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Monthly Archives: July 2012
Pharmacy Retailing in the UK | Verdict Market Report
Posted: Published on July 12th, 2012
NEW YORK, July 11, 2012 /PRNewswire/ -- Reportlinker.com announces that a new market research report is available in its catalogue: Pharmacy Retailing in the UK | Verdict Market Report http://www.reportlinker.com/p0930061/Pharmacy-Retailing-in-the-UK-|-Verdict-Market-Report.html#utm_source=prnewswire&utm_medium=pr&utm_campaign=Pharmacies_and_Drug_Stores With an ageing population, significant changes in government policy and consolidation in the market, Pharmacy is an ever-changing sector. Learn where the opportunities and threats are in the market and how to manage these most effectively for your business.Reduce the impact of changes in government policy on your business by being prepared and understanding where the greatest threats will come from.Use the data, forecasts to 2015, and insight on the market, including NHS receipts and OTC, to help form an effective growth strategy.Understand the impact on pharmacy retailing of the Boots/Walgreens merger and how the investment will increase competitiveness in the sector.Identify the opportunities to grow business in this sector by comparing strategies of the key players in the market and their performance metrics.In 2011, the government announced plans for changes in the control of entry rules that would end the 100 hours exemption and this has prompted a rush of opening applications which we forecast will dilute profitability. 250 new pharmacies opened in the first four months of 2012.Furthermore … Continue reading
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Auto insurance hearings hold Brampton session
Posted: Published on July 12th, 2012
Provincial politicians heard from a broker, doctors, a physical therapist, a brain injury victim and others during local public hearings on the auto insurance industry. Brampton hosted the second meeting in a series of public hearings being conducted in several Ontario communities. The provincial governments Standing Committee on Finance and Economic Affairs has organized the sessions as part of a study of the auto insurance industrys practices and trends. The study was undertaken to develop recommendations on how auto insurance rates could be made more affordable. The Committee, composed of MPPs from the Liberal, Progressive Conservative and New Democratic parties, was in Toronto Monday. Tuesdays session was held at Bramptons Holiday Inn on Peel Centre Drive. More meetings are scheduled in Windsor and Thunder Bay this week. Mississauga-Brampton South Liberal MPP Amrit Mangat and Bramalea-Gore-Malton New Democrat Jagmeet Singh joined committee proceedings Tuesday to hear speakers and ask questions of presenters. Both politicians have introduced private members bills designed to help lower insurance rates. Singhs was focussed on preventing a drivers home address from being used as the primary factor in determining their policy rates. His proposed bill was rejected by 52-16 vote in the legislature during second reading last … Continue reading
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Stress reduction therapy prevents MS brain lesions
Posted: Published on July 12th, 2012
Public release date: 11-Jul-2012 [ | E-mail | Share ] Contact: Hilary Hurd Anyaso h-anyaso@northwestern.edu 847-491-4887 Northwestern University CHICAGO --- A weekly stress management program for patients with multiple sclerosis (M.S.) prevented the development of new brain lesions, a marker of the disease's activity in the brain, according to new Northwestern Medicine research. Brain lesions in M.S. often precede flare-ups of symptoms such as loss of vision or use of limbs or pain. "This is the first time counseling or psychotherapy has been shown to affect the development of new brain lesions," said David Mohr, principal investigator of the study and professor of preventive medicine at Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine. "In M.S., the prevention of new brain lesions is an important marker used to judge how effective medications are." "The new finding is an important step and the strongest evidence we have to date that stress is involved in M.S.," Mohr added. The results indicate that stress management therapy may be a useful adjunct treatment with drug therapy for M.S., but a larger clinical trial is needed to confirm this, Mohr said. The study is published in the July 11, 2012 issue of Neurology, the medical journal of … Continue reading
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Stress management training may help reduce disease activity in MS
Posted: Published on July 12th, 2012
