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| South Korea expands poultry cull on bird flu fears Sunday, Jan 26, 2014 06:37 PM PST By Jane Chung SEOUL (Reuters) - South Korea is expanding a poultry cull in a bid to contain the spread of bird flu that has been found on an increasing number of farms around the country and in migratory birds. The country's agriculture ministry said the H5N8 strain of bird flu had been detected on six poultry farms and that there had been 13 cases in migratory birds since the first outbreak earlier this month. No human infection has been reported, while the ministry is looking into four additional reports from poultry farms and more than 50 other suspected cases in migratory birds, it said in a statement on Monday. Asia's fourth-largest economy has had four bird flu outbreaks in the past 10 years, without any cases of human infection reported. Full Story | Top |
| Texas hospital ends life support for brain-dead pregnant woman Sunday, Jan 26, 2014 05:22 PM PST By Jana J. Pruet FORT WORTH, Texas (Reuters) - A Texas hospital removed a pregnant brain-dead woman from life support on Sunday in line with a court order obtained by her husband who argued the fetus she was carrying was withering inside her lifeless body, the family's lawyers said. Marlise Munoz, who was about 22 weeks pregnant, had been on life support in the hospital in Fort Worth since November 26 after suffering what her husband believes was a pulmonary embolism. Erick Munoz had sought to remove his wife from life support, with the support of her parents, but the hospital had refused, citing a Texas law that says life-sustaining treatment cannot be withdrawn or withheld from a pregnant woman despite a "do not resuscitate" order or a request from the family. A judge on Friday agreed with Erick Munoz in finding that Marlise Munoz was already legally dead and ordering the John Peter Smith Hospital to remove her ventilator, setting a Monday deadline. Full Story | Top |
| More than 300 fall ill on Royal Caribbean cruise ship Sunday, Jan 26, 2014 04:16 PM PST (Reuters) - More than 300 passengers and crew members fell ill aboard a Royal Caribbean cruise ship, many with vomiting and diarrhea, the Centers for Disease Control said on Sunday. The CDC said in a statement that 281 passengers and 22 crew members aboard the Explorer of the Seas reported becoming sick during a voyage. The ship was carrying 3,050 passengers and a crew of 1,165. The CDC said the cause of the sickness was unknown but that an environmental safety officer and an epidemiologist would board the ship in St. Thomas in the U.S. Virgin Islands to determine the cause of the outbreak and the proper response. Full Story | Top |
| Britain unveils ban on e-cigarettes for under-18s Sunday, Jan 26, 2014 11:01 AM PST | Top |
| Analysis: Replay of energetic deal-making seen for drugmakers in 2014 Sunday, Jan 26, 2014 09:21 AM PST The torrid pace of deals in the pharmaceutical and biotechnology sectors through 2013 is not expected to let up this year, thanks to new technologies to address unmet medical needs. Between 2011 and 2016, patents in developed markets will expire on brand-name drugs that would otherwise have generated sales of $127 billion, according to data firm IMS Health. To replace some of the lost revenue, larger drugmakers are looking to bring in new products, often in areas of significant scientific advancement such as treatments for cancer, rare diseases and drugs designed to turn off the activity of rogue genes. There were 10 major M&A deals involving publicly traded biotech companies last year, led by Amgen Inc's $10 billion buyout of Onyx Pharmaceuticals. Full Story | Top |
| Analysis: Emerging markets rout a reality check for Davos elite Sunday, Jan 26, 2014 04:10 AM PST | Top |
| Italy's Berlusconi opts for wrinkles in new image switch Sunday, Jan 26, 2014 03:43 AM PST | Top |
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