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Jul 2, 2011

HEALTH News, Jul 02, 2011

Medicare will keep covering Roche's Avastin
Thu,30 Jun 2011 04:31 PM PDT
Reuters - photoWASHINGTON (Reuters) - Medicare will continue paying for Roche Holding's drug Avastin for breast cancer, regardless of what health regulators decide about the medicine's future, a spokesman said on Thursday.

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Medicare to cover Dendreon's prostate drug
Thu,30 Jun 2011 03:12 PM PDT
Reuters - WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The Medicare and Medicaid federal health insurance programs will fully cover Provenge, Dendreon Corp's expensive treatment for advanced prostate cancer, U.S. regulators said, sending company shares 3 percent higher. Full Story1

Roche undeterred after FDA's Avastin rebuff
Thu,30 Jun 2011 02:31 PM PDT
Reuters - photoZURICH (Reuters) - Swiss drugmaker Roche Holding AG had nothing to lose by giving Avastin another roll of the dice, and by doing so showed the world it still believes the drug should be used in breast cancer.

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Nearsightedness linked to serious eye disease
Thu,30 Jun 2011 02:27 PM PDT
Reuters - NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - People who are nearsighted may be nearly twice as likely to also develop glaucoma, a leading cause of blindness, according to a new study that summarizes earlier research. Full Story1

Skin lesion risk seen at moderate arsenic levels
Thu,30 Jun 2011 02:26 PM PDT
Reuters - NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - High arsenic exposure is known to be a risk factor for skin cancer, but a new study suggests that even more-moderate exposure through drinking water may boost the risk of pre-cancerous skin growths. Full Story1

Life after prostate surgery worse than men expect
Thu,30 Jun 2011 02:23 PM PDT
Reuters - NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Nearly half of men who undergo surgery to treat prostate cancer find themselves with greater incontinence problems and less sexual function than they had anticipated, according to a new poll. Full Story1

Cured meats not linked to pancreatic cancer
Thu,30 Jun 2011 02:19 PM PDT
Reuters - photoNEW YORK (Reuters Health) - There are no clear signs that eating cured meats like ham, bacon or hot dogs could increase the odds of getting pancreatic cancer, according to a new study.

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Europe's E. coli outbreaks linked to Egyptian seeds
Thu,30 Jun 2011 01:16 PM PDT
Reuters - photoLONDON (Reuters) - Imported fenugreek seeds from Egypt may be the source of highly toxic E. coli outbreaks in Germany and France that have killed at least 48 people, according to initial investigations by European scientists.

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U.N. peacekeepers likely caused Haiti cholera
Thu,30 Jun 2011 12:08 PM PDT
Reuters - photoATLANTA (Reuters) - Evidence strongly suggests U.N. peacekeepers from Nepal were the source of a cholera epidemic in Haiti that has killed more than 5,500 people, according to a new report published by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

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Swine flu vaccine safe in pregnancy: study
Thu,30 Jun 2011 11:21 AM PDT
Reuters - NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - The swine flu shot appears to be safe for pregnant women, according to a new government report that tallies health problems occurring after the vaccinations. Full Story1

Even the Queen faces funding squeeze in austerity Britain
Thu,30 Jun 2011 10:24 AM PDT
Reuters - photoLONDON (Reuters) - Queen Elizabeth became the latest Briton to face a funding squeeze on Thursday when the government proposed changes to how it pays for royal trips and engagements.

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Analysis: Life saving lung cancer test to set off cost debate
Thu,30 Jun 2011 09:19 AM PDT
Reuters - photoNEW YORK (Reuters) - A landmark study showing that routine lung screening of heavy smokers and former smokers using low dose CT scans could save thousands of lives is sure to set off a fierce debate about the cost of such testing on an overburdened healthcare system.

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One patient's plea for FDA approval of Avastin
Thu,30 Jun 2011 05:22 AM PDT
Reuters - SILVER SPRING, Maryland (Reuters) - She made her doctor repeat it several times: There's nothing there. There's nothing there. There's no evidence of cancer. Full Story1

Thailand fights cancer-causing parasitic worms
Thu,30 Jun 2011 03:48 AM PDT
Reuters - HONG KONG (Reuters) - Health authorities in northeast Thailand plan to screen people for fluke worms to detect early signs of bile duct cancer, a deadly disease linked to eating uncooked freshwater fish. Full Story1

