Posted
March 12, 2004:
►March
2004 -
Is it influenza or anthrax? A decision analytic approach to the treatment of
patients with influenza-like illnesses.
- journal article (Annals of Emergency Medicine)
►March 12, 2004 - The
Global Disease-Busters - Financial Times via
www.immunizationinfo.org
(abstract)
►March 12, 2004 - U.S.
to Buy Anthrax Vaccine - Washington Post via
www.immunizationinfo.org
(abstract)
►March 11, 2004 - First
Round of Polio Vaccination Campaign Begins in Northern Afghan Province
- BBC News via
www.immunizationinfo.org (abstract)
►March 11, 2004 - Flu
Shots Program Has A$6m Wastage - Sydney Morning Herald via
www.immunizationinfo.org
(abstract)
►March 11, 2004 - Flu
Vaccines for All? - Christian Science Monitor via
www.immunizationinfo.org
(abstract)
►March 11, 2004 - Meningococcal
Vaccine Trial Reports Success - Wellington Dominion via
www.immunizationinfo.org
(abstract)
►March 11, 2004 - New
U.S Guidelines Stress Flu Shots for Babies - Reuters via
www.immunizationinfo.org
(abstract)
►March 11, 2004 - Progress
Reported on Safer Smallpox Vaccine - Atlanta Journal-Constitution via
www.immunizationinfo.org
(abstract)
►March 11, 2004 - Report:
Conn. No. 1 in U.S. in Childhood Vaccinations - AP via
www.immunizationinfo.org
(abstract)
►March 10, 2004 - India,
Pakistan to Cooperate in Polio Eradication - BBC News via
www.immunizationinfo.org
(abstract)
►March 10, 2004 - Rwanda
to Join African Trials for AIDS Vaccine - Reuters via
www.immunizationinfo.org
(abstract)
►March 1, 2004 - Europe
Approves Infectious Disease Center - Nature Medicine via
www.immunizationinfo.org
(abstract)
►March 12, 2004 - Connecticut
No. 1 in child vaccinations - AP via
www.wfsb.com
►March 11, 2004 - Flu
bug reduces schools' funding - State holds back cash because of absences -
Record Searchlight via www.redding.com
►March 4, 2004 - To
your child's health - Waltham Forest Guardian, UK
►March 11, 2004 - Insect
bite killed holidaymaker - Liverpool Daily Post, UK via
http://icliverpool.icnetwork.co.uk
►March 11, 2004 - Healing
with Light Moves Beyond Fiction -
http://healthlink.mcw.edu
►March 12, 2004 - Interview/
Satoshi Ishikawa: Pesticides more dangerous than believed -
www.asahi.com - "Recent studies reveal
organophosphates in household pesticides and flame retardants used in building
materials and home electrical appliances can cause complex neurological and
mental disorders that were not recognized before."
►March 11, 2004 - Study
identifies how new neurons grow in the adult brain - University of
California Irvine via UC News Wire
►March 11, 2004 - Caring
and curing - The Guardian, UK - "The health secretary, John
Reid, tackles the most serious challenge facing the NHS at a Guardian conference
today in Birmingham. Do not expect his speech to provoke a media frenzy. The
issue does not threaten splits within the main political parties or between
them. Hence the absence of political debate. Yet how the NHS responds to chronic
disease remains the most important issue on the health agenda. Here is one way
of putting it in perspective: consider the acres of media space devoted to
elective surgery's waiting lists; yet of the 1 million patients waiting for
treatment, 70% will be seen within three months. Now consider the 17 million
patients suffering from chronic, incurable and debilitating diseases (arthritis,
asthma, diabetes, depression, multiple sclerosis, Parkinson's) who will not be
cured by a one-off operation but who, with good integrated care over many years,
can lead productive and fulfilling lives. The challenge is much more than 17
times as large."
