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Monthly Archives: February 2012
Petitions go head-to-head over Sainsbury's pharmacy
Posted: Published on February 17th, 2012
COMPETING petitions have been lodged both for and against a proposed in-store pharmacy at a Godalming supermarket. A controversial application by Sainsbury’s, in Woolsack Way, was submitted in December last year, and opinion is divided over what decision should be made. Many are angry at the way the supermarket went about applying for the pharmacy, which was opened without permission in November before a retrospective planning application was submitted. Nearly six weeks later, a spokesman for Sainsbury's confirmed that it would be closing the facility "until the planning application was decided". Store manager Joe Lock said at the time that feedback from customers had been positive, and that research was being done to determine whether the Sainsbury’s pharmacy would have a "detrimental impact on the town centre". Two petitions have now been received by Waverley Borough Council, one of which was created on behalf of the supermarket and features comments and signatures from customers in favour of what they said was a more convenient facility. Another petition has been lodged, signed by 1,133 residents of Godalming and the surrounding villages, all of whom object to the application on the grounds that it will negatively affect other, smaller pharmacies in the … Continue reading
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Armstrong County reopens pharmacy bids
Posted: Published on February 17th, 2012
KITTANNING — The county is looking for a company to provide pharmacy service for its health center — again — but this time it's all about the bottom line rather than a complicated scoring system that made it difficult for the board of commissioners to decide on the best pharmacy. On the advice of the county's solicitor, Chase McClister, the commissioners on Thursday rejected all bids and reopened the bidding process. "The process needs resolved in the fairest way possible," said Commissioner Chairman Dave Battaglia. "We checked with the solicitor and this is the best way." "We were in a time constraint," he said. "It gives all bidders a fresh opportunity." Controversy about the health center's next pharmacy contract started when Mission Pharmacy — a small Kittanning company which has been the provider for the past 10 years — was passed over for Diamond Pharmacy of Indiana on the recommendation of health center officials. David Mansour, health center administrator, recommended awarding the two-year contract to Diamond Pharmacy based on its having the lowest cost determined from a sample list of medical and non-medical services, and on its having the highest point score using criteria that included electronic system, experience, price … Continue reading
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Study Provides Roadmap for Improved Care of Epilepsy Emergencies by Paramedics
Posted: Published on February 17th, 2012
(PHILADELPHIA) -- Injecting epilepsy patients with medication via an autoinjector -- similar to the EpiPens used to treat serious allergic reactions -- works more quickly to stop seizures than delivery of a drug via IV on board ambulances, according to a national study published today in the New England Journal of Medicine. Results of the trial, which included investigators from the Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania, also indicates that patients who receive the autoinjection are less likely to require hospitalization after treatment in emergency rooms. The Rapid Anticonvulsant Medication Prior to Arrival Trial (RAMPART) study provides a roadmap for improving and speeding treatment of status epilepticus -- severe seizure activity -- which causes 55,000 deaths each year. "Status epilepticus is a life-threatening neurological emergency that requires immediate treatment, even before patients reach the hospital. With every minute the seizure continues, it becomes harder to stop, increasing the possibility of brain damage," said Jill Baren, MD, MBE, chair of the department of Emergency Medicine and principal investigator for the greater Philadelphia-Southern New Jersey Neurological Treatment Trials Network, which includes the community of York, PA, where the local portion of the study was performed. "This study establishes that … Continue reading
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House finance weighs autism bill
Posted: Published on February 17th, 2012
