Friday, August 10, 2012

X-Ray Scans at Airports Leave Lingering Worries - NYT

August 6, 2012, 5:26 pm

X-Ray Scans at Airports Leave Lingering Worries

Even before she was pregnant, Yolanda Marin-Czachor tried to avoid the full-body X-ray scanners that security officers use to screen airport passengers. Now she's adamant about it: She'll take a radiation-free pat-down instead any day.
"I had two miscarriages before this pregnancy," Ms. Marin-Czachor, a 34-year-old mother and teacher from Green Bay, Wis., recalled, "and one of the first things my doctor said was: 'Do not go through one of those machines. There have not been any long-term studies. I would prefer you stay away from it.' "
There are 244 full-body "backscatter" X-ray scanners in use at 36 airports in the United States. They operate almost nonstop, according to the Transportation Security Administration. Other airports use millimeter wave scanners, which look like glass telephone booths and do not use ionizing radiation, or metal detectors.
Most experts agree that as long as the X-ray backscatter machines are functioning properly, they expose passengers to only extremely low doses of ionizing radiation.
But some experts are less sanguine, and questions persist about the safety of using X-ray machines on such a large scale. A recent study reported that radiation from the machines can reach organs through the skin. In another report, researchers estimated that one billion X-ray backscatter scans per year would lead to perhaps 100 radiation-induced cancers in the future. The European Union has banned body scanners that use radiation; it is against the law in several European countries to X-ray people without a medical reason.
The machines move a narrowly focused beam of high-intensity radiation very quickly across the body, and David Brenner, director of the Center for Radiological Research at Columbia University Medical Center, says he worries about mechanical malfunctions that could cause the beam to stop in one place for even a few seconds, resulting in greater radiation exposure.
For security reasons, much about how the machines work has been kept secret. The T.S.A. says the full-body scanners have been assessed by the Food and Drug Administration, the United States Army Public Health Command and the Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory.
But researchers at these institutions have not always had direct access to the scanners in use, and some of the published reports about them have been heavily redacted, with the authors' names removed. Independent scientists say limited access has hampered their ability to evaluate the systems.
John Sedat, emeritus professor of biochemistry and biophysics at the University of California, San Francisco, believes that the effective dose could be 45 times as high as the T.S.A. has estimated, equivalent to about 10 percent of a single chest X-ray.
T.S.A. officials scoff at scientists' statements that measuring the effective radiation dose received by passengers is very complex, saying that it is not difficult, that the machines are inspected for problems at least once a year, and that they are equipped with fail-safe shutoff systems.
The machines, though, have had mechanical problems. A recent T.S.A. report said that between May 2010 and May 2011, there were 3,778 service calls concerning mechanical problems in backscatter X-ray machines. Radiation safety surveys were conducted after only 2 percent of the calls.
In a letter to the federal Department of Health and Human Services dated Oct. 12, 2010, the scientists said that "the casual nature for maintenance of these devices is alarming to us. These machines are capable of delivering large X-ray doses.
They added, "Hospitals usually check for problems on X-ray machines daily."
Most of what is known of the risks of radiation has been extrapolated from disease trends in Japan after World War II.
T.S.A. officials say that these low doses of radiation are safe for everyone, including pregnant women, infants and young children, even though children are significantly more sensitive to radiation's effects.
Those at greatest risk, however, may be T.S.A. employees and others who work in the terminals and go through security daily. A 2004 National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health study of T.S.A. baggage screeners urged the agency to have employees wear film badges to monitor ongoing exposure systemically, as many hospital and lab employees do, and to label machines more prominently. The agency has not done so.
While the risk to the average passenger may be low, here are some suggestions for those who wish to reduce their exposure.
¶ Get to the airport early. That gives you extra time to opt for a pat-down if you want.
¶ If you are pregnant or think you may be pregnant, tell a T.S.A. agent. You may be allowed to pass through a metal detector without additional screening.
¶ The younger children are, the more sensitive to radiation. T.S.A. employees have been known not to require children under 13 to go through an X-ray machine, although the agency denies there is any policy on this.
¶ If you have any concerns about medical conditions, you have the right to opt for a pat-down by a T.S.A. employee.
Readers may submit comments or questions for The Consumer by e-mail to consumer@nytimes.com.
This post has been revised to reflect the following correction:
Correction: August 8, 2012

An earlier version of this article described millimeter wave scanners incorrectly. The scanners, which look like glass telephone booths, do not use ionizing radiation, but they do use low-powered radio frequency waves; it is not the case that they use no radiation.