►March 2004 - Consent
To Clinical Decisions When Capacity Is Absent. Part 1: Making decisions -
Nursing Management Harrow-on-the-Hill via
http://mentalhelp.net
►March 12, 2004 - Facing
the global threat of the influenza virus - Borneo Bulletin via
www.brunei-online.com - "Recognising
the current serious global threat of the influenza virus, the Institute of
Medicine at the University of Brunei Darussalam (UBD) organised a medical
lecture on 'Influenza Infections - Lingering Global Threats'."
►March 11, 2004 - Overnight
Killer - Parents Lose Daughter to Fast-Working Disease; Could Vaccine Have
Helped? - www.abcnews.go.com - "Sue
Koenig says she'll never forget the cold December afternoon when her tortured
young daughter turned to her with a simple question...'Why
do I feel so sick, Mom?' her daughter asked, Koenig recalled on ABCNEWS'
Good Morning America."
►March 11, 2004 - Parents
wary of holding off on antibiotics - Chicago Tribune via Knight Ridder
Newspapers via www.kentucky.com
►March 11, 2004 - Terrorism
is a Medical Matter -
www.medicinenet.com
►March 11, 2004 - Isis
Pharmaceuticals Forms Strategic Alliance With Alnylam Pharmaceuticals in RNAi
Therapeutics - Isis and Alnylam Bring Together Leading RNAi Patent Estates
and Expertise to Develop RNAi Therapeutics - PRNewswire-FirstCall via
http://interestalert.com
►March 11, 2004 - Visa
delays put off start of Swiss-born Scripps director - South Florida
Sun-Sentinel
►March 11, 2004 - Chimerix
Awarded NIH Grant to Fund Drug Development for Multi-Drug Resistant HIV
Infection - PRNewswire via
http://interestalert.com
►March 12, 2004 - Lottery
cash for childcare - Lottery grants worth more than £100,000 have been
awarded to four childcare projects in Belfast and County Tyrone. - BBC News
►March 11, 2004 - Movie
Experiment Hints That Our Brains Work Alike - National Geographic News
►March 11, 2004 - Facing
a new challenge - State goals put greater burden on special education -
Barrington Courier-Review
►March 11, 2004 - Embracing
Autism: Story is laborious testament to a mother's love, persistence - The
Boston Globe via Sarasota Herald-Tribune - book review
- The Boy Who Loved Windows
►March 11, 2004 -
How can
vaccines cause damage? - letter in response to
Pressure
mounts for inquiry into MMR furore
(BMJ)
►March 11, 2004 - Scots
prefer health care near home to centres of excellence - The Herald, UK
►March 11, 2004 -
Pfizer probed for marketing of 2 drugs - AP via Newsday
►March 11, 2004 -
Let's look at those tests again - Vivienne Parry finds that even classic
medical research can be based on a one size fits all attitude - The Guardian, UK
- "When scientists from Bristol University questioned the accuracy of
risk estimates based on the Framingham heart study, there was a collective
intake of breath. As accusations go, it was up there with criticising David
Attenborough or saying puppies aren't adorable. For Framingham was the most
gilded of gold standard medical data sets. But it now looks as though it has
been relegated to that league of greats that once ruled the world but which are
now recognised as also being able to bamboozle, mislead and generally
misinform."
►March 11, 2004 -
A Shameful Episode - letters - Daily Telegraph, UK - "In the current
furore over Dr Andrew Wakefield, the parents whose autistic children were
treated at the Royal Free Hospital and became subjects of his research have
hardly been heard...This shameful episode in modern medical
science looks more like a Soviet show trial than scientific scholarship, as
personal innuendo gives way to public accusations, retractions and
vilification...There is little thought for our children's future, their denial
of treatment, and the effect of this undeserved treatment on Dr Wakefield and
his family."