February 17, 2012 · The House finance committee considered an amendment for House Bill 4260, which determines insurance coverage for autism spectrum disorders. Kanawha County Democrat Mark Hunt has a child with autism. He’s a cosponsor on the bill. Hunt said he just wants to see the bill through. “This bill is not so much for my child; this bill is more for other people’s children,” Hunt said. “Knowing that early intervention does make an extreme difference, I feel like we’re fiddling while children are actually burning out there. Every year we delay the full implementation of this bill, a whole generation of children is being lost.” The bill provides $30,000 a year for behavioral therapy for three years before dropping down to $2,000 a month. Finance committee counsel Jennelle Jones says the bill clarifies exactly what that $30,000 should cover. “The problem was when it left the House the $30,000 cap applied to ABA therapy,” Jones told lawmakers. “Then, the Senate amended in language that said the $30,000 cap applied to all treatment for autism which could include a drug regimen or other types of treatment that would be different from ABA therapy.” The fiscal note for the … Continue reading
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Researchers see differences in Autism brain development as early as 6 months
Posted: Published on February 17th, 2012
Public release date: 17-Feb-2012 [ | E-mail | Share ] Contact: Jane E. Rubinstein jrubinstein@rubenstein.com 212-843-8287 Autism Speaks New York, N.Y. -- The changes in brain development that underlie autism spectrum disorder (ASD) may be detectable in children as young as 6 months, according to research reported online today in the American Journal of Psychiatry. While core behaviors associated with ASD (impaired social communication and repetitive behaviors) tend to be identified after a baby's first birthday, researchers found clear differences in brain communication pathways as early as 6 months in infants who later received a definitive diagnosis of ASD. As part of the Infant Brain Imaging Study (IBIS), senior author Joe Piven, M.D., director of the University of North Carolina's Carolina Institute for Developmental Disabilities in Chapel Hill, and his colleagues studied early brain and behavior development in 92 infants. These infants had older siblings on the autism spectrum and, so, were at elevated risk of developing ASD themselves. "These results offer promise that we may one day be able to identify infants at risk for autism before the behavioral symptoms are present," says study co-author Geri Dawson, Ph.D., Autism Speaks chief science officer. "The goal," she adds, "is to … Continue reading
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Post-Stroke Speech Problems Inflate Cost of Treatment
Posted: Published on February 17th, 2012
THURSDAY, Feb. 16 (HealthDay News) -- Average medical costs for a stroke patient with language impairment (aphasia) are more than $1,700 higher in the first year after stroke than for a patient without aphasia, a new study finds. Researchers analyzed the medical records of 3,200 Medicare patients in South Carolina who had an ischemic (blocked blood flow to the brain) stroke in 2004. They found that 12 percent of them had trouble speaking because of the stroke. Help in regaining lost speech drive up medical bills, the researchers found. Medicare payments averaged over $20,700 for those with aphasia compared to about $18,700 for those without these language difficulties, an 8.5 percent difference. The researchers also found that patients with aphasia were older and suffered more severe strokes, stayed in health care facilities 6.5 percent longer than those without impaired language, and had higher rates of illness and death. The study appears Feb. 16 in the journal Stroke. Each year in the United States, strokes leave about 100,000 people with language impairment. "These findings are important because dramatic changes are occurring in health care reimbursement, specifically imposed caps on Medicare reimbursement for outpatient speech language pathology and physical therapy," study lead … Continue reading
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InVivo Therapeutics Announces Pricing of Public Offering of Common Stock
Posted: Published on February 17th, 2012
CAMBRIDGE, Mass.--(BUSINESS WIRE)-- InVivo Therapeutics Holdings Corp. (OTC/BB: NVIV), a developer of groundbreaking technologies for the treatment of spinal cord injuries, today announced the pricing of an underwritten public offering of 8,281,574 shares of its common stock, offered at a price to the public of $2.10 per share, for gross proceeds of approximately $17.4 million. Net proceeds to InVivo, after deducting underwriting discounts and commissions and other offering expenses, are expected to be approximately $15.7 million. InVivo anticipates using the net proceeds from the offering for working capital and other general corporate purposes, including the research, development and pre-clinical and clinical trials for its product candidates, capital expenditures, repayment of debt and possibly acquisitions of other businesses, products or technologies. In addition, InVivo has granted the underwriters an option to purchase up to an additional 1,242,236 shares of its common stock to cover overallotments, if any. The offering is expected to close on or about February 23, 2012, subject to customary closing conditions. Aegis Capital Corp. and Summer Street Research Partners are acting as joint book-running managers for the offering. The securities described above are being offered by InVivo pursuant to a shelf registration statement previously filed with the Securities … Continue reading