Public release date: 11-Jul-2012 [ | E-mail | Share ] Contact: Rachel Seroka rseroka@aan.com 612-928-6021 American Academy of Neurology MINNEAPOLIS A new study shows that taking part in a stress management program may help people with multiple sclerosis (MS) prevent new disease activity. The study is published in the July 11, 2012, online issue of Neurology, the medical journal of the American Academy of Neurology. The study involved 121 people with MS. Half received the stress management program, meeting with a therapist for 16 individual 50-minute sessions over five to six months. They learned about problem-solving skills, relaxation, increasing positive activities, and enhancing their social support. They could also choose optional sessions on topics such as fatigue management, anxiety reduction, pain management and insomnia treatment. After the treatment ended, the participants were followed for another five to six months. The remaining participants were put on a waiting list as a control group. After 10 months, they attended a five-hour workshop on stress management. A total of 77 percent of those receiving stress management training were free of new lesions, or brain damage that indicates disease activity, during the treatment period, compared to 55 percent of those in the control group. … Continue reading
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Stress Management May Prevent MS Brain Lesions
Posted: Published on July 12th, 2012
Multiple Sclerosis Patients Had Fewer New Brain Lesions During Treatment July 11, 2012 -- Teaching MS patients how to deal with stress can improve their quality of life -- and may also prevent or slow down formation of new brain lesions, according to a new study. Patients with multiple sclerosis who attended stress management therapy sessions for six months had fewer new brain lesions from disease flare-ups and slower disease progression during their treatment, Northwestern University researcher David C. Mohr, PhD, and colleagues found. The findings, published in the July 11 issue of the journal Neurology, add to evidence that stress management can slow MS disease activity. "People who got the stress management training had significant reductions in the incidence of new brain lesions while enrolled in the weekly sessions," Mohr tells WebMD. But the improvement disappeared when the weekly sessions ended, suggesting that more sustained therapy may be needed, he says. Mohr says stress management therapy may be a useful addition to MS drugs. He has spent more than a decade researching the impact of depression and stress on MS progression. The new study included 121 MS patients randomly assigned either to a stress management treatment group or to … Continue reading
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Veterinary Q&A: Why is xylitol so dangerous for dogs and cats?
Posted: Published on July 12th, 2012
Dr. Dana Brooks, an internist at Seattle Veterinary Specialists in Kirkland, answers this week's question. Dr. Dana Brooks, an internist at Seattle Veterinary Specialists in Kirkland, reports an increased number of dogs and cats being treated at its emergency clinic -- in one case the dog died -- from eating xylitol, an artificial sweetener used as a sugar substitute in foods, including sugar-free gum, sugar-free mints, chewable vitamins, tooth paste and oral-care products. Xylitol is also available in a granulated form at your local grocery store for baking and beverage sweeteners. Question: Why is xylitol so dangerous for dogs and cats? Answer: Ingestion of xylitol primarily affects insulin release throughout the body. Insulin causes an increase of glucose (blood sugar) uptake into the liver, muscle, and fat cells resulting in decreasing blood glucose levels. Xylitol strongly promotes the release of insulin from the pancreas into circulation leading to a rapid decrease of blood glucose levels. Hypoglycemia (low blood sugar) can occur within 30 to 60 minutes of xylitol ingestion with levels as low as 0.1g xylitol /kg body weight. Hypoglycemia may compound further into liver toxicity, liver damage, and ultimately liver failure. Ingesting amounts of xylitol greater than 0.5 g … Continue reading
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Hormone Replacement Therapy Alert: Top HRT Doctor in Las Vegas Now Featured and Interviewed in The Morning Blend Las …
Posted: Published on July 12th, 2012
