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Monthly Archives: March 2012
Sen. Hinojosa: HMO shift forcing pharmacies out of business
Posted: Published on March 8th, 2012
PHARR A low reimbursement rate for Medicaid patients is crippling independent pharmacies in the Rio Grande Valley to the point that most will go out of business, state Sen. Juan Chuy Hinojosa said Wednesday while standing inside a small drugstore that closed its doors last week. About a dozen Valley pharmacies went out of business since the Health and Human Services Commission placed 400,000-plus Medicaid beneficiaries into its managed care program March 1 in an effort to more efficiently deliver health care to the poor and to those with disabilities. But Hinojosa, D-McAllen, said the profit-driven companies that are now managing Medicaid dramatically cut reimbursement rates for small, independent pharmacies while paying a higher fee to the chains. Quite frankly, the dispensing fee and the reimbursement rates are unacceptable, Hinojosa said at a news conference surrounded by dozens of pharmacists at Sam Houston Pharmacy, a Pharr-based drugstore that shut down the first day of managed care. They were never intended to be that low. The Valley made the long-delayed switch to managed care March 1 despite opposition from local legislators, who successfully delayed its rollout here for about a decade. Under managed care, the state contracts the coverage for its … Continue reading
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Lady Braves survive Douglas to advance — Motilium Without A Prescription » Online Pharmacy
Posted: Published on March 8th, 2012
By Dahl Erickson on Mar 7, 2012 in Featured, Sports The Lady Braves had won 18 straight games dating back to mid-December, but win #19 on their current streak was perhaps the closest one yet. The Douglas Lady Bearcats controlled much of the tempo against Star Valley, leading by as many as five points on four different occasions. However, the Lady Braves, who were out-rebounded and gave up many uncharacteristic second-chance baskets, clawed their way back to a lead in the fourth quarter after trailing by five to end the third. Down the stretch, the Lady Braves forced 26 turnovers but only turned it over twice in the final stanza to forge a modest four-point lead. Douglas answered with a huge three-point basket from Jill Espeland but a clinching steal from Hailey Greenwood and clutch free-throws from Lexi Erickson sealed a 46-43 victory. Erickson finished with a game high 18 points and five assists while Christy Clinger finished with nine. Kassidy Scott led Douglas with 12 before fouling out, one of three Lady Bearcats to pick up five fouls. The ladies now match up with Rawlins at 6 p.m. in the semi-finals on Thursday evening. Take a look at the … Continue reading
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Mr. Long Without A Prescription » Online Pharmacy
Posted: Published on March 8th, 2012
By Dahl Erickson on Mar 7, 2012 in Featured, Sports The Lady Braves had won 18 straight games dating back to mid-December, but win #19 on their current streak was perhaps the closest one yet. The Douglas Lady Bearcats controlled much of the tempo against Star Valley, leading by as many as five points on four different occasions. However, the Lady Braves, who were out-rebounded and gave up many uncharacteristic second-chance baskets, clawed their way back to a lead in the fourth quarter after trailing by five to end the third. Down the stretch, the Lady Braves forced 26 turnovers but only turned it over twice in the final stanza to forge a modest four-point lead. Douglas answered with a huge three-point basket from Jill Espeland but a clinching steal from Hailey Greenwood and clutch free-throws from Lexi Erickson sealed a 46-43 victory. Erickson finished with a game high 18 points and five assists while Christy Clinger finished with nine. Kassidy Scott led Douglas with 12 before fouling out, one of three Lady Bearcats to pick up five fouls. The ladies now match up with Rawlins at 6 p.m. in the semi-finals on Thursday evening. Take a look at the … Continue reading
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Stem Cell-Seeded Cardiopatch Could Deliver Results for Damaged Hearts
Posted: Published on March 8th, 2012
