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Sebelius: Single-Payer Health Care Not In Plans
In an interview with NPR, Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius stressed that talk of a public plan doesn"t mean that a single-payer option is a possibility. "This is not a trick. This is not single payerò€¦ That"s not what anyone is talking about - mostly because the president feels strongly, as I do, that dismantling private health coverage for the 180 million Americans that have it, discouraging more employers from coming into the marketplace, is really the bad, you know, is a bad direction to go," she said. Sebelius added that a public insurance option would pressure private insurance companies to lower costs, which she says is "a good thing for the American public. Medicare right now has lower overhead than private insurers." Some Republicans have argued that Americans currently in private plans would flee to the public option, but Sebelius countered that expanding health insurance would potentially create "50 million-plus new insurance customers, whether you"re talking about a private plan or public option."

ANA Reaffirms Support Of Health Reform Legislation
The American Nurses Association (ANA) reached out to lawmakers Friday, with a letter in support of H.R. 3200 "America"s Affordable Health Choices Act of 2009." After a contingent from ANA took part in a Rose Garden press conference with President Obama July 15th, ANA set out to engage lawmakers, nurses, and other health professionals across the country to voice their commitment to real healthcare reform.
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New Species Of Jungle Yeast Discovered
A new species of yeast has been discovered deep in the Amazon jungle. In a paper published on-line in FEMS Yeast Research, IFR scientists and colleagues from Pontificia Universidad CatÃölica del Ecuador describe the novel characteristics of Candida carvajalis sp. nov.
Diagnostics

Scientists Test New Drug Combo Against Breast Cancer

The American Cancer Society estimates 192,000 new cases of breast cancer will be diagnosed in the United States this year with more than 40,000 individuals dying from the disease. In New Jersey alone 6,400 new cases are expected with 1,400 deaths. In an effort to combat such statistics, researchers at The Cancer Institute of New Jersey (CINJ) have opened a clinical trial, which will evaluate a new drug combination for patients with breast cancer who are set to undergo surgery to remove the tumor. At focus is the process of stopping angiogenesis (blood vessel growth), which is necessary for cancer tumors to grow and spread. CINJ is a Center of Excellence of UMDNJ-Robert Wood Johnson Medical School. CINJ is one of the participating centers in the United States and Canada conducting the study, which is sponsored by the National Surgical Adjuvant Breast and Bowel Project Foundation Research Program. This trial will look at the effects of an investigational drug called pazopanib when given with chemotherapy before surgery and when given without chemotherapy after surgery. Pazopanib, which does not yet have the approval of the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, possibly blocks new blood vessel growth in cancer tumors and also targets and halts certain proteins that help cancer cells grow. Antoinette R. Tan, MD, a medical oncologist at CINJ and assistant professor of medicine at UMDNJ-Robert Wood Johnson Medical School, is the national study chair for the trial and the lead investigator of the study at CINJ. She notes, "In adding pazopanib to the standard of care, this new combination may improve our ability to reduce the size of breast cancer tumors. By targeting blood vessel growth in particular, we can cut off a key lifeline that enables tumors to grow and spread." Before taking part in the trial, interested participants will undergo various examinations including a general physical and routine blood and urine tests. Selected patients will receive pazopanib with chemotherapy prior to breast surgery and will receive pazopanib by itself after surgery. Pazopanib is taken by mouth, while chemotherapy is given through a vein. Patients will keep a medication diary and continue with standard testing such as blood work and physical exams throughout their participation in the trial, which is expected to be about two years. Some 100 participants total are being sought from all sites Women at or over age 18, who have breast cancer and have not yet undergone surgery to remove the tumor are eligible to take part in the trial, although other criteria must be met. Clinical trials, often called cancer research studies, test new treatments and new ways of using existing treatments for cancer. At CINJ, researchers use these studies to answer questions about how a treatment affects the human body and to make sure it is safe and effective. There are several types of clinical trials currently underway at CINJ, including those that diagnose, treat, prevent, and manage symptoms of cancer. Many treatments used today, whether drugs or vaccines; ways to do surgery or give radiation therapy; or combinations of treatments, are the results of past clinical trials. As New Jersey"s only National Cancer Institute-designated Comprehensive Cancer Center, CINJ offers patients access to treatment options not available at other institutions within the state. CINJ currently enrolls more than 1,000 patients on clinical trials, including approximately 15 percent of all new adult cancer patients and approximately 70 percent of all pediatric cancer patients. Enrollment in these studies nationwide is fewer than five percent of all adult cancer patients. About The Cancer Institute of New Jersey The Cancer Institute of New Jersey is the state"s first and only National Cancer Institute-designated Comprehensive Cancer Center, and is dedicated to improving the prevention, detection, treatment and care of patients with cancer. CINJ"s physician-scientists engage in translational research, transforming their laboratory discoveries into clinical practice, quite literally bringing research to life. The Cancer Institute of New Jersey is a center of excellence of UMDNJ-Robert Wood Johnson Medical School. The Cancer Institute of New Jersey Network is comprised of hospitals throughout the state and provides a mechanism to rapidly disseminate important discoveries into the community. Flagship Hospital: Robert Wood Johnson University Hospital. Major Clinical Research Affiliate Hospitals: Carol G. Simon Cancer Center at Morristown Memorial Hospital, Carol G. Simon Cancer Center at Overlook Hospital, and Jersey Shore University Medical Center. Affiliate Hospitals: Bayshore Community Hospital, CentraState Healthcare System, Cooper University Hospital*, JFK Medical Center, Raritan Bay Medical Center, Robert Wood Johnson University Hospital at Hamilton (CINJ at Hamilton), Saint Peter"s University Hospital, Somerset Medical Center, Southern Ocean County Hospital, The University Hospital/UMDNJ-New Jersey Medical School*, and University Medical Center at Princeton. Cancer Institute of New Jersey

Plastic Surgery Abroad commented:

surgery Information is appropriate and I can understand all the aspects that are of significant importance in this task. Nice work.

01.05.2012


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