►March 11, 2004 - Japan
investigates crows as cause of bird flu - AFP via International Herald
Tribune
►March 11, 2004 - Asian
countries warned not to drop guard against bird flu -
www.4ni.co.uk
►March 11, 2004 -
First HIV/AIDS Clinical Simulation Training Initiative Made Available To More
Than 34 At-Risk Counties - TheraSim(R) via Business Wire
►March 11, 2004 -
Effect of Paediatric Rheumatoid Diseases on Immediate or Delayed Bone Disease
Needs Further Study - Current Rheumatology
Reports via Doctor's Guide
►March 12, 2004 -
R.P.
gets U.N. agency help to ward off bird flu -
www.abs-cbnnews.com
►March 5, 2004 -
The
Autism Pandemic and the MMR vaccine connection (pdf) - paper by Paul Watson,
Past President of the Autism Society of Collin County Texas -
http://www.geocities.com/pwatsonascc/
►December 2003 -
Savant-like skills exposed in normal people by suppressing the left fronto-temporal
lobe. - journal article (Journal of
Integrative Neuroscience)
►January 2004 -
Respiratory syncytial virus: The virus, the disease and the immune response
- journal article (Paediatric Respiratory
Reviews)
►April 2004 -
Update on attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder - journal article
(Current Opinion in Pediatrics)
►April 2004 -
Update on sudden infant death syndrome. - journal article
(Current Opinion in Pediatrics)
►April 2004 -
An update on child abuse and neglect. - journal article
(Current Opinion in Pediatrics)
►January 2004 -
Current therapy of ulcerative colitis in children - journal article
(Expert Opinion in Pharmacotherapy)
►February 2004 -
The effectiveness of secretin in the management of autism - journal article
(Expert Opinion in Pharmacotherapy)
►March 5, 2004 -
Volunteers test new anthrax vaccine - The Telegraph, UK
►January 2004 -
Use of the tuberculin skin test in children - journal article
(Paediatric Respiratory Reviews)
►January 2004 -
Children and the global tuberculosis situation - journal article
(Paediatric Respiratory Reviews)
►January 2004 -
Do rhinoviruses cause pneumonia in children? - journal article
(Paediatric Respiratory Reviews)
►January 2004 -
Pathogenesis of respiratory syncytial virus bronchiolitis related wheezing -
journal article (Paediatric Respiratory
Reviews)
►March 9, 2004 -
Doctors
Groups Issue Ear Infections Guide - AP via Yahoo!
►March 9, 2004 -
Study:
Obesity an Epidemic in U.S. - AP via Yahoo!
►March 9, 2004 -
Obesity
Gains on Smoking as Top Cause of U.S. Death - Reuters via Yahoo!
►March 9, 2004 -
Ads to
Target Alarming Obesity Trends - Reuters via Yahoo!
►March 9, 2004 -
Which Drug
Battles Pneumonia Best - HealthDay via Yahoo!
►March 9, 2004 -
Study: Abstinence pledges not reducing rates of STDs - AP via USA Today
►March 11, 2004 -
Truth, honesty taking a back seat - Whistler Question - "Of course, just
because the tobacco industry or a biotechnology company, or an environmental
organization funded a paper, does not make its conclusions invalid. But knowing
the source of that funding is crucial to the readers ability to judge certain
assumptions the researchers may have made. This kind of disclosure is essential
for any honest interpretation of the conclusions to occur...Most scientists are
honest, as are most journalists, doctors and people in general. But when a few
choose to step over the line, there seems to be no shortage of consumers willing
to accept the latest news as gospel."
Comment: It continually amazes to
me that few, if any, of the people criticizing Wakefield for an alleged conflict
of interest seem to be the least bit concerned about the "studies" clearly
conflicted by ties to vaccine manufacturers. What's that about?
