Sunday, September 23, 2012

Daily News Digest: Reuters Health News Headlines - Yahoo! News

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Sunday, September 23, 2012 2:41 AM PDT
Today's Reuters Health News Headlines - Yahoo! News:
Texas governor Perry's debate gaffe due to lack of sleep: book
Sat,22 Sep 2012 03:33 PM PDT
Reuters -

Texas Governor Perry announces he is dropping his run for the Republican U.S. presidential nomination during a news conference in Charleston(Reuters) - Texas Governor Rick Perry's embarrassing inability to remember a government department he would eliminate if he became president, perhaps the biggest gaffe of the 2012 election campaign, was due to chronic lack of sleep, a new book says. "Oops," a diary of covering the Perry campaign by Texas Tribune correspondent Jay Root, says Perry suffered from insomnia for weeks before the gaffe. The blunder occurred during a Republican presidential debate in Rochester, Michigan on November 9, 2011. ...


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Sharon Stone bounces back from migraine at Milan fashion week
Sat,22 Sep 2012 02:11 PM PDT
Reuters -

U.S. actress Sharon Stone attends an auction at a charity dinner for The Foundation for AIDS Research (amfAR) during Milan's Fashion WeekMILAN (Reuters) - U.S. actress Sharon Stone bounced back from a hospital admission at Milan fashion week to chair a star-studded fundraising gala on Saturday. Stone, 55, was admitted to hospital with a migraine after attending a runway show by Italian fashion house Fendi on Friday, raising questions over whether she could chair the Saturday AIDS research fundraiser as planned. The "Basic Instinct" star suffered a health scare in 2001 when she was hospitalized for a brain aneurysm - bleeding in the brain that can cause stroke - after suffering severe headaches. ...


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Drunken driver kills seven at Moscow bus stop
Sat,22 Sep 2012 11:29 AM PDT
Reuters - MOSCOW (Reuters) - A drunken driver ploughed his car into a bus stop in Moscow on Saturday, killing seven people and injuring three others, police said. The driver, who was detained and could face nine years in jail, had his license suspended in 2010 for drunk driving, police said. Interfax news agency quoted a police official as saying he was driving at about 200 km per hour (125 mph). "As a result of a test that was conducted, it was determined that at the time of the accident the driver was in a state of alcoholic intoxication," a statement on the Moscow police website said. ... Full Story
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Opponents of legalizing marijuana focus on risk to teens
Sat,22 Sep 2012 08:32 AM PDT
Reuters - DENVER/LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Opponents of legalizing marijuana in three western states are targeting mothers in a fight over ballot measures that for the first time could make recreational pot use legal in parts of the United States. "If people tell you it's not a gateway drug - it's baloney," Colorado state Representative Kathleen Conti, a Republican, told two dozen parents and local residents at a recent meeting in the Denver suburb of Greenwood Village. ... Full Story
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Doping is now a public health issue, conference told
Sat,22 Sep 2012 07:23 AM PDT
Reuters -

Some doping pills are pictured in the headquarters of Austria's special anti doping police task force in ViennaSTOCKHOLM (Reuters) - The use of performance-enhancing drugs is now a public health matter rather than simply a sporting problem, delegates said at a top anti-doping conference. "If we believe that around three percent of high school boys in the U.S. are taking a steroid or growth hormone, then that's a public health issue," said Dr. Timothy Armstrong of the World Health Organisation (WHO). "Substance abuse in any shape or form has a physical and mental health aspect to it. The WHO, being the lead UN (United Nations) agency on health matters, takes this issue quite seriously. ...


