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China seeks extra testing of U.S. pork for feed additive

CHICAGO (Reuters) – China wants a third party to verify beginning March 1 that U.S. pork shipped to the country is free of a feed additive used to promote lean muscle growth, a U.S. Meat Export Federation spokesman told Reuters. The reasons for China’s timing ... More »

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Gilead, Teva reach settlement in Viread patent lawsuit

(Reuters) – Gilead Sciences Inc said it has agreed with Israel’s Teva Pharmaceuticals Industries Ltd to settle a lawsuit relating to patents protecting Viread, a treatment for HIV infection and chronic hepatitis B. As per the agreement, Gilead said Teva will b... More »

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Almost one-third of chemotherapy used “off-label”

NEW YORK (Reuters Health) – About one-third of chemotherapies are used to fight cancers that drug regulators never approved them to treat, says a new study. Chemotherapies – drugs that kill rapidly dividing cells – are approved by the Food and Drug Administrat... More »

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U.S. to operate 26 state health exchanges with little local help

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – The Obama administration said on Tuesday that it will operate federal online health insurance marketplaces in 26 of the 50 U.S. states with little or no input from local state officials. The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services a... More »

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Diet drinks may not fuel your appetite: study

NEW YORK (Reuters Health) – Take another sip of that Diet Coke – a new study suggests diet soda drinkers don’t eat any more sugary or fatty foods than people who stick with water instead. Some researchers have proposed drinks sweetened with fake sugar might di... More »

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Kentucky turnaround to drive Wellcare profit (Feb 13)

(Reuters) – Managed care provider Wellcare Health Plans Inc’s fourth-quarter profit edged past analysts’ estimates on growth in its Kentucky Medicaid health plan that previously dragged on the results of several insurers. The company’s shares jumped 12 percent... More »

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Express Scripts accuses Ernst & Young of stealing trade secrets

(Reuters) – A unit of Express Scripts Holding Co has sued Ernst & Young and one of the accounting firm’s former partners for stealing trade secrets and corporate data to boost Ernst & Young’s own healthcare business. The lawsuit, filed on February 14 in state ... More »

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British shoppers saying nay to meat after horse scandal

LONDON (Reuters) – The discovery of horsemeat in products sold as beef has shocked many British consumers into buying less meat, a survey showed on Monday. The furor, which erupted in Ireland last month and then spread quickly across Europe, has led to ready m... More »

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GSK wins priority status for new HIV drug in U.S

LONDON (Reuters) – U.S. regulators gave priority review status to an experimental GlaxoSmithKline drug for HIV/AIDS, which industry analysts view as a possible multibillion-dollar-a-year seller. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration awards certain drugs priori... More »

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More thorough dialysis may reduce deaths

NEW YORK (Reuters Health) – A more thorough dialysis technique may help prevent deaths due to heart conditions and infections in people with advanced kidney disease, according to a new study. Known as hemodiafiltration, that method is better able to clean the ... More »

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”High-glycemic” foods tied to diabetes risk

NEW YORK (Reuters Health) – People who eat a lot of low-fiber and processed foods that quickly spike blood sugars may, not surprisingly, have a significantly higher risk of the most common form of diabetes, according to a new study. “By raising blood sugar and... More »

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FDA approves first retinal implant for rare eye disease

(Reuters) – The U.S. Food and Drug Administration has approved the first artificial retina, an implanted device that replicates some of the function of the retina, helping to restore vision to people blinded with a rare genetic disorder, the agency said Thursd... More »

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U.S. official touts health insurance markets, lawmakers leery

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – The Obama administration on Thursday assured U.S. lawmakers that it is on track to enroll millions of people in new state health insurance markets, but it quickly came under fire from Republicans and Democrats about how costly the covera... More »

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French firm suspected as culprit in horsemeat scandal

PARIS (Reuters) – An investigation has identified a French meat-processing firm as a likely culprit in the horsemeat scandal that has enraged consumers across Europe and implicated traders and abattoirs from Cyprus to Romania. Separately, British police invest... More »

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Obama Medicare rebate plan could hurt drug companies

(Reuters) – President Barack Obama’s decision to spotlight drug rebates as a way to save money on Medicare is likely to be opposed by the pharmaceutical industry, which could potentially lose billions of dollars in profits. In his annual State of the Union spe... More »

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Horsemeat scandal set to spur tougher EU food tests

BRUSSELS (Reuters) – The European Commission has proposed increased DNA testing of meat products to assess the scale of a scandal involving horsemeat sold as beef that has shocked the public and raised concern over the continent’s food supply chains. “The test... More »

