►February 10, 2004 -
Nigerian Politics Threaten Polio Campaign - AP via Yahoo!
►February 10, 2004 -
Heart in the right place - The Hampton Union via
www.seacoastonline.com
►February 10, 2004 -
Granville soldier deployed without vaccine - AP via The Advocate - "The
Army dropped one charge against an Ohio National Guard member convicted once and
charged again with disobeying a lawful order after he refused to take the
anthrax vaccine, then deployed the soldier to Iraq without the shots."
►February 10, 2004 -
Soldier Who Refused
Anthrax Vaccine Returning to Iraq - Ohio News Network
►February 10, 2004 -
Nickelodeon's 'Let's
Just Play' Campaign Comes to Miami Saturday, Feb. 21 - Event Presented by
the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Centers for Disease Control's
National Multicultural Campaign, VERB(TM). It's what you do, to Highlight
Importance of Physical Activity - PRNewswire via Yahoo!
►February 9, 2004 -
Africa Needs to 'Take Ownership' of its Vaccine Programmes - The East
African
►February 10, 2004 -
Oconee
County student infected with bacterial meningitis - AP via Athens
Banner-Herald
►February 11, 2004 -
Anthrax alert lost in rush to war - The West Australian - "THE
Australian navy deliberately rushed sailors to war in the Gulf without first
warning them they would need anthrax shots and without recording the details of
vaccines they were given, a secret defence investigation has found."
►February 10, 2004 -
Small tuna found to hold less mercury - A study finds wide variation between
West Coast albacore and larger fish in big brands (requires registration) - The
Oregonian
►February 10, 2004 -
WHO raps Asia over handling of bird flu crisis as China reports new cases -
AFP via www.channelnewsasia.com
►February 11, 2004 -
NZ acts as
lethal bird flu spreads - The United States has formally confirmed its own
outbreak of a deadly bird flu, as doctors warn New Zealand to stockpile
anti-viral drugs. - www.stuff.co.nz
►February 10, 2004 -
EU health
ministers to meet over bird flu epidemic - EU Business
►February 10, 2004 -
EU warns Asian
countries against bird flu cover-up - EU Business
►February 10, 2004 -
US bird flu under
microscope - Scientists suspect the strain is innocuous. - Nature
►February 10, 2004 -
Checks on fake bird flu vaccines strengthened - Xinhuanet via China View
►February 10, 2004 -
More
bird flu outbreaks confirmed in China - Xinhuanet via China View
►February 10, 2004 -
Still Not Clear Whether Humans Pass Bird Flu-WHO - Reuters
►February 10, 2004 -
EU to eye
measures if bird flu spreads to Europe - Reuters AlertNet
►February 10, 2004 -
Asia too worried
about bird flu economic impact - WHO - Reuters AlertNet
►February 10, 2004 -
No
link found between autism, vaccine - UPI via The Washington Times
►February 10, 2004 -
Thousands
Of Babies Need To Retake Hepatitis B Shot - Vaccine May Be Ineffective
Because It Was Frozen, Doctors Say -
www.thedenverchannel.com
►February 10, 2004 -
Storage
disables hep B vaccine - 4,300 kids may need shots again - Denver Post
►February 10, 2004 -
Faulty hepatitis B shots may mean revaccination for tots - Rocky Mountain
News
►February 10, 2004 -
Babies and hepatitis B - Rocky Mountain News
►February 10, 2004 -
Breakthrough in Efforts to Create a Hepatitis C Vaccine -
www.woai.com
►February 10, 2004 -
Defense Department has "no interest" in government-owned vaccine facility -
Arkansas New Bureau
►February 10, 2004 -
Despite drop in flu, vaccinations still encouraged - The Robesonian - "Even
though the worst of the national flu epidemic seems to have passed, the Robeson
County Health Department is urging at-risk individuals to take advantage of the
limited number of flu vaccines still available...Bill Smith, health director,
said flu season typically runs through March, and data from the past two winters
show that flu activity has peaked during February and March."
Comment: And in
spite of the fact that they apparently do not work, even according to the
CDC.