(PRWEB) July 12, 2012 Aging may very well be one of the most common problems humans are being faced with because after all, nobody can escape the ravages of time. Fortunately though, it seems that solutions are being worked upon with one of the most interesting being hormone replacement therapy(HRT). HRT is a method of treatment which administers a patient with hormones to compensate for a lack of natural hormones, or to substitute for others(source: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hormone_replacement_therapy). One of the most established hormone replacement therapy clinics in Las Vegas Nevada, LiveAgelessly by Dr. Maria Keller, was recently featured in Las Vegas The Morning Blend show. Liveagelessly provides details on the therapy itself, the theory behind it, how it works, and what other patients have to say about it. Lots of people are surprised to find out that they have hormonal imbalance for years. The therapy will help people that have these symptoms: Dr. Maria Keller has been a medical practitioner after being trained in Gynecology and Obstetrics in 1997. Lately, she has focused most of her research on hormones, how they function within the body and how they can be exploited to slow down the aging process. LiveAgelessly is the fruit … Continue reading
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Human trials for potential HIV cure
Posted: Published on July 12th, 2012
Australian scientist Prof Alan Trounson is working on a cure for HIV using stem cells. Source: AP A WORLD-renowned Australian stem cell expert working on a cure for HIV says their research is about to progress to human trials. Professor Alan Trounson heads the California Institute of Regenerative Medicine, which is advancing towards a cure for conditions including HIV and diabetes. Prof Trounson, the former director of Monash Immunology and Stem Cell Laboratories in Melbourne, said the research institute's work towards a HIV cure was about to enter human trials. He said if the trials were successful further research would be needed to modify the technology so it could be affordably used where it is needed most, in Africa. "I want the HIV work to go globally because it shouldn't be restricted to patients in Western (countries)," Prof Trounson said. "We're going to have to modify some of that further research to get it into a suitable treatment that we can use in Africa. "I'm very hopeful that the industry will do that. "We have to try and make these as available to people as possible." Prof Trounson said the HIV research uses blood stem cells to mimic a gene … Continue reading
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Stem cell cures bring challenges
Posted: Published on July 12th, 2012
A world-renowned Australian stem cell expert says it's crucial that any potential cures using the technology are available globally, particularly in developing countries. Professor Alan Trounson heads the California Institute of Regenerative Medicine, which is advancing towards a cure for conditions including HIV and diabetes. Prof Trounson, the former director of Monash Immunology and Stem Cell Laboratories in Melbourne, said the research institute's work towards a HIV cure was about to enter human trials. He said if the trials were successful further research would be needed to modify the technology so it could be affordably used where it is needed most, in Africa. 'I want the HIV work to go globally because it shouldn't be restricted to patients in Western (countries),' Prof Trounson told AAP. 'We're going to have to modify some of that further research to get it into a suitable treatment that we can use in Africa. 'I'm very hopeful that the industry will do that. 'We have to try and make these as available to people as possible.' Prof Trounson said the HIV research uses blood stem cells to mimic a gene mutation found in a small proportion of the population who are immune to the virus. … Continue reading
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Break out the sunscreen: Sunburns damage your genetic code
Posted: Published on July 12th, 2012
That painful sunburn on your shoulder is actually a complex volley of genetically encoded counterattacks buried deep under your skin. According to a study published in Medicine, the sun is scorching your RNA. In some ways, it was a surprise, said Dr. Richard Gallo, chief of the dermatology division at the University of California San Diego. We know a sunburn will damage DNA. What we didnt suspect is that it is also damaging the RNA. DNA stores genetic code; RNA transmits it. The study found that ultraviolet UVB rays from the sun bore through the skin to fracture and tangle a specific type of RNA that does not make proteins. Sunburned cells release that non-coding micro-RNA, setting off an alarm in healthy surrounding cells that something weird and dangerous is going on. That alarm turns into inflammation which turns into sunburn We were interested in how the injury is recognized by our body, Gallo said on Monday. Those cells that are injured are dead. How can their neighbours detect that? In fact, the inflammation is the skin trying to heal itself, releasing a cocktail of antibodies and anti-inflammatories that could be beneficial. It may help us remove cells that might … Continue reading
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