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House Republican aims to repeal Medicare doctor pay cuts

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – Republicans in the House of Representatives will seek a permanent solution to scheduled steep cuts in physician payments from the federal Medicare health insurance plan for retirees and disabled people, a House committee chairman said on... More »

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Slow approvals put India’s drug trials industry at risk

MUMBAI/NEW DELHI (Reuters) – Slower government approval for testing new medicines is threatening India’s aspirations to be a fast-growing, low-cost hub for clinical trials, and has prompted some drugs firms to shift operations elsewhere, adding to their costs.... More »

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Drugmakers eye Africa’s middle classes as next growth market

PARIS (Reuters) – For pharmaceutical companies, Africa is changing. Not only is the continent’s economic growth grabbing attention in boardrooms but the shifting nature of its disease burden is luring Big Pharma, as new opportunities open up for treating chron... More »

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Obama rules out raising Medicare eligibility age to cut spending

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – President Barack Obama has ruled out raising the age that Americans become eligible for Medicare, the government health insurance program for seniors, as a way to reduce the government’s deficit, a White House spokesman said on Monday. R... More »

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Tesco’s spaghetti bolognese tests positive for horse DNA

LONDON (Reuters) – Tesco, Britain’s biggest retailer, said on Monday it had found horse DNA exceeding 60 percent in some of its own-brand frozen spaghetti bolognese meals withdrawn from stores last week. Tesco said tests carried out since pulling the product l... More »

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Novo Nordisk hit hard as U.S. rebuffs insulin drug

COPENHAGEN (Reuters) – U.S. regulators refused to approve Novo Nordisk’s new long-acting insulin Tresiba until it conducts extra tests for potential heart risks, dealing a major blow to a key product for the Danish drugmaker. Shares in Novo, the world’s leadin... More »

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Catholic bishops reject Obama offer on contraceptive coverage

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – U.S. Roman Catholic bishops on Thursday rejected the Obama Administration’s latest bid for compromise over a hotly disputed health policy that requires employees at religiously affiliated institutions to have access to insurance coverage... More »

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Insight: GSK vaccine ingredient scrutinized for narcolepsy clues

LONDON (Reuters) – Mounting evidence of a link between GlaxoSmithKline’s Pandemrix flu shot and a spike in narcolepsy cases among children in Europe is putting one of the vaccine’s key ingredients, AS03, under intense scrutiny. The ingredient is one of a class... More »

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Test strip supply linked to better diabetes care

NEW YORK (Reuters Health) – Frequent blood sugar testing was strongly associated with better diabetes control in a large new study that concludes public and private insurers should not be limiting test strip supplies. Particularly for people with type 1 diabet... More »

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Michigan Republican governor Snyder backs Medicaid expansion

(Reuters) – Michigan Governor Rick Snyder on Wednesday endorsed an expansion of health coverage for the poor under President Barack Obama’s reform law, joining five other Republican governors who have agreed to widen the Medicaid program in their states. Snyde... More »

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Europe faces cost cuts as GSK promises return to growth

LONDON (Reuters) – GlaxoSmithKline plans to cut costs in its struggling European drugs division and promised investors a return to growth this year, after failing to deliver a hoped-for sales and margin recovery in 2012. Britain’s biggest drugmaker said a new ... More »

What is surrogacy? Is it sale of kids or lifesaving medicine?

Surrogate motherhood procedure came into service not recently, as some people believe, but it has been being around for a long time. If we dip into the history of humanity, we will see surrogacy takes its origin from the ancient civilizations. Thus, the Old Te... More »

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GSK promises to publish detailed drug trial data

LONDON (Reuters) – British drugmaker GlaxoSmithKline, which paid $3 billion last year to settle charges that it gave misleading information on its medicines, said on Tuesday it would publish more of its clinical research data. When the company agreed to the fi... More »

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U.S. proposes scrapping some obsolete Medicare regulations

(Reuters) – The Obama administration on Monday proposed eliminating certain obsolete Medicare regulations, a move it said would save hospitals and other healthcare providers an estimated $676 million a year, or $3.4 billion over five years. The Department of H... More »

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FDA approves generic version of cancer drug Doxil

(Reuters) – Health regulators have approved a generic version of the cancer drug Doxil in a move that could ease a months-long shortage that has threatened the lives of thousands of patients. The Food and Drug Administration said on Monday it approved a versio... More »

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Key TB vaccine trial fails- more waiting in the wings

