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Monthly Archives: March 2012
New Jersey bans synthetic marijuana
Posted: Published on March 1st, 2012
New Jersey Attorney General Jeffrey S. Chiesa on Wednesday announced a statewide ban on all forms of synthetic marijuana, the so-called designer drug that mimics the effects of marijuana. The concoction, also known as K2 and Spice, is the third most commonly abused drug by high school seniors, behind marijuana and prescription drugs, according to a 2011 study funded by the National Institute on Drug Abuse. Side effects include violent seizures, dangerously elevated heart rates, and hallucinations, according to the institute and the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration. New Jersey's ban - in an emergency order pending legislative action - prohibits the manufacture, distribution, and sale of any of the hundreds of chemical combinations that mirror marijuana's effect, and is more sweeping than previous efforts. The drug will now be considered a controlled dangerous substance, like cocaine and heroin. Violators could face three to five years in prison and a fine of up to $25,000, officials said. Under state law, officials can reclassify and restrict the availability of chemicals that have a high potential for abuse and no accepted medical use. Chiesa said authorities wanted to ban all possible variants of the drug to prevent manufacturers and dealers from sidestepping the … Continue reading
Posted in Drug Side Effects
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Heroin becomes fatal addiction for more area teens
Posted: Published on March 1st, 2012
I never learned about heroin in my pediatric residency. I didn't need to I never treated a patient with heroin dependency. But this ugly drug has invaded St. Louis and St. Charles County high schools and our community emergency rooms. The new face of heroin is a suburban adolescent, in the prime of life, not breathing. Heroin causes breathing to slow, and heroin overdose causes death by respiratory depression. These patients arrive in the emergency room blue and nonresponsive. They are usually brought in by nervous friends, also abusers, who do not want their own drug use revealed. These are the lucky ones most heroin addicts die before anyone realizes they are not just sleeping. "It never ceases to amaze me how frequently they come in almost dead and then they come back again, the same way, a week later," said my colleague Dr. Robert Yeager, an emergency medicine physician at Progress West Health Center in O'Fallon, Mo. Dr. Joseph Karre, also an emergency medicine physician at Progress West, just shook his head, "I can't believe how many high school kids are willing to try it." And it's extremely difficult to find any inpatient drug treatment program that will accept … Continue reading
Posted in Drug Dependency
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First Nations Warn of ‘Health Catastrophe’ After OxyContin Pulled
Posted: Published on March 1st, 2012
By Justina Reichel Epoch Times Staff Created: March 1, 2012 Last Updated: March 1, 2012 A 40 mg bottle of OxyContin. The highly addictive painkiller was pulled from the market on Mar. 1 and replaced with OxyNeo, a new version designed to be more difficult to abuse. Ontario First Nations are seeking government support for a potential mass withdrawal in their communities due to the discontinuation of the drug. ( Darren McCollester/Getty Images) Just as Alberta decides not to follow some other provinces in limiting funding for highly addictive painkiller OxyContin, Ontario First Nations are seeking government support for a potential mass withdrawal in their communities due to the discontinuation of the drug on March 1. OxyContin was pulled from the Canadian market by manufacturer Purdue Pharma because of increasing rates of abuse. It is being replaced with a new version of the drug called OxyNeo, said to be more difficult to abuse because it cannot be crushed or liquefied, making it unsuitable for injecting or snorting. Health Canada recently announced that all long-acting oxycodones such as OxyContin and OxyNeo have been removed from the Non-Insured Health Benefits (NIHB) list, including for First Nations people. Alberta has said it has … Continue reading
Posted in Drug Dependency
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Substance misuse treatment vital for crime reduction
Posted: Published on March 1st, 2012
Baroness Bonham-Carter argues drug and alcohol treatment programmes are key to reducing reoffending rates and must not 'slip down the agenda'. Both the Home Office and the Ministry for Justice have for years considered treatment for drug and alcohol dependence to be key to bringing down reoffending rates, with all the associated benefits this has, both for the individuals concerned and for society as a whole. The criminal justice system has invested in various programmes to tackle substance misuse, and this policy has achieved much success, with drug-treatment programmes estimated to help prevent around 680,000 crimes per year. It is now proposed that responsibility for all drug-recovery budgets should be passed to the new executive agency of the Department of Health, Public Health England, with effect from April 2013. According to ministers, in practice this would mean that local authorities would have responsibility for commissioning drug and alcohol prevention and recovery treatments, funded by a public health grant. The NHS Commissioning Board would be responsible for commissioning substance-misuse treatment for people in prison or other forms of detention. In many ways this makes sense, as local authorities and the NHS can bring together the range of services aimed at helping … Continue reading
Posted in Drug Dependency
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Drugs destined for Mardi Gras seized
Posted: Published on March 1st, 2012
Drugs with a street value of $120,000 have been seized, with police alleging they were destined for this weekend's Sydney Gay Mardi Gras. Four men have been arrested and charged, following the seizure of cocaine, marijuana and almost $100,000 in cash from police searches in Leichhardt, Surry Hills, Paddington and Bondi. A 40-year-old Leichhardt man, arrested on Tuesday with one ounce of cocaine in his car, has been charged with supplying a commercial quantity of a prohibited drug, dealing with the proceeds of crime and other drug-related offences. He was granted bail to appear in Central Local Court on April 12. A 35-year-old Rose Bay man was also charged with the same offences, and was granted to appear in Downing Centre Local Court on Friday. Two men from Surry Hills, aged 34 and 63, were issued court attendance notices for possession of a prohibited drug and are due to appear in Downing Centre Local Court on March 21. Read more from the original source: Drugs destined for Mardi Gras seized … Continue reading