Factbox: World's neglected tropical diseases
Thu,30 Jun 2011 03:48 AM PDT
Reuters - HONG KONG (Reuters) - A northeastern Thailand province is preparing to test its population for a parasitic worm to detect early signs of bile duct cancer, which is caused by eating raw seafood. Full Story1
Medicare proposes change in anemia drug usage
Fri,1 Jul 2011 09:41 PM PDT
Reuters - LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - The Medicare federal health insurance program has proposed removing its requirement that kidney dialysis providers keep patient hemoglobin levels above a set minimum, which could lead to lower use of Epogen, the anemia drug sold by Amgen. Full Story1
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Evidence "increasingly against" phone cancer risk
Fri,1 Jul 2011 04:02 PM PDT
Reuters - LONDON (Reuters) - Despite a recent move to classify mobile phones as possibly carcinogenic, the scientific evidence increasingly points away from a link between their use and brain tumors, according to a new study on Saturday. Full Story1

FDA chides Novartis on meningitis vaccine promotion
Fri,1 Jul 2011 01:24 PM PDT
Reuters - photoWASHINGTON (Reuters) - Novartis AG falsely implied that its Menveo meningitis vaccine was approved in a manner consistent with guidelines from an influential U.S. advisory group, health regulators said in a letter to the Swiss drugmaker.

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Menu labels don't influence students' food choices
Fri,1 Jul 2011 12:51 PM PDT
Reuters - photoNEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Menu labels on cafeteria food -- highlighting the good and the bad of various meal options -- make no difference in college students' meal choices, a new study concludes.

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Special infant formula may not prevent allergies
Fri,1 Jul 2011 12:50 PM PDT
Reuters - NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Despite pediatric guidelines endorsing "allergy-friendly" whey-based infant formulas, a new study finds the products don't ward off allergies in babies at high risk for sensitivities. Full Story1

Safety group sets kids' drawstring safety rules
Fri,1 Jul 2011 12:32 PM PDT
Reuters - CHICAGO (Reuters) - The Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) on Friday set a new federal safety rule, saying drawstrings in certain children's clothing are now considered substantial product hazards. Full Story1

Russia says abortion ads must carry health warning
Fri,1 Jul 2011 12:23 PM PDT
Reuters - MOSCOW (Reuters) - Russian lawmakers, worried about a falling birth rate, passed a law on Friday that abortion advertisements must carry a health warning. Full Story1

More people struggling with bladder control: study
Fri,1 Jul 2011 10:37 AM PDT
Reuters - NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - An increasing number of people say they are dealing with incontinence, according to a new survey of nearly 20,000 U.S. adults. Full Story1

Fertility treatment less successful in obese women
Fri,1 Jul 2011 09:52 AM PDT
Reuters - NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Obese women undergoing in vitro fertilization (IVF) may be half as likely as their normal-weight counterparts to have a baby, a study at one U.S. medical center suggests. Full Story1

Arsenic linked to kidney cancer
Fri,1 Jul 2011 08:34 AM PDT
Reuters - NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - People with moderately elevated levels of arsenic in their urine may have an increased risk of kidney cancer -- particularly if they have high blood pressure and kidney disease, a new study suggests. Full Story1

Lundbeck acts to stop misuse of drug in executions
Fri,1 Jul 2011 08:33 AM PDT
Reuters - COPENHAGEN (Reuters) - Danish pharmaceutical group Lundbeck on Friday said it was changing the distribution of its epilepsy drug Nembutal to avoid the drug being used in executions in U.S. prisons. Full Story1

Copper kills 97 percent of hospital ICU bacteria: study
Fri,1 Jul 2011 07:51 AM PDT
Reuters - photoNEW YORK (Reuters) - Antimicrobial copper surfaces in intensive care units (ICU) kill 97 percent of bacteria that can cause hospital-acquired infections, according to preliminary results of a multisite clinical trial in the United States.

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Who should get screened for lung cancer?
Fri,1 Jul 2011 07:47 AM PDT
Reuters - NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Using chest scans to screen for lung cancer in people who've never smoked and have no symptoms might help catch cancers early and decrease the disease's death toll, suggests a new study from Japan. Full Story1

Medicare will keep covering Roche's Avastin
Thu,30 Jun 2011 04:31 PM PDT
Reuters - photoWASHINGTON (Reuters) - Medicare will continue paying for Roche Holding's drug Avastin for breast cancer, regardless of what health regulators decide about the medicine's future, a spokesman said on Thursday.

Full Story1

Medicare to cover Dendreon's prostate drug
Thu,30 Jun 2011 03:12 PM PDT
Reuters - WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The Medicare and Medicaid federal health insurance programs will fully cover Provenge, Dendreon Corp's expensive treatment for advanced prostate cancer, U.S. regulators said, sending company shares 3 percent higher. Full Story1

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