CHICAGO (Reuters) – A highly anticipated study of the first new tuberculosis vaccine in 90 years showed it offered no added benefit over the current vaccine when it came to protecting babies from TB infections, a disappointing but not entirely unexpected outco... More »

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Insight: Revived search for a TB vaccine may be about to pay off

CHICAGO (Reuters) – After nearly 100 years, researchers could be on the verge of finding a vaccine that would eradicate tuberculosis infections, a scourge that kills 1.4 million people a year. Global health experts are eagerly awaiting clinical trial results, ... More »

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Yoga may aid people with irregular heart rhythm

NEW YORK (Reuters Health) – Regular yoga classes could help people with a common heart rhythm problem manage their symptoms while also improving their state of mind, a new study suggests. According to the American Heart Association, about 2.7 million people in... More »

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Obesity in girls tied to higher multiple sclerosis risk

NEW YORK (Reuters Health) – New research suggests that obese kids – adolescent girls, in particular – are more likely to be diagnosed with multiple sclerosis (MS) than normal-weight youth. That doesn’t prove carrying around some extra weight in childhood cause... More »

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Supplement reduces risk of diabetes in pregnancy

NEW YORK (Reuters Health) – A nutritional supplement called myo-inositol may help protect women at risk for gestational diabetes, according to a small pilot study. Previous studies have shown that inositol supplements may help restore fertility in polycystic o... More »

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FDA OKs Merck OTC version of overactive bladder drug

(Reuters) – Health regulators approved Merck & Co’s nonprescription version of Oxytrol to treat overactive bladder in women ages 18 and older, the agency said on Friday. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration said the over-the-counter version of Oxytrol would b... More »

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Russian anti-smoking bill backed by lawmakers

MOSCOW (Reuters) – Russian lawmakers on Friday backed a law which would ban smoking in bars, cafes and other public spaces to promote healthier living in the world’s largest tobacco market after China. Supported by President Vladimir Putin, who likes to presen... More »

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U.S. mental health experts urge focus on early treatment

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – The U.S. mental health system has huge gaps that prevent millions of people with psychological problems, including children and teens, from receiving effective treatment that could prevent tragic consequences, experts told U.S. lawmakers... More »

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Merck CEO says jury out on raising good cholesterol

DAVOS, Switzerland (Reuters) – The jury is still out on the benefits of increasing “good” HDL cholesterol, but the strategy remains worth pursuing, despite recent setbacks, the chief executive of said on Thursday. Confidence in the HDL thesis suffered a fresh ... More »

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Davos divided on tackling the scourge of obesity

DAVOS, Switzerland (Reuters) – Obesity, a major factor in diabetes and heart disease, imposes costs on both public and private sectors and is a drag on economic growth, but business leaders meeting in Davos can’t agree on what they can or should do to address ... More »

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U.S. top court rejects hospitals’ Medicare claims suit

(Reuters) – The U.S. Supreme Court rejected on Tuesday a bid by a group of 18 hospitals to reopen a specialized group of Medicare reimbursement claims that are up to 25 years old. The hospitals, which are entitled to extra compensation for treating a large num... More »

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Flu-conomics: The next pandemic could trigger global recession

(Reuters) – A high body count is not the only meaningful number attached to a pandemic. The potential cost of a global outbreak of the flu or some other highly contagious disease, however ghoulish to calculate, is essential for government officials and busines... More »

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Japan tsunami stress may have brought on seizures: study

(Reuters) – The number of seizure patients in a northern Japanese fishing community devastated by the March 11, 2011 tsunami spiked in the weeks following the disaster, according to a Japanese study. The study, published in the journal Epilepsia, looked at 440... More »

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China media train fire on U.S. food giants over chicken scare

SHANGHAI (Reuters) – Just weeks after Chinese authorities cleared Yum Brands Inc and McDonald’s Corp of charges they had served chicken laced with excessive chemicals, local media are again attacking the iconic American firms, while barely reporting on the cha... More »

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Analysis: Drug industry bets on new blockbusters in 2013

LONDON/NEW YORK (Reuters) – Drugmakers are betting that a new wave of medicines for cancer, diabetes, heart disease, multiple sclerosis and hepatitis will shape up as tomorrow’s blockbusters in the coming 12 months. With the industry regaining some of its swag... More »

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New York governor declares public health emergency to combat flu

(Reuters) – New York Governor Andrew Cuomo declared a public health emergency on Saturday, giving pharmacists permission to administer flu vaccinations to more people as officials seek to stem the worst flu outbreak in that state in several years. Cuomo’s orde... More »

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Flu reaches epidemic level in U.S., says CDC