Posted in Spinal Cord Injury Treatment
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High doses of 'load' slows loss of bone in spinal cord injury
Posted: Published on February 17th, 2012
A new clinical trial conducted by University of Iowa researchers shows that delivering high doses of "load," or stress, to bone through programmed electrical stimulation of the muscle significantly slows the loss of bone density in patients with SCI. The focus on quantifying the effective dose of load is one of the study's most important aspects, says Richard Shields, P.T., Ph.D., a professor and director of the UI Physical Therapy and Rehabilitation Science Graduate Programs. The study also is the first to carefully test the impact of different doses of load in humans with paralysis. Previous research had suggested that stressing or loading bone through muscle contractions could slow the loss of bone density, but results from clinical trials have been mixed. "Thirty years ago a clinical trial concluded that putting patients with SCI in an upright weight-bearing position with braces or standing frames did nothing to prevent loss of bone density," Shields says. "The novelty of our study is we have designed a method for individuals with paralysis to stand (bear weight) while superimposing a dose of muscle force using programmed electrical stimulation of the muscle." The study findings, published in the journal Osteoporosis International in December 2011, reveal … Continue reading
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InVivo Therapeutics’ CEO Frank Reynolds Scheduled to Appear on Fox News First and San Antonio Living
Posted: Published on February 17th, 2012
CAMBRIDGE, Mass.--(BUSINESS WIRE)-- InVivo Therapeutics Holdings Corp. (OTC/BB: NVIV), a developer of groundbreaking technologies for the treatment of spinal cord injuries (SCI), today announced that CEO Frank Reynolds is scheduled to appear on San Antonio’s Fox News First on KABB-TV on Wednesday, February 22nd during their 7:00 AM (CST) newscast. Reynolds is also scheduled to appear the same day on San Antonio Living on WOAI-TV that airs from 10:00 to 11:00 AM (CST). InVivo Therapeutics has pioneered a new treatment platform that uses a biocompatible polymer-based scaffold to provide structural support to a damaged spinal cord in order to spare tissue from scarring while improving recovery and prognosis after a traumatic spinal cord injury. Reynolds will discuss the scaffold and how it is expected to work in humans, as well as results from InVivo’s largest non-human primate study. “We expect that our technology will change the standard care for spinal cord injury treatment. We’re currently under review at FDA and we look forward to receiving approval to begin human studies,” said Reynolds. “Our therapeutic approach confirms a clear paradigm shift in the treatment of spinal cord injuries.” Fox News First is the morning show that airs weekdays from 5:00 – … Continue reading
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Study shows exercise may help Parkinson's patients
Posted: Published on February 17th, 2012
TOLEDO, OH (WTOL) – Promising new work in the field of exercise may help some Parkinson's patients regain some lost control of their motor skills. A new study has found that weight training for two years may improve the motor symptoms of those who live with Parkinson 's disease. "Slowing this progression or altering the progression is really the single greatest unmet medical need in Parkinson's. And to date, there haven't been any positive pharmacological interventions or surgical interventions that have been effective in slowing disease progression." said Dr. Jay Alberts of the Cleveland Clinic. Researchers at the University of Illinois at Chicago found separated 48 patients into two groups. One group did weight training, while the other used flexibility, balance and strengthening exercises to manage the disease. The results of the study show that both forms of exercise reduced motor symptoms after 6 months, but those in the weight training group seemed to slow the progression of the disease even after two years. Researchers say that weight training could be an important component in managing Parkinson's disease, and Dr. Alberts believes it also empowers the patient: "Rather than being a passive recipient to medication or even a surgical procedure, … Continue reading
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