►March 13, 2004 -
Mercury risk rising - opinion - People's Weekly World Newspaper
►March 11, 2004 -
FAO Warns Against Resurgence of Bird Flu - AFP, AP via Voice of America
►March 11, 2004 -
Bird Flu Reappears - www.news24.com
►March 11, 2004 -
Vaccines target bird flu virus - China Daily
►March 11, 2004 -
PAHO/WHO Ensuring Haiti Health Systems Operate - press release - Pan
American Health Organization
►March 11, 2004 -
UN-backed global partnership to eliminate polio hails new Canadian donation
- UN
►March 11, 2004 -
Vaccine program targets chicken pox - CP via The Province via
www.canada.com
►March 11, 2004 -
Woman Sues
Taco Bell Over Possible Hepatitis A Exposure - Lawsuit Accuses Restaurant Of
Not Taking Precautions - AP via
www.thewmurchannel.com
►March 11, 2004 -
Hundreds may have gotten wrong HIV results - UPI via The Washington Times
►March 11, 2004 -
Weapons of sheath destruction - The immune system may not be the culprit in
multiple sclerosis (requires subscription) - The Economist
►March 11, 2004 -
Increased Clot Risk Found With Bowel Disease - Study says those with the
intestinal disorder face three times the risk - HealthDay - "People suffering
from inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) face a greatly increased risk of
developing blood clots in their veins, new research discloses...Most experts,
however, are not surprised that the clots, called venous thromboembolisms, are
linked to the intestinal disorder. The finding, which show those with IBD have
more than triple the risk for clots, will appear in the April issue of Gut."
►March 11, 2004 -
Whooping
Cough Becomes Epidemic In Clinton County - Disease Quickly Spreads Through
Schools -
www.thechamplainchannel.com
►March 2004 -
SSRIs in
children and adolescents: Where do we stand? - journal article
(Current Psychiatry)
►February 20, 2004 -
Not So Rare:
Errors of Metabolism During the Neonatal Period (requires registration) -
journal article (Newborn & Infant Nursing
Reviews)
►March 11, 2004 -
Minister
declares avian influenza control area in southern British Columbia -
Canadian Food Inspection Agency via Canada NewsWire
►March 12, 2004 -
Facing the global threat of the influenza virus - Borneo Bulletin via
www.brunei-online.com
►March 12, 2004 - US
Plans for Anthrax Terror Attack - PA News via The Scotsman
►March 12, 2004 -
U.S. to stockpile anthrax vaccine - report - Reuters via Forbes
►March 13, 2004 -
Frequency and natural history of subdural haemorrhages in babies and relation to
obstetric factors (requires registration for abstract and subscription to
full article) - journal article (The Lancet)
►March 12, 2004 - Birth
'rarely causes head injury' - Brain haemorrhages in babies over a month old
are unlikely to be caused by problem births, researchers say. - BBC
►March 10, 2004 - Brain
Hemorrhage in Newborns Not Likely Result of Traumatic Delivery -
The Lancet via Newswise
►March 13, 2004 -
Post-traumatic stress in former Ugandan child soldiers (requires
registration) - journal article (The Lancet)
►March 12, 2004 -
Abuse claim mother's fight to keep her injured child - The Telegraph, UK
►March 12, 2004 -
Research raises doubt on 'shaken baby' evidence - The Telegraph, UK -
"Babies' brains are far more vulnerable to injury during birth than was
previously thought, according to research which raises doubts about the safety
of shaken baby syndrome convictions...Brain scans on 111 healthy newborn babies
disclosed that eight per cent were suffering from undiagnosed brain bleeding."
Comment: How many lives have been, and
continue to be, wrongly and tragically destroyed over false allegations of SBS?
For more on shaken baby syndrome, go to the
online SBS conference at
www.redflagsdaily.com.
►December 2003 -
Water-miscible, emulsified, and solid forms of retinol supplements are more
toxic than oil-based preparations (requires subscription for article but not
for abstract) - journal article (American
Journal of Clinical Nutrition)
►April 2004 -
Vitamin D supplementation during the first year of life and risk of
schizophrenia: a Finnish birth cohort study (requires subscription for
article but not for abstract) - journal article
(Schizophrenia Research)
►March 10, 2004 -
Bill for an Act Concerning Notification to Persons of Immunizations for their
Children Under Specified Circumstances - SB 04-139 - House Information &
Technology - Bill Summary 03/10/2004 -
SB04-139 Final Vote - Postpone SB 04-139 indefinitely. The motion carried
on a 10-0-1 vote. - Colorado Legislative Update
►March 11, 2004 -
Medical Services Receives Additional Test Results From China - press release
- Medical Services International Inc. via PRNewsire-FirstCall via Yahoo!