(Reuters) – Influenza has officially reached epidemic proportions in the United States, with 7.3 percent of deaths last week caused by pneumonia and the flu, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said on Friday. The early start and fast spread of... More »

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Supreme Court to review free speech of HIV/AIDS groups

(Reuters) – The Supreme Court agreed to consider whether the government can require groups that receive federal funding for overseas HIV/AIDS programs to have explicit policies that oppose prostitution and sex trafficking. The case is one of six that the court... More »

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Massachusetts governor seeks to revamp retiree health care

(Reuters) – Massachusetts Governor Deval Patrick said on Friday that he will file legislation to overhaul benefits for public retirees, including a proposal to double the number of years an employee would have to serve to be eligible. The bill would require mo... More »

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Drugmakers report U.S. shortages of flu vaccine, Tamiflu

(Reuters) – This year’s U.S. flu season has created shortages of the Tamiflu treatment for children and of the most widely used flu vaccine, their manufacturers said. Roche Holding AG told Reuters late on Wednesday that it had a shortage of the liquid form of ... More »

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Bioengineer developing needle-free “nanopatch” vaccines

LONDON (Reuters) – When it comes to protecting millions of people from deadly infectious diseases, Mark Kendall thinks a fingertip-sized patch covered in thousands of vaccine-coated microscopic spikes is the future. A biomedical engineer with a fascination for... More »

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Health department releases new immunization rules

INDIANAPOLIS — New Indiana health department rules require two chicken pox vaccinations for all grades unless the student can prove that he or she contracted the disease in the past. Previously, some grade levels were only required to have one vaccination for ... More »

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Hospital executive named Ind. health commissioner

INDIANAPOLIS — The longtime leader of a central Indiana hospital will become the new state health commissioner under Gov.-elect Mike Pence. The incoming governor announced Thursday that Dr. William VanNess will lead the state Health Department. VanNess retired... More »

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DNA pioneer James Watson takes aim at “cancer establishments”

NEW YORK (Reuters) – A day after an exhaustive national report on cancer found the United States is making only slow progress against the disease, one of the country’s most iconic – and iconoclastic – scientists weighed in on “the war against cancer.” And he d... More »

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Best diet a high-protein, low-fat compromise

While everybody seems to be interested in eating healthy foods and achieving and staying at a healthy weight, opinions on how to do this keep changing. It is amusing to look back on the evolving definition of the healthiest way to achieve the ideal weight. By ... More »

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Justice official wants trustee in Mass. pharmacy case

BOSTON — An independent trustee must be appointed to oversee the bankruptcy of a Massachusetts pharmacy linked to a meningitis outbreak because of the firm’s “gross mismanagement,” among other reasons, a Justice Department official argued Tuesday. U.S. Trustee... More »

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Galapagos secures milestone payment from GSK

BRUSSELS (Reuters) – Belgian biopharmaceutical company Galapagos said on Wednesday it had delivered a fifth pre-clinical drug candidate to GlaxoSmithKline, triggering a milestone payment. Galapagos did not specify the amount of the payment, which is the result... More »

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Judge in San Francisco lets biggest medical pot shop stay open

SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) – A federal magistrate judge on Monday ruled that a medical-marijuana dispensary that bills itself as the world’s largest can continue to operate, at least for now, in Oakland and San Jose despite a bid by federal prosecutors to shut it... More »

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Health officials say flu season is getting off to early start

Numerous cases reported in area during December EVANSVILLE — When Mike Mammoser returned to Newburgh after a recent business trip to Chicago, he brought a suspected case of the flu home with him. Though Mammoser didn’t go to the doctor, a few days after his re... More »

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Mass. women at trial: Pregnancy drug caused cancer

BOSTON — A lawyer for four sisters who believe their breast cancer was caused by a drug their mother took during pregnancy says the drug maker failed to test its effect on fetuses before promoting it as a way to prevent miscarriages. The sisters are suing Eli ... More »

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Indiana senator pushes bill to regulate pain clinics

INDIANAPOLIS — A problematic pain clinic in Clark County has led a Jeffersonville Republican to push legislation to change the way similar medical centers operate statewide. Sen. Ron Grooms’ legislation – Senate Bill 246 – is aimed at practices that prescribe ... More »

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U.S. health care spending slows for third straight year

WASHINGTON — Americans kept health care spending in check for three years in a row, the government reported Monday, an unusual respite that could linger if the economy stays soft or fade like a mirage if job growth comes roaring back. The nation’s health care ... More »

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Hillary Clinton back at work after hospitalization