►February 10, 2004 -
House passes state immunization registry - AP via
http://kobtv.com
►February 10, 2004 -
Allergy surge to be
investigated - Scientists are to look at whether diet affects people's risk
of developing an allergy. - BBC
►February 9, 2004 -
Fellowship combines tech and social entrepreneurship - The Stanford Daily
►February 10, 2004 -
Study: Dogs Build Infants' Immunity - Newsday
►February 10, 2004 -
Inoculation against chicken pox advised - CP via The London Free Press
►February 9, 2004 -
Soldiers, rebel
forces not a hindrance to immunization drive - Dayrit - Minda News
►February 10, 2004 -
Vaccination rate
low - Many kids in state not getting final shot -
www.heraldnet.com
►February 10, 2004 -
Cold and
flu season keeps supplements in demand - The Salt Lake Tribune
►February 10, 2004 -
Mercury is
removed from schools in Charlotte - District gets rid of thermometers after
recent spill - Lansing State Journal
►February 10, 2004 -
Bird flu must be
curb in February at any cost: PM - Voice of Vietnam News
►February 10, 2004 -
Bird Flu may
spread in Asia: WHO - AP via Mid Day
►February 10, 2004 -
Vaccine allocated to curb spread of bird flu in Hubei - Xinhuanet via China
View
►February 10, 2004 -
Foot-and-mouth may worsen bird flu in Vietnam: expert - Xinhuanet via China
View
►February 9, 2004 -
U.S. bird flu
believed contained - Import bans still may hurt - AP via The Atlanta
Journal-Constitution
►February 10, 2004 -
Make sure kids receive free shots - Battle Creek Enquirer
►February 9, 2004 -
U.S. slams ban on its chickens - A U.S. official has slammed a decision by
several Asian nations to ban American poultry after chickens on a farm in the
eastern state of Delaware were diagnosed with bird flu. - CNN
►February 8, 2004 -
Health Canada to release Pandemic flu plan - CP via
www.canoe.ca
►February 7, 2004 -
Health Workers Take Aim at AIDS in South - AP via The Herald-Sun
►February 8, 2004 -
Medicine Hunter Tracks Promising Plants - AP via The Herald-Sun
►February 8, 2004 -
AIDS Medicine Price Hike Being Probed - AP via The Herald-Sun
►February 9, 2004 -
Hospitals try to slow progress of infections report card plan - Pittsburgh
Post-Gazette
►February 9 2004 -
WHO says China may have human cases of bird flu - The Financial Times
►February 9, 2004 -
Ottawa unveils flu plan - Fear of worldwide influenza outbreak sparks
concerns - Calgary Sun via www.canoe.ca
►February 5, 2004 -
Bird flu sweeps through Asia - Fear of a human pandemic grows. - Nature
►February 9, 2004 -
Avian influenza A(H5N1) - update 20 - Situation (human) in Viet Nam - WHO
►February 10, 2004 -
WHO wants more tests to ensure bird flu cannot be passed among humans -
Channel News Asia
►February 9, 2004 -
Bird flu may be long-term issue - CP via
www.canoe.ca
►February 9, 2004 -
Breast cancer vaccine study - Study evaluates immune response to telomerase
tumor antigen as possible vaccine - University of Pennsylvania Medical Center
via
www.eurekalert.org
►February 9, 2004 -
Making of mouse marks move toward 'mitochondrial medicine' - University of
Rochester Medical Center via
www.eurekalert.org
►February 9, 2004 -
Study examines inappropriate medication prescribing for elderly patients -
JAMA and Archives Journals Website via
www.eurekalert.org - "Medications considered
'inappropriate' were prescribed at approximately eight percent of outpatient
visits by elderly patients, with pain relievers and central nervous system drugs
accounting for a large share, according to an article in the February 9 issue of
The Archives of Internal Medicine, one of the JAMA/Archives journals...According
to the article, inappropriate medication use in patients 65 or older has been
linked to many adverse drug reactions, poor physical functioning, and excess
health care utilization."
