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Access To Abortion Services In Kansas Hindered After Closure Of Tiller's Clinic
After the murder of abortion provider George Tiller and the closure of his Wichita, Kan., clinic, residents of the city face about a three-hour drive to the nearest abortion provider, a distance experts say is not uncommon for access to abortion services in southern and midwestern states, the Wichita Eagle reports. Jenny O"Donnell of the Abortion Access Project said that southern and midwestern states have the heaviest restrictions on abortion, adding that "substantial populations don"t have an abortion provider" in states such as Mississippi and Arkansas. According to 2005 statistics from the Guttmacher Institute, 87% of U.S. counties have no abortion provider; the figure rises to 94% of counties in the Midwest and 96% of counties in Kansas. The number of abortion providers in Kansas declined from 15 in 1992 to seven in 2005, while the number of providers nationwide dropped from 2,380 to 1,787 over the same time period, according to Guttmacher. Experts say the decline is the result of several factors, including public pressures, increased regulation that has driven up the cost and complexity of providing abortion and a general trend in the health care industry toward consolidated, more specialized practices.Vicki Saporta, president and CEO of the National Abortion Federation, said that the decrease in the number of abortion providers is misleading on some levels. The decline primarily has occurred among hospitals and small providers who perform a few procedures a year, while major clinics that specialize in abortion have remained essentially stable, Saporta said. Peter Brownie, executive director of Planned Parenthood of Kansas and Mid-Missouri, said that the group"s clinics have experienced an increase in contacts from women from south-central Kansas since Tiller"s clinic closed a little more than one week ago. He added, "At the present time, there"s no place between Denver and Kansas City where a woman can obtain abortion care. That"s a significant barrier for women throughout the state that have that need." NAF has established a national hotline to offer referrals for women who have to make new arrangements for abortion care because of the closure of Tiller"s clinic, Saporta said (Lefler, Wichita Eagle, 6/9).
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June Is Brain Injury Awareness Month In Canada
Brain injuries are the number one killer and disabler of people under the age of 45 in Canada. These injuries are
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Alzheimer's Society Response To The Publication Of Revised NICE Guidance On Alzheimer's Treatments, UK
Thousands of people with Alzheimer"s will continue to be denied access to the only drug treatments for the disease following the publication of revised guidance by the National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence (NICE). The original guidance recommended that only people in the moderate stages of Alzheimer"s disease should have access to drugs in the NHS, denying them to people in the early stages.
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Recovery Act Funding Supports 23 Fellowships For Early Career Scientists

Funding from the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act will allow the National Institutes of Health to create jobs for early career scientists and increase the ranks of researchers and clinicians working in the global health field. With $3 million in funding over the next 18 months, the NIH"s Fogarty International Center will be able to support 23 additional participants in its Clinical Research Training Scholars and Fellows Program. The ARRA award is being made to Vanderbilt University"s Institute for Global Health, which administers the scholars program managed by Fogarty. The initiative provides a year of mentored clinical research training at NIH-funded research sites in the developing world, designed to encourage the recipients to establish careers in global health-related clinical research. Among the new positions created will be 13 research fellows and 10 advanced research fellows, who will be able to continue their projects for a second year. The fellows will be employees of Vanderbilt University and other U.S. institutions, coming from medical schools and universities across the country. "Researchers in post-doctoral positions are vulnerable during this economic downturn," said Fogarty Director Roger I. Glass. "These newly created jobs are an example of the Recovery Act"s effectiveness in stimulating a crucial sector of the American economy, harnessing the enormous interest in global health among college students and ensuring the United States remains competitive in the biomedical research arena." In addition to carrying out research projects, the 13 fellows will conduct training workshops in the United States and abroad and serve as lecturers in their respective areas of expertise. The 10 advanced research fellows are early stage scientists who have already completed a year in the scholars program and will expand their ongoing research at foreign sites as a result of the new funding. The advanced fellows will also design curriculum in research skills for use by the program and act as mentors for other trainees. "We"re seeking a new generation of global health research leaders," said Dr. Sten Vermund, director of the Institute for Global Health at Vanderbilt University Medical Center and principal investigator for the Clinical Research Training Scholars and Fellows Program. "The clinical research that our new fellows will oversee will help the global economy to prosper while benefiting Americans worldwide, including military personnel and travelers abroad." Emily Wong, M.D., a University of California, San Francisco resident physician and one of the second year advanced research fellows supported by the funding, will continue a study recently begun in South Africa. Working with the Reproductive Health and HIV Research Unit in Johannesburg, Dr. Wong will analyze the high percentage of early deaths in patients who begin antiretroviral therapy (ART) for HIV. By using needle biopsies of various organs, she and her colleagues will be able to access more data on the patients than was previously available. "Despite the huge success of antiretroviral therapy, little information is available about the 10 to 20 percent of patients who die in the early stages of ART," said Dr. Wong. "This new recovery funding will allow us to gather information on the high number of HIV patients whose early deaths have been gone largely untraced." Another second year advanced research fellow, Joseph Tucker, M.D., from Massachusetts General Hospital, will be starting a new project to examine the growing syphilis epidemic in China. Collaborating with China"s National Sexually Transmitted Disease Center in Nanjing, Dr. Tucker will link his study to an already existing screening program run by the World Health Organization. "This grant provides a very exciting opportunity," he said. "In Shanghai alone, syphilis is the most commonly reported infection, surpassing even tuberculosis. This study will help us determine the causes and hopefully help to eventually ensure that patients get tested for both syphilis and HIV." Some of the research fellows will be carrying out studies focused on health problems that are also prevalent in the United States such as acute heart failure, herpes suppression, HIV, respiratory infections, colorectal cancer and glaucoma. The fellows" areas of expertise include infectious diseases, injury and trauma, oncology, ophthalmology, cardiology and pediatrics. The Fogarty International Center, the international component of the NIH, addresses global health challenges through innovative and collaborative research and training programs and supports and advances the NIH mission through international partnerships. For more information, visit http://www.fic.nih.gov. National Institutes of Health


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