Popular Articles

Biotech Factories Created From Bacteria
High-throughput sequencing has turned biologists into voracious genome readers, enabling them to scan millions of DNA letters, or bases, per hour. When revising a genome, however, they struggle, suffering from serious writer"s block, exacerbated by outdated cell programming technology. Labs get bogged down with particular DNA sentences, tinkering at times with subsections of a single gene ad nauseam before moving along to the next one.

PARI Pharma's Nebulized DSCG Shows Results Similar To Inhaled Steroids In Asthma Studies Presented At ATS
This week, Swiss researchers presented positive data from an ongoing Phase II clinical study at the American Thoracic Society (ATS) International Conference that compared PARI Pharma"s inhaled IsoCrom, an isotonic 1% disodium cromoglycate (DSCG) solution, to inhaled corticosteroids (ICS) in 28 children with atopic asthma. Results showed decreases in mean asthma symptom scores without a change in lung function for both groups. These results were achieved with IsoCrom administered via a customized small droplet Investigational eFlow Nebulizer System designed to deliver drugs to the deep lungs. One of the benefits of DSCG is the long track record as an extremely safe drug.
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New Book: Does Quantum Mechanics Show A Connection Between The Human Mind And The Cosmos?
Does quantum mechanics show a connection between the human mind and the cosmos? Are our brains tuned into a "cosmic consciousness" that pervades the universe enabling us to make our own reality? Do quantum mechanics and chaos theory provide a place for God to act in the world without violating natural laws?
Cardiovascular

HANYS Calls On Legislature To Pass Measure To Help Families Prevent Health Care Decision Nightmares

The Healthcare Association of New York State (HANYS) called on the State Legislature to pass much-needed legislation that will better protect the rights of incapacitated patients and spare family members from the nightmare of helplessly watching their loved one"s health care wishes go unfulfilled. New York is one of only two states in the nation that bars family members from making treatment decisions for incapacitated patients. Only 25% of New Yorkers have a "health care proxy." Without one, family members are powerless to make health decisions for loved ones. HANYS distributes wallet-sized proxy forms to anyone on request, but more must be done. The legislation, known as the "Family Health Care Decisions Act," allows medical treatment decisions to be made privately by the patient"s family or friends based on common sense standards: the patient"s expressed wishes or, if unknown, the patient"s best interest. Consultation with medical professionals is required to avoid hasty or ill-motivated decisions. Above all else, the legislation would require that all decisions be made out of respect for, and in consideration of, the individual dignity and uniqueness of the patient. "These patients and their families are lost in the loopholes of existing law, too often resulting in terrible, unneeded suffering on the part of the patient and the patient"s loved ones," said HANYS President Daniel Sisto. "We need to free them from these terrible dilemmas and give the patient every opportunity to have his or her own wishes fulfilled. It is an essential right for all of us." The bill is sponsored in the Legislature by Senator Thomas Duane and Assemblyman Richard Gottfried. Healthcare Association of New York State


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