Posted in Drugs
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FBI Investigates Bardstown Pharmacy – Video
Posted: Published on March 1st, 2012
28-02-2012 18:13 A small pharmacy in Bardstown is under investigation by the FBI. More here: FBI Investigates Bardstown Pharmacy - Video … Continue reading
Posted in Pharmacy
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Proposed cuts would ‘decimate’ College of Pharmacy
Posted: Published on March 1st, 2012
When the Senate voted last week to restore $3 million to USF's College of Pharmacy after proposing to slash its entire budget, many heralded it as a victory for USF. Yet Pharmacy Dean Kevin Sneed said the $3 million budget is still highly debilitating. "That would totally decimate everything we've been able to accomplish to this point," he said. "We're a brand new college starting out, trying to grow." The College of Pharmacy, established a year ago, was intended to be housed at USF Polytechnic. The Florida Legislature awarded $10 million last year for the construction of a Pharmacy building at the Lakeland campus and$6 million in recurring funds to start the program, which has 53 students. Yet when a conforming bill put forth by Sen. Evelyn Lynn, R-Ormond Beach, proposed to immediately sever Polytechnic from USF and create an independent12th university, the College of Pharmacy was returned to the USF System without the $6 million used to fund it. Senate Budget Committee Chairman and longtime Polytechnic separatist Sen. JD Alexander, R-Lake Wales, said during last week's Senate meeting that the $3 million would be "more than adequate" for the College. "A couple years ago, USF got the School of … Continue reading
Posted in Pharmacy
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Complete Genomics Announces Formation of Genomic Medicine Advisory Board
Posted: Published on March 1st, 2012
MOUNTAIN VIEW, Calif., Feb. 29, 2012 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Complete Genomics Inc. (Nasdaq:GNOM - News), the whole human genome sequencing company, today announced the formation of its Genomic Medicine Advisory Board (GMAB). The GMAB will provide insight and guidance on the best ways for the company to provide sequencing services to healthcare organizations and physicians interested in implementing genomic medicine in their practice. Inaugural board members include distinguished physicians and scientists. Robert Nussbaum, MD, Holly Smith Professor of Medicine, chief of the Division of Medical Genetics in the Department of Medicine, and director of the Cancer Risk and Cardiovascular Genetics Programs at the University of California, San Francisco, will serve as GMAB chairman. "There are a number of major challenges to deploying whole genome sequencing in the clinic," said Dr. Nussbaum. "The Complete Genomics GMAB is a wonderful opportunity to assemble thought leaders in genomic medicine to begin to define the 'clinical genome' and how to make it most useful and accessible to clinicians, establish technical and ethical standards, and address some of the regulatory and reimbursement obstacles that exist in this rapidly-evolving field. Complete Genomics is committed to doing this right." Founding members of the Complete Genomics GMAB include … Continue reading
Posted in Cell Medicine
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Women Can Make New Eggs After All, Stem-Cell Study Hints
Posted: Published on March 1st, 2012
Women may make new eggs throughout their reproductive yearschallenging a longstanding tenet that females are born with finite supplies, a new study says. The discovery may also lead to new avenues for improving women's health and fertility. A woman has two ovaries, which release eggs during her monthly ovulation.(Learn more about the human body.) Previous research had suggested that a woman is born with all the egg cells she will ever have in her lifetime. But in recent experiments, scientists discovered a new type of stem cell in the ovaries thatwhen grown in the labgenerates immature egg cells.The same immature cells isolated from adult mouse ovaries canturn into fertile eggs. Stem cells,found in embryos and certain adult body tissues, have the potential to grow into many different types of cells. (See"Liposuction Fat Turned Into Stem Cells, Study Says.") The finding reinforces the team's previous experiments in mice, which had identified a new type of ovarian stem cell that renews a female mouse's source of eggs throughout its fertile years. That study, published in the journal Nature in 2004, was the "first to reach the conclusion that this long-held belief in our fieldthat young girls are given a bank account at … Continue reading
Posted in Cell Medicine
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International Cellular Medicine Society Grants First Worldwide Accreditation to Tijuana Clinical Trial
Posted: Published on March 1st, 2012
Regenerative Medicine Institute, Mexico has been granted full accreditation for its clinical stem cell trials Portland, Oregon (PRWEB) February 29, 2012 We are pleased that RMI undertook this process, says David Audley, executive director of the ICMS. The clinic understood that patient safety can only be assured through strict evaluation and rigorous oversight. From day one they have embraced the transparency that this program requires. RMI is the first clinic to achieve this status under the ICMS Accreditation Program. The clinic has undergone two separate site audits as well as an institutional review board review evaluation. Most importantly, the clinic has placed in excess of 50 patients into the Treatment Registry for long-term outcome tracking. The safety profile has been excellent, continued Audley. We have tracked patients over at least two follow-ups and a minimum of six months and not seen a single cell-related adverse event. The ICMS is currently evaluating nearly a dozen clinics worldwide. Accreditation is based upon the Guidelines for the Practice of Cell-Based Medicine developed and published by the ICMS. Key components of these guidelines are the ethical recruitment of patients, proper consent of patients and compliance with local laws and regulations in the treatment of … Continue reading
Posted in Cell Medicine
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