►February 9, 2004 -
Clozapine effective for controlling dyskinesias in people with severe
Parkinson's - American Academy of Neurology via
www.eurekalert.org
►February 9, 2004 -
Colorado Last in Child Immunization Rate - AP via The Herald-Sun
Comment: Not
everyone agrees with this assessment. For more on this,
read a letter from
NVIC rep, Cindy Loveland, to the governor of
Colorado.
►February 9, 2004 -
Stopping Newborn AIDS May Harm Mothers - AP via The Herald-Sun
►February 10, 2004 -
Doctors Urged to Discuss Patient Fitness - AP via The Herald-Sun
►February 10, 2004 -
Seniors Given Dangerous Drugs, CDC Warns - AP via The Herald-Sun
►February 10, 2004 -
Depression Linked to Heart Disease Death - AP via The Herald-Sun
►February 10, 2004 -
Accutane makes severe acne vanish, but its sometimes severe side effects give
patients and doctors pause - Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
►February 10, 2004 -
Cold got you miserable? Those symptoms might be healing you - Pittsburgh
Post-Gazette - "Let that runny nose run. Cough and sneeze away. A little fever?
Let it rise. Just say 'no' to decongestants, antihistamines, cough drops, Advil,
aspirin, and everything else that might bring blessed relief to those miserable
symptoms...The best medicine for cold and flu symptoms may be no medicine...A
relatively new field called evolutionary or Darwinian medicine argues that
treating symptoms of some diseases may actually make the illness worse."
Comment: What does
this say about how health promoting "symptomless" immune reactions via vaccines
are?
►February 10, 2004 -
FDA on Drug Ads: Less Is More - (requires registration) - Washington Post
►February 10, 2004 -
Making Us (Nearly) Sick - A Majority of Americans Are Now Considered to Have
at Least One 'Pre-Disease' or 'Borderline' Condition. Is This Any Way to Treat
Us? - (requires registration) - Washington Post
Comment: How does this
compare to the pre-vaccine era?
►February 8, 2004 - Bioterrorism
work fascinates students - Oakland Tribune via
http://i-medreview.subportal.com
►February 8, 2004 - Some
clinics run out of flu vaccine as demand increases - Channel NewsAsia via
Yahoo!
►Jan/Feb
2004 - 22q13
Deletion Syndrome: An Update and Review for the Primary Pediatrician -
Clinical Pediatrics via http://mentalhelp.net
►February 9, 2004 - Cambridge
Antibody Technology and Genzyme Announce Preliminary Results From Phase I/II
Trial Of Cat-192 For Scleroderma - PRNewswire-FirstCall via
http://interestalert.com
►February 8, 2004 - WHO
expert warns Oman of changing patterns of non-communicable diseases - Gulf
News via www.zawya.com
January 15, 2004 - Transforming
Growth Factor-[beta]^sub 1^ Promoter Polymorphism C- 509T Is Associated with
Asthma - American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine via
www.pharmacytimes.com
►February 9, 2004 - Drug
Company Attacks Developing Nations' Diseases - AP via The Tampa Tribune - "Victoria
Hale is chief executive of the ultimate oxymoron: a nonprofit drug
company...From her office in San Francisco, she hopes to wipe out diseases that
plague developing nations but are ignored by Western drug companies for lack of
profit possibilities...Hale's prescription is to gain marketing rights to
promising drug candidates that are owned by drug companies but sit undeveloped
in labs."
►February 9, 2004 - UAE
monitoring avian flu in US - Gulf News via
www.zawya.com
►February 8, 2004 - Analysis:
Nationwide livestock ID system years away - AP via The Sacramento Bee
►February 8, 2004 - Genetic
disorders analysed - Gulf Daily News
►February 8, 2004 - Task
Force Formed To Prevent Zoonotic Diseases -
www.brudirect.com
►February 8, 2004 - Science
a passion for SARS-fighter - With last year's SARS
outbreak and the battle against bird flu making headlines, Su Ih-jen,
director-general of the Center for Disease Control (CDC), has been widely quoted
as an expert on disease prevention. Su was appointed head of the center at the
height of the SARS outbreak in May to help eradicate the disease. He spoke to
`Taipei Times' reporter Joy Su about the battle against infectious diseases
- Taipei Times
►February 9, 2004 - Coping
With Autism - Ivanhoe Newswire - "The most recent statistics show
autism affects between one and three of every 500 people. Its a lifelong
disorder that makes social interaction and every day communication tough. It
also causes aggression in many people. Now different therapies can help ease
that autistic aggression."
