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Antivirals Might Be Wasted On The Elderly, Researchers Warn
A model of influenza transmission and treatment suggests that, if the current swine flu pandemic behaves like the 1918 flu, antiviral treatment should be reserved for the young. Researchers writing in the open access journal BMC Infectious Diseases found that, in this situation, providing the elderly with antiviral drugs would not significantly reduce mortality, and may lead to an increase in resistance.
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Use Of Lenalidomide In Patients With Multiple Myeloma Having Already Received At Least Two Previous Therapies Approved By NICE, UK
A review of the NICE decision on the approval of lenalidomide is published in a special report Online First and in the July edition of The Lancet Oncology. About 2,000 multiple myeloma sufferers in the UK could benefit from the drug and improve their life expectancy pending a decision by The UK National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence (NICE). Patients who have received two or more previous therapies could receive lenalidomide, and the cost of cycles beyond the twenty-sixth cycle of treatment would be met by the drug manufacturer.
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To Lead The Transformation Of Health Care, Young Physicians Selected For Prestigious National Fellowship
The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Clinical Scholars Program® is pleased to announce the selection of 29 young physicians who will learn to conduct innovative research and work with communities, organizations, practitioners and policy-makers on issues important to the health and well-being of all Americans. They will begin their prestigious two-year fellowships in July 2010.
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Opinion: An 'Integrated Approach' To U.S. Global Health Aid; G8 Agriculture Investment

Global Health Aid Should Take An "Integrated Approach" "As the health care reform debate unfolds domestically, we face an opportune moment to recalculate for the better how we maximize the success of our efforts abroad to strengthen global health," Bill Frist, former U.S. Senate Majority leader and current member of the Millennium Challenge Corporation"s (MCC) Board of Directors, writes in a Houston Chronicle opinion piece. Frist continues, "Global health is as much about putting health infrastructure in place as it is improving the physical infrastructure (roads and water systems) and the institutional capacity (sound policies and training) developing countries need to keep their citizens healthy. We need it all. This integrated approach is the surest way to sustainably improve the alarming state of global health, where 9 million children die before their fifth birthday or one in every 250 mothers die giving birth." Frist looks at the "holistic approach" taken by the MCC: "It funds country-determined anti-poverty projects that view healthy, productive societies as vital to sustainable economic development," noting that it is "cost-effective" to channel development aid "to address the core causes of poor global health and prevent the reoccurrence of the symptoms." Frist adds, "And, during these tough economic times, it makes supreme sense to stretch the value of every U.S. dollar invested in global health in this accountable way" (7/30). Agriculture Investment, Innovation Needs Acceleration The G8"s pledge of $20 billion over three years for farm-investment aid is a "giant step forward," writes Texas A&M University Professor Norman Bourlag, who won the 1970 Nobel Peace Prize for his contributions to the world food supply, in a Wall Street Journal opinion piece. According to Bourlag, farmers who have the "right tools" have shown an "uncanny ability to feed themselves and others, and to ignite the economic engine that will reverse the cycle of chronic poverty," which "offers a chance for greater political stability in their countries as well." Investments like the one announced at the recent G8 summit "will most likely help to place current tools - like fertilizer and hybrid seeds that have been used for decades in the developed world - into the hands of small-holder farmers in remote places like Africa with the potential for noted and measured impact," he writes. But in order for investments to "continue to motivate new and novel discoveries" governments must make their decisions about access to new technologies "on the basis of science, and not to further political agendas," according to Bourlag. Civilization cannot continue to survive "without an adequate food supply," he writes, concluding that the future generations "will not evolve without accelerating the pace of investment and innovation in agriculture production" (Bourlag, 7/31). This information was reprinted from globalhealth.kff.org with kind permission from the Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation. You can view the entire Kaiser Daily Global Health Policy Report, search the archives and sign up for email delivery at globalhealth.kff.org. © Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation. All rights reserved.


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