A new type of stem cell-seeded patch has shown promising results in promoting healing after a heart attack, according to a study released today in the journal STEM CELLS Translational Medicine. Durham, NC (PRWEB) March 07, 2012 Ischemic heart disease, caused by vessel blockage, is a leading cause of death in many western countries. Studies have shown the potential of stem cells in regenerating heart tissue damaged during an attack. But even as the list of candidate cells for cardiac regeneration has expanded, none has emerged as the obvious choice, possibly because several cell types are needed to regenerate both the hearts muscles and its vascular components. Aside from the choice of the right cell source for tissue regeneration, the best way to deliver the stem cells is up for debate, too, as intravenous delivery and injections can be inefficient and possibly harmful. While embryonic stem cells have shown great promise for heart repairs due to their ability to differentiate into virtually any cell type, less than 10 percent of injected cells typically survive the engraftment and of that number generally only 2 percent actually colonize the heart. In order for this type of treatment is to be clinically effective, … Continue reading
Posted in Mesenchymal Stem Cells
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Internationally Recognized Leukemia Physician and Researcher to Lead Sylvester Comprehensive Cancer Center
Posted: Published on March 8th, 2012
MIAMI--(BUSINESS WIRE)-- Stephen D. Nimer, M.D., one of the worlds premier leukemia and stem cell transplant researchers and clinicians, has been named the new director of the Sylvester Comprehensive Cancer Center. Nimer, the Alfred P. Sloan Chair in Cancer Research at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center, will assume the key University of Miami Miller School of Medicine and UHealth-University of Miami Health System post this spring, bringing 30 years of pioneering research and clinical experience and an unquenchable passion for improving the lives of patients with cancer, and their families. The focus will not be solely on taking care of the cancer, it will be on taking care of the patient, said Nimer, whose patient-centered philosophy has won him as much acclaim as his clinical and laboratory accomplishments. That means trying to understand as fully as possible each patients cancer the biology driving the cancer, and the impact of the cancer on the patients life in order to develop a personalized therapeutic approach suited to each individual. Pascal J. Goldschmidt, M.D., Senior Vice President for Medical Affairs and Dean of the Miller School, and CEO of UHealth, said Nimer, who headed the Division of Hematologic Oncology at Sloan-Kettering for a dozen … Continue reading
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Transplant without lifetime of drugs?
Posted: Published on March 8th, 2012
Lindsay Porter's kidneys weighed 16 pounds before her transplant. STORY HIGHLIGHTS (CNN) -- By the time Lindsay Porter had her kidneys removed two years ago, they were bulging -- covered in cysts -- and together weighed 16 pounds. Her abdominal area was so distended, "I looked nine months pregnant, and people regularly asked when I was due," Porter said. As she prepared for a transplant to address her polycystic kidney disease, Porter, 47, had mixed feelings -- relief to have found a donor, tinged with resignation. She was looking forward to both a new kidney, and a lifetime on immune system-suppressing drugs. "You get this brand new shiny kidney, and then they give you drugs that eventually destroy it," said Porter. But that scenario may eventually change, if results of a new pilot study are replicated in a larger group of patients. The study, published Wednesday in the journal Science Translational Medicine, describes eight kidney transplant patients, including Porter, who received a stem cell therapy that allowed donor and recipient immune cells to coexist in the same body. The effect, in a handful of those patients, was to trick the recipient's immune system into recognizing the donated kidney as its … Continue reading
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Wayzata HS student takes stem cell research to national competition
Posted: Published on March 8th, 2012
by Tom Crann, Minnesota Public Radio March 7, 2012 Audio player code: St. Paul, Minn. A Minnesota teen will be one of 40 high school students nationwide competing for a top prize of $100,000 at the annual Intel Science Talent Search in Washington D.C. Thursday. Evan Chen, a student at Wayzata High School, focused his research on a type of stem cell that could help replace and regenerate muscle lost by people suffering from muscular dystrophy. Chen told Tom Crann of All Things Considered that he was inspired to do the research after meeting three boys from Taiwan who were in Minnesota seeking treatment for the disease. "They left after the experiment; the treatment didn't work," Chen said. "I was pushed not only by my experience with them, but also my fascination with stem cells." The advanced research Chen envisioned couldn't be done in a high school laboratory, so Chen approached local scientists for help. "Eventually one sat down with me and we talked about the research I wanted to do," Chen said. "He was like, 'Sure, you can use my lab for this.'" Chen and the other students will be judged by a panel of scientists. Other projects in … Continue reading