►February 8, 2004 - Special-needs
and regular education students teach one another in P.E. - The San Angelo
Standard-Times
►February 5, 2004 - Benign
afebrile cluster convulsions with gastroenteritis: an observational cohort study
- journal article (BMC Immunology)
►February 6, 2004 - Date
of origin of the SARS coronavirus strains - journal article (BMC
Infectious Diseases)
►February 5, 2004 - Common
variable immunodeficiency syndrome with right aortic arch; a case report -
journal article (BMC Infectious Diseases)
►February 6, 2004 - Primary
care physicians' approach to diagnosis and treatment of hepatitis B and
hepatitis C patients - journal article (BMC
Gastroenterology)
►February 5, 2004 - Immune
Response to Mycoplasma pneumoniae P1 and P116 in patients with atypical
pneumonia analyzed by ELISA - journal article (BMC
Microbiology)
►February 5, 2004 - Toxoplasma
seropositivity and depression: a case report - journal article (BMC
Psychiatry)
►February 4, 2004 - Complex
genetic predisposition in adult and juvenile rheumatoid arthritis - journal
article (BMC Genetics)
►February 4, 2004 - Clinical
and Molecular Allergy: a new open access journal that addresses rapidly evolving
information in the field of allergy and immunology - journal article (Clinical
and Molecular Allergy)
►February 3, 2004 - Reference
birthweight range for multiple birth neonates in Japan - journal article (BMC
Pregnancy and Childbirth)
►February 3, 2004 - Why
Combine Diet and Physical Activity in the Same International Research Society?
- journal article (International Journal of
Behavioral Nutrition and Physical Activity)
►February 2, 2004 - The
Effects of Chemotherapeutics on Cellular Metabolism and Consequent Immune
Recognition - journal article (Journal of
Immune Based Therapies and Vaccines)
►February 2, 2004 - A
Case of Familial Isolated Hemihyperplasia - journal article (BMC
Medical Genetics)
►February 2, 2004 - Welcome
to the International Journal of Behavioral Nutrition and Physical Activity (IJBNPA)!
- journal article (International Journal of
Behavioral Nutrition and Physical Activity)
January 31, 2004 - Materializing
research promises: opportunities, priorities and conflicts in translational
medicine - journal article (Journal of
Translational Medicine)
►December 10, 2003 - Cross-sectional
survey of users of Internet depression communities - journal article (BMC
Psychiatry)
►December 11, 2003 - The
role of the carotenoids, lutein and zeaxanthin, in protecting against
age-related macular degeneration: A review based on controversial evidence -
journal article (Nutrition Journal)
►December 18, 2003 - Gene
expression profiling of mammary gland development reveals putative roles for
death receptors and immune mediators in post-lactational regression -
journal article (Breast Cancer Research)
►February 2, 2004 - An
unappreciated role for RNA surveillance - journal article (Genome
Biology)
►January 29, 2004 - Hippocampal
volume in early onset depression - journal article (BMC
Medicine)
►February 6, 2004 - House
Dust Mite Project Aims To Reduce Asthma - Engineering and Physical Science
Research Council via www.intelihealth.com
►February 5, 2004 - School
Sports Don't Keep Kids Away From Tobacco - Center for the Advancement of
Health via www.intelihealth.com
►February 4, 2004 - The
American Heart Association's Guidelines At-A-Glance For Preventing Heart Disease
And Stroke In Women - American Heart Association via
www.intelihealth.com
►February 9, 2004 - Study:
Optimism no help against cancer - A positive attitude does not improve the
chances of surviving cancer and doctors who encourage patients to keep up hope
may be burdening them, according to the results of research released Monday. -
AP via CNN
►February 9, 2004 - Study
firms up depression, heart risk link in women - Depression in older women is
strongly linked with a higher risk of dying from heart disease, according to
research on more than 90,000 women. - AP via CNN
►February 9, 2004 - Another
gene linked to heart attack risk - A team of researchers said it has found a
simple genetic mutation that doubles the risk of heart attack and stroke. -
Reuters via CNN
►February 10, 2004 - US
bird flu under microscope - Scientists suspect the
strain is innocuous. - journal article (Nature)
►February 9, 2004 - Where's
the Flu Bug? - www.kndu.com - "This is
usually the time of the year when the flu bug is hitting the hardest...But after
an early start, and a run on flu shots, we havent seen the big outbreak that
was feared. It came early, and it looks like it might have left just as
quickly."