►January 12, 2004 -
Increasing
autism awareness: a role for MMR? - letter - journal article
(BMJ)
►July 20, 2002 -
Epidemiology research (requires registration) - letters re: journal article
(The Lancet)
►March 12, 2004 -
Clinton
County sees 53 cases of Whooping Cough -
www.news10now.com
►March 11, 2004 -
Changing
season brings in viral - Chandigarh Newsline via
http://cities.expressindia.com
►March 12, 2004 -
U.S. to Buy Anthrax Vaccine - Stockpile Would Permit Mass Inoculations
(requires registration) - The Washington Post
►March 12, 2004 -
Bird flu back in
Thailand; Japan probes poultry deaths - AP via China Post
►March 12, 2004 -
Hospital was told of faulty HIV tests - Ex-Md. General worker sent letter in
December; Former employee files suit; Woman says flawed gear infected her with
diseases - Baltimore Sun
►March 11, 2004 -
UNICEF Nigerian
Polio Vaccine Contaminated with Sterilizing Agents Scientist Finds -
Scientist says things discovered in vaccines are "harmful, toxic" -
LifeSiteNews.com
►March 12, 2004 -
Poverty blamed for rising child health problems - Hawkes Bay Today via
www.mytown.co.nz
►March 11, 2004 -
Report: Conn. No. 1 in U.S. in childhood vaccinations - AP via Newsday
►March 11, 2004 -
Child
Vaccinations - www.kold.com
►March 11, 2004 -
School Told Not to Worry After Teacher Dies From Meningitis - AP via
www.katv.com
►March 12, 2004 -
Measles Cases in Najran Schools - Arab News
►March 12, 2004 -
SARS without pneumonia could be common in outbreak areas -
The Lancet via
www.innovations-report.com
►March 13, 2004 -
Relative rates of non-pneumonic SARS coronavirus infection and SARS coronavirus
pneumonia (requires registration) - journal article
(The Lancet)
►March 10, 2004 -
Studies Find Bird Flu Not Transmittable by Human to Human - Twenty confirmed
deaths, health experts look to see if disease spreads to pigs - CNN, WHO via
Fullerton College Hornet
►March 10, 2004 -
Natrol and Earvin 'Magic' Johnson Combine Forces to Promote Immune Support
Products - press release - Natrol Inc. via
www.npicenter.com
►March 11, 2004 -
Canada pledges $32 million to fight polio - UPI via The Washington Times
►March 12, 2004 -
Political Hot-Dogging in the House
(requires registration or subscription) - The New York Times - "all it
legis-lite: the Republican leaders of Congress have been running one of the
least demanding workloads in decades, politicking most of the year while
scheduling only 94 days in session, 40 fewer than four years ago. Yet the House
still invested a day's debate in passing what is known as the cheeseburger bill
a supersize sop to the fast-food industry. It's a gift that Republicans love
doling out to their friends in big business, namely, immunity from being sued."
►March 12, 2004 -
Government Puts Out Call for Anthrax Vaccine
(requires registration or subscription) - The New York Times - "The Department
of Health and Human Services issued an open solicitation on Thursday for enough
anthrax vaccine for 25 million people...The solicitation follows contract awards
last September to two biotechnology companies to develop an experimental
vaccine. One of those companies, VaxGen Inc., said at the time that the
contract, which was for three years, paved the way for a significantly larger
contract to develop a national stockpile of the vaccine."
►March 11, 2004 -
FDA
Allows U.S. Doctors to Continue Use of FBI-Identified 'Terrorist Tool' in
Treatment of Children, Finds SafeMinds - SafeMinds via U.S. Newswire - "SafeMinds,
America's leading nonprofit scientific organization that investigates and
reports on the risks to infants and children exposed to mercury from medical
products, is disturbed by the lack of consistency displayed by U.S. government
agencies regarding the safety of mercury for humans...'If the FBI considers a
small amount of mercury in the hands of a terrorist to be a chemical weapon,
then the FDA (Food and Drug Administration) should realize that a medical
product containing a concentrated amount of mercury in the hands of a
pediatrician is no safer for our children,' responded Lyn Redwood, RN, MSN, NP,
to a recent FBI-issued warning that stated terrorists may use 'pen guns' filled
with mercury, among other toxins, to harm Americans."