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Stem Cell-Seeded Cardiopatch Could Deliver Results for Damaged Hearts
Posted: Published on March 8th, 2012
A new type of stem cell-seeded patch has shown promising results in promoting healing after a heart attack, according to a study released today in the journal STEM CELLS Translational Medicine. Durham, NC (PRWEB) March 07, 2012 Ischemic heart disease, caused by vessel blockage, is a leading cause of death in many western countries. Studies have shown the potential of stem cells in regenerating heart tissue damaged during an attack. But even as the list of candidate cells for cardiac regeneration has expanded, none has emerged as the obvious choice, possibly because several cell types are needed to regenerate both the hearts muscles and its vascular components. Aside from the choice of the right cell source for tissue regeneration, the best way to deliver the stem cells is up for debate, too, as intravenous delivery and injections can be inefficient and possibly harmful. While embryonic stem cells have shown great promise for heart repairs due to their ability to differentiate into virtually any cell type, less than 10 percent of injected cells typically survive the engraftment and of that number generally only 2 percent actually colonize the heart. In order for this type of treatment is to be clinically effective, … Continue reading
Posted in Cell Medicine
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Is Cancer Outwitting ‘Personalized Medicine’?
Posted: Published on March 8th, 2012
WEDNESDAY, March 7 (HealthDay News) -- The genetic makeup of cancer cells differs significantly from region to region within a single tumor, according to new research that raises questions about the true potential of personalized cancer medicine. With this treatment approach, doctors study a tumor's genetic makeup to determine which drugs would work best in a particular patient. But if the genetic mutations driving the cancer cells vary widely, a single tissue sample won't necessarily give the full picture. This "targeted therapy" involves "sticking a needle into the primary tumor site and taking a small sliver of a tumor, doing a gene analysis, and creating a genetic profile of the tumor to predict how the tumor will behave," explained Dr. Dan Longo, an oncologist and deputy editor at the New England Journal of Medicine. "What this paper tells us is that is an oversimplification of the complexity of tumors and their heterogeneity," he said. "If you look at different sites of the very same tumor and the very same person, one site might tell you a gene profile associated with a good prognosis and the other site will tell you a gene profile associated with a bad prognosis." Longo wrote … Continue reading
Posted in Cell Medicine
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Is Cancer Outwitting 'Personalized Medicine'?
Posted: Published on March 8th, 2012
WEDNESDAY, March 7 (HealthDay News) -- The genetic makeup of cancer cells differs significantly from region to region within a single tumor, according to new research that raises questions about the true potential of personalized cancer medicine. With this treatment approach, doctors study a tumor's genetic makeup to determine which drugs would work best in a particular patient. But if the genetic mutations driving the cancer cells vary widely, a single tissue sample won't necessarily give the full picture. This "targeted therapy" involves "sticking a needle into the primary tumor site and taking a small sliver of a tumor, doing a gene analysis, and creating a genetic profile of the tumor to predict how the tumor will behave," explained Dr. Dan Longo, an oncologist and deputy editor at the New England Journal of Medicine. "What this paper tells us is that is an oversimplification of the complexity of tumors and their heterogeneity," he said. "If you look at different sites of the very same tumor and the very same person, one site might tell you a gene profile associated with a good prognosis and the other site will tell you a gene profile associated with a bad prognosis." Longo wrote … Continue reading
Posted in Cell Medicine
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