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UPDATE 1-Doping is now a public health issue, conference told
Sat,22 Sep 2012 07:22 AM PDT
Reuters - (Adds details) STOCKHOLM, Sept 22 (Reuters) - The use of performance-enhancing drugs is now a public health matter rather than simply a sporting problem, delegates said at a top anti-doping conference. "If we believe that around three percent of high school boys in the U.S. are taking a steroid or growth hormone, then that's a public health issue," said Dr. Timothy Armstrong of the World Health Organisation (WHO). "Substance abuse in any shape or form has a physical and mental health aspect to it. ... Full Story
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GE plans medical technology acquisitions in Germany
Sat,22 Sep 2012 03:55 AM PDT
Reuters - FRANKFURT (Reuters) - General Electric plans to make acquisitions in Germany to raise its market share in CAT scan and MRI technology, the company's new Germany chief told a magazine. "Especially in the high-end segment we want to double, in some areas even triple, our market share," Volker Wetekam told Wirtschafts Woche weekly, according to an excerpt of an article to be published on Monday. He said the company plans to spend a "considerable" sum on acquisitions, without elaborating. "We are looking for companies that move us forward in terms of technology, not just in Germany but globally. ... Full Story
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Mice experiment may point to new ways to protect female fertility
Fri,21 Sep 2012 06:40 PM PDT
Reuters - HONG KONG (Reuters) - Egg cells can repair themselves from damage caused by radiation far better than doctors ever thought, a finding researchers say gives fresh hope in protecting women undergoing cancer therapy from infertility. Although the experiments have only been in mice, researchers believe they have relevance for female cancer patients and women who suffer premature menopause, a condition that puts them at risk of early infertility, osteoporosis and heart disease. ... Full Story
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Avian malaria spreads north into interior Alaska: study
Fri,21 Sep 2012 05:19 PM PDT
Reuters - ANCHORAGE, Alaska (Reuters) - Malaria is infecting birds as far north as Alaska's interior, and a rapidly warming climate may be the reason the mosquito-borne disease appears to be advancing northward, a new study shows. It is the first time scientists have detected the transmission of avian malaria in local birds at such far-north latitudes anywhere in North America, said the study, published on Wednesday in the scientific journal PLOS One. ... Full Story
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Illinois cannot make pharmacists give 'morning after' pill: court
Fri,21 Sep 2012 04:16 PM PDT
Reuters - CHICAGO (Reuters) - An Illinois appellate court Friday affirmed a lower court finding that the state cannot force pharmacies and pharmacists to sell emergency contraceptives - also known as "morning after pills" - if they have religious objections. In 2005, former Illinois Gov. Rod Blagojevich mandated that all pharmacists and pharmacies sell "Plan B," the brand name for a drug designed to prevent pregnancy following unprotected sex or a known or suspected contraceptive failure if taken within 72 hours. ... Full Story
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Romney, Ryan said to be in excellent health
Fri,21 Sep 2012 01:48 PM PDT
Reuters -

Republican presidential candidate Romney and vice-presidential candidate U.S. Congressman Ryan wave goodbye at the airportLAS VEGAS (Reuters) - Republican U.S. presidential candidate Mitt Romney is physically fit with no serious ongoing conditions and appears younger than his age, according to a letter from Romney's doctor released by the campaign on Friday. "He is a vigorous man who takes excellent care of his personal physical health," said Randall Gaz, an endocrinologist at Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston. ...


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U.S. drug company recalls two lots of hydrocodone pain drug
Fri,21 Sep 2012 01:47 PM PDT
Reuters - (Reuters) - Generic drugmaker Watson Pharmaceuticals Inc said it has recalled two lots of its hydrocodone and acetaminophen combination pain drug due to the possibility that the pills may contain higher than intended doses of the medicines. The voluntary, nationwide recall announced on Friday was prompted by a patient complaint that tablets were thicker and darker than usual. The affected pills were supposed to contain 10 milligrams of hydrocodone, a narcotic painkiller, and 500 mg of acetaminophen, the active ingredient in common pain products such as Tylenol. ... Full Story
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Can it! Soda studies cite stronger link to obesity
Fri,21 Sep 2012 01:07 PM PDT
Reuters -

File photograph of Coca-Cola bottle is seen with other beverages in New YorkNEW YORK (Reuters) - As Americans debate what is most to blame for the nation's obesity epidemic, researchers say they have the strongest evidence yet that sugary drinks play a leading role and that eliminating them would, more than any other single step, make a huge difference. Three studies published Friday in the New England Journal of Medicine represent the most rigorous effort yet to see if there is a link between sugar-sweetened beverages and expanding U.S. waistlines. "I know of no other category of food whose elimination can produce weight loss in such a short period of time," said Dr. ...


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Lawmakers seek limits on arsenic in rice
Fri,21 Sep 2012 01:03 PM PDT
Reuters -

A boy eats a bowl of rice at a soup kitchen for people on low incomes in BerlinWASHINGTON (Reuters) - Three lawmakers are introducing a bill on Friday to limit the amount of arsenic allowed in rice and rice-based products, a legislator said. The move comes after Consumer Reports urged limits for arsenic in rice. Tests of more than 60 products, from Kellogg's Rice Krispies to Gerber infant cereal, showed most had some inorganic arsenic, a known carcinogen in humans. The proposed RICE Act - Reducing food-based Inorganic and organic Compounds Exposure Act - requires the Food and Drug Administration to set a maximum level of arsenic in rice and food containing rice. ...


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Regeneron eye drug Eylea wins U.S. approval for new use
Fri,21 Sep 2012 12:57 PM PDT
Reuters - (Reuters) - Regeneron Pharmaceuticals Inc said U.S. health regulators approved the company's eye drug Eylea for a new use, potentially boosting the already soaring sales of the drug that treats a sight-robbing condition. With the approval, Eylea can now be used to treat the thickening of the macula of the eye that sometimes follows central retinal vein occlusion - a blockage of the veins that carry blood away from the eye. The macula is an area of the retina that is responsible for central vision and its thickening or swelling can lead to vision impairment. ... Full Story
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