►March 11, 2004 -
Vaccine-in-a-patch linked to diabetes and multiple sclerosis - Ingredients
called accelerants trigger immune system diseases in mice - The Medical Posting
►March 11, 2004 -
The incidence of
isle children with autism has increased at an alarming rate in recent years, and
nobody knows why - Honolulu Star Bulletin
►March 11, 2004 - Improved
care for chronic illness - Diabetes and asthma treatments in Reid's new deal
for patients - The Guardian, UK
►March 11, 2004 - A
Touch Of Arthritis - Jamaica Observer
►March 11, 2004 - Global
Fund to Fight AIDS, Malaria, TB Faces Crunch - The global AIDS fund could
soon face a cash crisis, due in part to the likes of Britain, Germany and Canada
failing to contribute their fair share to the U.N.-sponsored program, its chief
says. - Reuters via www.planetark.com
►March 11, 2004 - Psychology
skeptics say 'prove it' - New York Times via International Herald Tribune -
"They have been called assassins and parasites. They receive hate mail from the
proponents of a variety of popular psychotherapies. The president-elect of the
American Psychological Association has accused them of being overly devoted to
the scientific method. But the ire of their colleagues has not prevented a
small, loosely organized band of academic psychologists from rooting out and
publicly debunking mental health practices that they view as faddish, unproved
or potentially harmful."
►March 9, 2004 -
Medical board under scrutiny -
Legislators examine disciplinary guidelines, need for secrecy -
The Denver Post - "State
lawmakers are considering changes in the way Colorado regulates its physicians,
including giving the Board of Medical Examiners more specific guidelines for
discipline and removing some of the secrecy surrounding the board's inner
workings."
►March 9, 2004 -
Bill holds doctors and lawyers accountable for deceptive ads - The Newark
Star-Ledger - "Physicians, lawyers and other professionals
who run deceptive advertisements could be sued for consumer fraud under a bill
approved yesterday by a Senate committee...The bill would effectively undo last
month's decision by the New Jersey Supreme Court that the state's Consumer Fraud
Act does not apply to physicians and other "learned professionals." The court
said they were never covered by the law because they were not allowed to
advertise when it was enacted 40 years ago."
►March 9, 2004 -
Sudden Infant Death Syndrome Acute Illness not a Risk Factor - Medical News
Today - "The authors of a study published in
the Archives of Disease in Childhood (http://adc.bmjjournals.com) say that
advising parents to monitor their child for signs of illness as a way of
preventing SIDS is 'fruitless' and leads to unnecessary feelings of guilt if a
death does occur."
►March 9, 2004 -
New Guidelines Outline Appropriate Treatment of Ear Infections - American
Academy of Pediatrics
►March 1, 2004 -
A Timeline of the Thimerosal Controversy -
www.motherjones.com
►March 9, 2004 -
Consensus statement tackles newer antipsychotics - The Medical Post - "Due
to a constellation of adverse effects associated with second-generation
antipsychotics, physicians are now being warned to carefully screen and monitor
patients on these medications...The concerns involve an increased risk for
obesity, diabetes and dyslipidemia."
►March 11, 2004 -
Internet Malpractice Database Shuts Down - AP via The Herald-Sun - "An
Internet database that had purported to list patients who sued doctors for
malpractice has shut down...Sponsors
of www.DoctorsKnow.Us posted a farewell message this week, saying "controversy
this site has ignited was unanticipated" but that they hoped it had sparked
discussion that would result in changes to malpractice litigation."
►March 11, 2004 -
Patients May Have Gotten Wrong HIV Results - AP via The Herald-Sun - "Some
patients might have been told they were HIV-negative when in fact they were
positive -- and vice versa -- and the hospital failed to notify the patients of
the problem, said Nelson J. Sabatini, secretary of the state Department of
Health and Mental Hygiene..."I
think this is unconscionable behavior: People not being told about the status of
their tests," Sabatini told The (Baltimore) Sun."
