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WellQuest Launches Medically Supervised Weight Loss Program
WellQuest Medical & Wellness Corporation ("WellQuest") (OTCBB:WEQL) announced the recent launch of its Medically Supervised Weight Loss Program. WellQuest"s unique approach to weight loss addresses a growing $2 billion market.

Parents Ask Lawmakers To Keep Kids In Mind During Reform Debate
A group of 50 families will ask lawmakers this week to keep in mind 9 million uninsured children and many more who are underinsured when they undertake health reform this summer, the Cincinnati Enquirer reports. "Covering all children, and making sure they have access to the care they need regardless of their family"s financial situation or where they live, is an achievable first step toward covering all Americans," the CEO of the Children"s Hospital Association told the Enquirer.
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Jet Lag -Trends And Coping Strategies
Frequent air travelers, as well as people who fly only occasionally, are often inconvenienced by the effects of jet lag, according to research presented today at the American College of Sports Medicine"s 56th Annual Meeting in Seattle. Christopher Berger, Ph.D., Chair of the American College of Sports Medicine (ACSM) Task Force on Healthy Air Travel, "Exercise is Medicine™ On the Fly," explains that jet lag, medically called desynchronosis, is the physiological response to alterations to circadian rhythms.
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Report Examines Zimbabwean Refugees In South Africa

According to a report released Tuesday by Medicins Sans Frontiers (MSF), "Zimbabweans continue to cross the border [into South Africa] every day, legally and illegally, in massive numbers as a matter of survival," AFP/Google.com reports (AFP/Google.com, 6/2). An estimated "three million Zimbabweans - about a quarter of the entire population" have fled "the economic collapse and human rights abuses at home, as well as a cholera outbreak that has infected about 100,000 people," according to the BBC, and the "inauguration in February of a fractious power-sharing government in Zimbabwe has not stemmed the flight" (BBC, 6/2). The AP/Washington Post says the report indicates, "South Africa"s health system has been overwhelmed by an influx of Zimbabweans, and that South Africa was struggling to provide shelter and other services for Zimbabweans." The report also documented that some refugees had been "raped by criminals at the border, harassed by South African police once they cross and denied medical care at South African hospitals," the AP/Washington Post writes. "It"s a major humanitarian crisis ... here on this side of the border," said Eric Goemaere, medical coordinator for MSF in South Africa (Bryson, AP/Washington Post, 6/2). MSF performs thousands of consultations monthly for Zimbabwean refugees in its centers, many of whom have HIV or TB, according to Goemaere (Ncube, Zimbabwe Times, 6/2). The MSF report calls for the government of South Africa and U.N. agencies "to do more to ensure desperate migrants were safe and had shelter and health care" (AP/Washington Post, 6/2). "This should be paid for by the international community," Goemaere said (SAPA/News24.com, 6/2). The AP/Washington Post reports that South Africa has lifted visa restrictions for Zimbabwean refugees - which Nomvanela Kota, a spokeswoman for South Africa"s international relations department - said has made it easier for Zimbabweans to come and stay in South Africa and shows that the government has "long been seized of this matter." Kota welcomed foreign help, "but as part of a "coordinated effort" led by South Africa" (AP/Washington Post, 6/2). 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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