body "without the signs of resistance linked to treatments from" Merck"s Isentress and Gilead Sciences" Elvitegravir, according to Bloomberg. GSK will begin a larger trial of the drug this month, Sherene Min, the director of clinical pharmacology discovery medicine for GSK, said. Michael Saag, director of the Center for AIDS Research at the University of Alabama, who is not affiliated with the study, said the scale of viral reduction was "spectacular," adding, "In 10 days to go to undetectable is pretty strong. This thing"s working" (Bennett, 7/21).
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Feminine Looking Guys Win In The Long Term
Single women prefer feminine looking men when judging them for long term relationships, this is the finding of a study published online, in the British Journal of Psychology.
Cardiovascular

Today's Selection Of Opinions And Editorials

First, Make No Mistakes The New York Times The Obama administration should take a lesson from the transportation safety board"s successes and establish an independent agency charged with identifying and eliminating the causes of medical error (Hall, 7/28). Media Needs To Deepen Coverage Of Healthcare Reform Los Angeles Times America has a healthcare crisis, yes, and so do broad segments of the media, particularly television news. They have transformed the story of how to fix an overpriced and inadequate care system into an overheated political scrum, with endless chatter about deadlines and combatants and very little about the kind of medical care people get and how it might change (Rainey, 7/29). Can"t Blame Liberal Media For Health Bill Stall The Wall Street Journal Broadcast coverage tilts heavily in favor of Barack Obama"s big government plan (Noyes and Seymour, 7/28). A Market For Health Reform The Washington Post Amid the clamor over public insurance options -- which, incidentally, would be housed on the exchange -- and employer tax exclusions and all the other points of controversy, the health insurance exchange is hardly being discussed. And there are signs that it, and thus the long-term promise of reform, might be in danger (Klein, 7/29). Will Health-Care Reform Hurt Washington Kids? The Seattle Times If Washington state has to trade in its ambitious and effective children"s health insurance plan for a national offering, it had better be for something much better than what we have (Varner, 7/28). The All-Powerful August Break CNN Members of Congress value the recess as a time to recharge their batteries, reconnect with their family and visit with their constituents. Pelosi may well have realized that a wise leader might use the August recess as a deadline, but not a cudgel with which to beat her colleagues (Feehery, 7/28). How CEOs Can Help Fix Health Care The Wall Street Journal We recommend executives make one or more of three innovative changes: 1) encourage employees to use nurse-staffed in-store health clinics for common ailments, 2) partner with integrated health systems like Kaiser Permanente, and 3) set up company-run clinics at corporate offices and plants (Christensen and Hwang, 7/28). 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.


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