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InteKrin Therapeutics Announces INT131 Phase 2a Results At The 2009 American Diabetes Association Annual Meeting
InteKrin Therapeutics Inc presented Phase 2a clinical study results at the American Diabetes Association annual meeting in New Orleans demonstrating that once a day oral treatment with INT131 provides anti-diabetic efficacy consistent with maximal dose thiazolidinedione (TZD) therapy but with less hematocrit reduction and weight gain.
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Clinton Says U.S. Will Work With India To Address Health Challenges, Hunger
The U.S. will work to address the health challenges facing India among other countries and will aim to improve maternal and child health care services through comprehensive dialogue, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said on Friday after visiting a Self Employed Women"s Association (SEWA) trade outlet in Mumbai, India, PTI/Yahoo! News reports. Clinton said, "Our government is already spending a lot of money on HIV/AIDS but we wanted to add maternal and child health to that commitment as it is important for India." She added that the funding will be used to combat tuberculosis and polio, "which are also problems in India" (7/18).
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Final Analysis Shows HPV Vaccine Highly Effective At Preventing Precancerous Cervical Lesions
The final analysis of the PATRICIA study shows that the HPV-16/18 AS04-adjuvanted vaccine (GlaxoSmithKline) has high efficacy against the precancerous cervical lesions that can eventually lead to cervical cancer. The vaccine also shows cross-protective efficacy against other oncogenic (cancer-causing) HPV types closely related to HPV-16/18. Furthermore, it also shows efficacy in the cohorts relevant to universal mass vaccination and catch-up programmes. The findings are reported in an Article Online First and in an upcoming edition of The Lancet, written by Dr Jorma Paavonen, University of Helsinki, Finland, and colleagues.
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Infighting Among Dems On Health Care Reform

Infighting among Democrats over inclusion of a public plan in health care reform is turning disagreement between moderates and liberals into a "Democratic civil war" with outside groups taking part in the attacks, Politico reports. "When Sen. Ben Nelson, D-Neb., called the public plan a deal breaker, a progressive group co-founded by Joe Trippi launched a campaign in Nebraska accusing the senator of being a "sellout" for special interests. After a strategy memo by the centrist Democratic think tank Third Way cautioned Democrats on overreaching on a public plan, Daily Kos bloggers went on the attack, and Third Way now faces an effort by the Trippi group, Change Congress, to pressure Third Way donors. Sen. Mary Landrieu, D-La, is the next target. On Tuesday, she said she opposed the public plan. By Wednesday, the liberal Health Care for America Now was drawing up a plan to change her mind." Democrats could pass reform with 51 votes in the Senate using the reconciliation process, but public plan-supporting Democrats are taking steps to get moderates in order and President Obama is traveling to Wisconsin and Chicago to push the public plan. Liberal groups have attempted to persuade some Democratic senators, including Nelson, into supporting the plan by spending money on mailing and Internet advertisements. Politico notes that while "Nelson is no longer calling the public plan a "deal breaker"... On Wednesday, he said he could not back a public plan that jeopardized the private insurance coverage for 200 million Americans but he will "look at any public plan that is presented." "Those people who are out there attacking us are using the whack-a-mole approach - anyone who sticks their head up and says, "I won"t be supporting a single payer plan," they whack," Nelson said." Senate negotiators have been trying to find a compromise, but didn"t find one yesterday with competing Democratic alternatives floating around, including one from Sen. Kent Conrad of North Dakota to create nonprofit cooperatives, one from Sen. John Rockefeller, of West Virginia, appealing to more liberal members (Brown, 6/11). And Roll Call reports that as Democrats battle over other issues such as war funding and a cap-and-trade bill limiting carbon emissions, the focus remains on health reform: "One House Democratic aide to a liberal lawmaker said left-leaning Members have been much more focused on health care reform and are generally happy with the direction negotiations on the issue are going. "The debate is no longer whether there will be a public plan; it"s over what the public plan will look like," the aide said" (Dennis and Pierce, 6/11). This information was reprinted from kaiserhealthnews.org with kind permission from the Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation. You can view the entire Kaiser Daily Health Policy Report, search the archives and sign up for email delivery at kaiserhealthnews.org. © Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation. All rights reserved.


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