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Novel Herbal Therapy For Men At High Risk Of Prostate Cancer: Results Of Phase I Trial
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Examining The Risk Of Tuberculosis From Arthritis Medication
Treatment with anti-tumor necrosis factor (TNF) agents is recognized as a risk factor for tuberculosis (TB) in patients with immune-mediated inflammatory diseases such as rheumatoid arthritis, ankylosing spondylitis, Crohn"s disease, psoriatic arthritis and psoriasis. Most TB cases develop as a result of reactivation of a latent TB infection, and health authorities worldwide recommend screening for latent TB and treating patients before initiating anti-TNF treatment. A new study examined cases of TB associated with anti-TNF therapy and found that the risk of TB is higher for patients receiving anti-TNF monoclonal antibody therapy (infliximab or adalimumab) than for those receiving soluble TNF receptor therapy (etanercept). The study is published in the July issue of Arthritis & Rheumatism.
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Opinion: Humanitarian Messaging; Maternal Health

Changing Humanitarian Messaging Could Save More People In a New York Times opinion piece, columnist Nicholas Kristof says G8 leaders are "collectively so far behind in meeting humanitarian aid pledges," and asks why it is easier "to try to assist a stranger before us" than "to donate to try to save strangers from malaria half a world away." Kristof writes, "There"s growing evidence that jumping up and down about millions of lives at stake can even be counterproductive. A number of studies have found that we are much more willing to donate to one needy person than to several." Humanitarians are "abjectly ineffective at selling their causes," he writes, arguing that "toothpaste is peddled with far more sophistication than the life-saving work of aid groups." Although there are "no easy answers here," Kristof writes, pointing out that if a toothpaste company had the same "miserable results in its messaging" as aid groups do, "it would go back to the drawing board." He concludes, "That"s what bleeding hearts need to do as well" (7/8). New Promise To Ensure Maternal Health Worldwide Needed Although the decision for President Obama and the first lady "to visit Ghana on the heels of the G8 summit in Italy this week" demonstrates the administration"s commitment to "develop a healthy and prosperous Africa," a new promise "must be made to provide highly cost-effective solutions to ensure that women are healthy before, during and after pregnancy," Rep. Gwen Moore (D-Wis.) writes in an opinion piece in the Hill. According to Moore, it is "unacceptable" that "[m]ore than 500,000 women worldwide die from pregnancy each year, and millions more endure life-threatening complications." "The president has said, "We will not be successful in our efforts to end deaths from AIDS, malaria and tuberculosis unless we do more to improve health systems around the world, focus our efforts on child and maternal health, and ensure that best practices drive the funding of these programs,"" writes Moore, who adds that she is looking "forward to hearing from the president and first lady on this very issue following their trip to Ghana." She writes, "Improving impoverished women"s chances of survival before, during and after pregnancy is an issue of rights and social justice. It is also a sound economic and social investment, given the importance of women to the well-being of their children, families and societies" (7/7). 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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