WASHINGTON — Cheers, a standing ovation and a gag gift of protective headgear greeted Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton as she returned to work on Monday after a monthlong absence caused first by a stomach virus, then a fall and a concussion and finall... More »

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Health calendar

Chronic Disease Program of the Vanderburgh County Health Department: Blood pressure screening: Rural King at 2300 E. Morgan Ave., 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. today; Schnucks East at 4600 Washington Ave., 9:30 to 11 a.m. Tuesday; Wal-Mart Neighborhood Market at 3430 T... More »

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NEAHRING: Treatment of cough depends on cause

I have a cough. It is not life-threatening, but it is terribly annoying. I would describe it as a tickle in my throat, although the word tickle makes it sound rather fun and festive, instead of an aggravating nuisance. Rationally, I realize that it is just a l... More »

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Competition affects who gets a liver transplant: study

(Reuters) – More competition between medical centers that perform liver transplants may mean sicker patients get lower-quality donor organs, according to a U.S. study. When more than one center has patients on the same donor list, the centers have an incentive... More »

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Analysis: Obama may turn Medicare reform into wider health debate

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – President Barack Obama could seek common ground with Republicans in the looming battle over Medicare spending by broadening the debate over entitlement reform to encompass the spiraling healthcare costs that confront a wide range of Amer... More »

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New food safety rules aim for more accountability

(Reuters) – U.S. regulators proposed new food safety rules on Friday that aim to make food processors and farms more accountable for reducing foodborne illnesses that kill or sicken thousands of Americans annually. The new rules, required by the Food Safety Mo... More »

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Private equity pours money into India primary healthcare

MUMBAI (Reuters) – Private equity funds quadrupled their investment in India’s primary healthcare, betting the sick and ailing will stop seeing family doctors in often cramped and dingy quarters and check into modern chains sprouting up across Asia’s No.3 econ... More »

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2012 was worst year for whooping cough since 1955

Health officials say 2012 was the nation’s worst year for whooping cough in nearly six decades. About 42,000 cases were reported last year, the most since 1955. But the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is still gathering information, and the number c... More »

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Obesity’s a crisis but we want our junk food

WASHINGTON — We know obesity is a health crisis, or every new year wouldn’t start with resolutions to eat better and get off the couch. But don’t try taking away our junk food. Americans blame too much screen time and cheap fast food for fueling the nation’s f... More »

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Analysis: Entering the age of the $1 million medicine

LONDON (Reuters) – The Western world’s first drug to fix faulty genes promises to transform the lives of patients with an ultra-rare disease that clogs their blood with fat. The only snag is the price. The gene therapy for lipoprotein lipase deficiency (LPLD),... More »

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Walking linked to fewer strokes in women

NEW YORK (Reuters Health) – Women who walk at least three hours every week are less likely to suffer a stroke than women who walk less or not at all, according to new research from Spain. “The message for the general population remains similar: regularly engag... More »

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Biogen Lou Gehrig’s disease drug fails in key trial

(Reuters) – An experimental drug to combat amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, commonly called Lou Gehrig’s disease in the United States, failed to work in an important trial and Biogen Idec said it would stop development of the treatment. The drug, dexpramipexole,... More »

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France may curb use of riskier oral contraceptives

PARIS (Reuters) – French health regulators are studying limiting the use of contraceptive pills that carry health risks and will stop reimbursing prescription costs of some types from March, after a woman sued drugmaker Bayer over alleged side-effects. An inqu... More »

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Sperm donor fighting child support payments

TOPEKA, Kan. — TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) A Kansas man who donated sperm to a lesbian couple after answering an online ad is fighting the state’s efforts to suddenly force him to pay child support for the now 3-year-old girl, arguing that he and the women signed an agr... More »

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Memorial friends laugh and cry as they remember Sam Featherstone

EVANSVILLE — Despite the many awful things associated with cancer, the first thing Ian Barron noticed when he saw his friend Sam Featherstone after his pediatric brain cancer diagnosis was his hair loss. Featherstone, who was diagnosed with medulloblastoma — a... More »

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Cancer takes the life of a local hero in Sam Featherstone

NEWBURGH — Sam Featherstone, the Newburgh teen whose determination to conquer pediatric brain cancer has seen more than $200,000 raised over the past few weeks for research at St. Jude Children’s Hospital where he was treated, died Wednesday morning. He was 19... More »

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Clinton receiving blood thinners to dissolve clot

WASHINGTON — Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton continues to recover in a New York hospital where she’s being treated for a blood clot in her head. Her doctors say blood thinners are being used to dissolve the clot and they are confident she will make a... More »