►March 11, 2004 -
Panel: Organ Donors Should Know Risks - AP via The Herald-Sun
►March 11, 2004 -
New breast cancer drug promising - Aromatase inhibitor anastrozole showed
better results than tamoxifen in several studies - Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
►March 11, 2004 -
State Senate OKs limit on medical malpractice - Rendell has 'philosophical
differences' with cap - Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
►March 11, 2004 -
Flu
bug reduces schools' funding - State holds back cash because of absences -
Record Searchlight via www.redding.com
►March 11, 2004 -
Organizers change site of seminar on autism to handle more people (requires
subscription) - conference alert -
Watertown Daily Times
►March 11, 2004 -
Health workers test mass vaccination skills - Arizona Daily Sun
►March 11, 2004 - Doc recovering -
A county doctor and his wife, also a doctor, were part of a triple swap of
transplants. - York Daily Record
►March 11, 2004 -
FACTIVE, gemifloxacin mesylate, Tablets Receive Marketing Approval from Health
Canada; FDA-Approved Fluoroquinolone Being Readied for Launch in U.S. -
Genome Therapeutics via Business Wire
►March 11, 2004 -
Waning bird
flu still hurts China - Recovery slow for small farms - The Atlanta
Journal-Constitution
►March 11, 2004 -
Tokyo academic says migratory birds unlikely to be avian flu carriers - CNA
via www.channelnewsasia.com
►March 11, 2004 -
Patents received Feb. 3, 2004 - The University of Pittsburgh for
"Cold-adapted equine influenza viruses, No. 6,685,946." - U.S. Patent and
Trademark Office via Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
►March 11, 2004 -
Rotarian travels to India to immunize children against polio - Clarke
Times-Courier via www.zwire.com
►March 11, 2004 -
Nine isolated in Durban airport anthrax scare - The Mercury via
www.iol.co.za
►March 11, 2004 -
FBI at crucial stage in finding source of anthrax attack - Sun-Sentinel
►March 11, 2004 -
Health ministry to begin testing for bird flu - Local companies to foot some
of the bill - Jamaica Observer
►March 11, 2004 - The
Politics of Drug Demonization - Tech Central Station - "The Food and Drug
Administration has approved the new drug Avastin, which shrinks tumors. The FDA
pushed through the medicine, produced by Genetech, because Avastin significantly
aided patients with advanced bowel cancer. Yet in the view of many Americans,
not to mention politicians of both parties, the pharmaceutical companies --
which are spending billions on research to produce medicines like Avastin -- are
the enemy."
►March 11, 2004 -
Saying No to Polio Shots - editorial/op-ed (requires registration or
subscription) - The New York Times
►March 11, 2004 -
New
Case of Bird Flu Found in Thailand - AP via The Mercury News
►March 11, 2004 -
EU suspends poultry imports from Canada over bird flu outbreak - AFP via EU
Business
►March 11, 2004 -
China
develops two new types of bird flu vaccines - Xinhuanet via China View
►March 11, 2004 -
Dead
chickens test negative for bird flu in Japan - Xinhuanet via China View
►March 11, 2004 -
Md. officials hear USDA assurances on bird flu - Agency tells of aggressive
effort to contain disease - Baltimore Sun
►March 11, 2004 -
Mumps: 3 struck by brain bug - Daily Record, UK
►March 11, 2004 -
City ripe for
rabies; vaccinations urged - Portland Press Herald
►March 11, 2004 -
Chronic Wasting Disease: New testing finds indicators of deer disease in 14
new counties - AP via The Pioneer Press via
www.twincities.com
►March 11, 2004 -
In AIDS, hepatitis C, early diagnosis is vital - It's important to prevent
transmission to others - The Baltimore Sun
►March 11, 2004 -
24% of Arizona toddlers lack shots (requires registration) - State's
vaccination progress still falls short - The Arizona Republic
►March 11, 2004 -
Four-time cancer survivor lives on hope - Heather Warrick has survived
breast cancer three times and skin cancer once. - Daily Trojan