►February 9, 2004 - As
bird flu spreads, global health weaknesses are exposed - NY Times News
Service via www.abs-cbnnews.com
►February 10, 2004 - More
Singaporeans taking flu inoculations - Channel NewsAsia via Yahoo!
►February 10, 2004 - Heading
north? Get a flu jab - The Straits Times
►February 9, 2004 - 'Respiratory
etiquette' cuts spread of disease - Evansville Courier & Press via Healthy
News
►February 9, 2004 - Vaccine
supplies dwindle for many diseases - The Washington Times - "The recent
shortage of flu shots received much attention, but vaccine stocks have also
dwindled in the past few years for such diseases as meningitis, mumps, measles
and diphtheria...The problems with supply are blamed on a number of interrelated
factors the low prices the federal government pays for childhood vaccines, the
dwindling number of vaccine producers, and others."
►February 10, 2004 - Hemispherx
Biopharma Reports Publication Suggesting Efficacy of Ampligen in Treating
Myocarditis Virus - Business Wire via
www.pharmacytimes.com
►February 10, 2004 - Flu
outbreak could sicken poultry exports - AP via Tallahassee Democrat
►February 10, 2004 - 2d
group of conventioneers was sickened - The Philadelphia Inquirer
►February 10, 2004 - Baylor
group hosting AIDS Awareness Week - The Baylor Lariat
►February 9, 2004 - Scientists
test ISU-grown shrimp for diseases - Iowa State Daily
►February 9, 2004 - Study:
Early fevers lower allergy risk later - Babies who develop several fevers in
their first year are less likely to develop allergies later in life, researchers
said on Monday. - Reuters via CNN
Comment: In the same way, is
experiencing childhood infectious disease protective in one's later years?
►February 9, 2004 - Helping
the less fortunate - Company advances drugs to cure
little-known diseases, not to make a profit - AP via The Buffalo News
►February 9, 2004 - TB
hunt looks at N.M. border - The Albuquerque Tribune
►February 10, 2004 - Agencies
struggle with state on behalf of developmentally disabled - Sun Sentinel
►February 10, 2004 - Caution
call on 'maverick' claims - Scientists should think twice before
courting publicity for their "minority views", says an ethics expert. - BBC -
"Professor Udo Schuklenk, writing in the Journal of Medical Ethics, warns
patients may be led to refuse treatment most experts think safe...For example,
some parents rejected the MMR jab after suggestions it causes autism - even
though most scientists believe the vaccine is safe...But other experts said
science only develops if assumptions are challenged...He (Schuklenk) said there
were cases where a minority view had turned out to be correct, but that this was
rare...In order to prevent confusion, Professor Schuklenk says ethical
guidelines should be drawn up governing how scientists present their work to the
public."
►February 10, 2004 -
Researchers dispute risk of autism from vaccines - Cox News Service via The
Contra Costa Times
►February 10, 2004 -
Federal Panel Hears Testimony on Vaccinations and Autism (requires
registration or subscription) - The New York Times - "Medical experts squared
off Monday before a federal panel trying to determine whether a mercury-based
preservative once common in routine childhood vaccines was behind the rising
rates of autism in the United States...Most of the epidemiologists who testified
said they doubted that the preservative, thimerosal, was responsible. But a few
toxicologists said they had become more and more convinced of a potential
link...Representative Dave Weldon, Republican of Florida, accused the Centers
for Disease Control of ignoring potential links and said it was blocking access
by outside researchers to a vaccine database it maintained with a group of
managed-care organizations."