The Bullying Culture of Medical School - NYT

August 9, 2012, 12:00 pm

The Bullying Culture of Medical School

Powerfully built and with the face of a boxer, he cast a bone-chilling shadow wherever he went in the hospital.
At least that is what my medical school classmates and I thought whenever we passed by a certain resident, or doctor-in-training, just a few years older than we were.
With the wisdom of hindsight, I now see that the young man was a brilliant and promising young doctor who took his patients' conditions to heart but who also possessed a temper so explosive that medical students dreaded working with him. He had called various classmates "stupid" and "useless" and could erupt with little warning in the middle of hospital halls. Like frightened little mice, we endured the treatment as an inevitable part of medical training, fearful that doing otherwise could result in a career-destroying evaluation or grade.
But one day, one of our classmates, having already been on the receiving end of several of this doctor's tirades, shouted back. She questioned one of his conclusions in front of the rest of the medical team, insisted on getting an explanation, then screamed back when he started yelling at her.
The entire episode unnerved us all; and over the next few weeks, we marveled at her courage and fretted over her potentially ruined career prospects. But there was one aspect of the event that disturbed us even more. One classmate who had witnessed the "screaming match" described how our fellow medical student had raised her voice and positioned her body as she threatened the doctor. "It was weird," he recounted. "It was like watching her turn into him."
For 30 years, medical educators have known that becoming a doctor requires more than an endless array of standardized exams, long hours on the wards and years spent in training. For many medical students, verbal and physical harassment and intimidation are part of the exhausting process, too.
It was a pediatrician, a pioneer in work with abused children, who first noted the problem. And early studies found that abuse of medical students was most pronounced in the third year of medical school, when students began working one on one or in small teams with senior physicians and residents in the hospital. The first surveys found that as many as 85 percent of students felt they had been abused during their third year. They described mistreatment that ranged from being yelled at and told they were "worthless" or "the stupidest medical student," to being threatened with bad grades or a ruined career and even getting hit, pushed or made the target of a thrown medical tool.
Nonetheless, many of these researchers believed that such mistreatment could be eliminated, or at least significantly mitigated, if each medical school acknowledged the behavior, then created institutional anti-harassment policies, grievance committees and educational, training and counseling programs to break the abuse cycle.
One medical school became a leader in adopting such changes. Starting in 1995, educators at the David Geffen School of Medicine at the University of California, Los Angeles, began instituting a series of schoolwide reforms. They adopted policies to reduce abuse and promote prevention; established a Gender and Power Abuse Committee, mandated lectures, workshops and training sessions for students, residents and faculty members; and created an office to accept confidential reports, investigate and then address allegations of mistreatment.
To gauge the effectiveness of these initiatives, the school also began asking all students at the end of their third year to complete a five-question survey on whether they felt they had been mistreated over the course of the year.
The school has just published the sobering results of the surveys over the last 13 years. While there appears to have been a slight drop in the numbers of students who report experiencing mistreatment, more than half of all medical students still said that they had been intimidated or physically or verbally harassed.
Students described being yelled at, pushed and threatened. One student recounted being slapped on the hand by a more senior doctor who said, "If teaching doesn't help you learn, then pain will." Some students wrote about racial insults, with senior staff members making noises to mimic a foreign language; others reported being grabbed, asked out on a date or passed over because of their sex.
"We were really crushed when we saw the results," said Joyce M. Fried, lead author of the paper and assistant dean and chairwoman of the Gender and Power Abuse Committee at the medical school. "We were disappointed that it was so difficult to change."
U.C.L.A.'s experience is not isolated. In fact, national medical education surveys that include questions about mistreatment indicate that the environment at that school is about average. And the striking similarity of experiences across a generation of students suggests problems not just with one institution, but with the culture of medical training itself. "This is a national problem," Ms. Fried said. "Our faculty and doctors-in-training come from all over, including schools where some of them might have been mistreated."
While their findings are disheartening, Ms. Fried and her colleagues continue to believe that medical student mistreatment can be significantly reduced - but only if all medical schools come together to work on the issue. "We're talking about the really hard task of changing a culture, and that has to be done on a national level," Ms. Fried said. Such an effort would include shared training programs, common policies regarding mistreatment and greater transparency about the mistreatment that currently exists in medical schools.
"There are a lot of really good people and role models out there," Ms. Fried said. "But the culture for all these years has been to just take the mistreatment and not say anything."
"It wasn't right back then, and it shouldn't be tolerated anymore," she added.

Not on Facebook? Employers, psychiatrists may think you are a psychopath

Is not joining Facebook a sign you're a psychopath? Some employers and psychologists say staying away from social media is 'suspicious'

By Daily Mail Reporter

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Facebook has become such a pervasive force in modern society that increasing numbers of employers, and even some psychologists, believe people who aren't on social networking sites are 'suspicious.'
The German magazine Der Taggspiegel went so far as to point out that accused theater shooter James Holmes and Norwegian mass murder Anders Behring Breivik have common ground in their lack of Facebook profiles.
On a more tangible level, Forbes.com reports that human resources departments across the country are becoming more wary of young job candidates who don't use the site.
Facebook
Normal: Facebook has become so pervasive in this culture that not having a profile is considered 'abnormal'
The common concern among bosses is that a lack of Facebook could mean the applicant's account could be so full of red flags that it had to be deleted.
Slate.com Advice Columnist, Emily Yoffee, wrote in an advice column that young people shouldn't date anyone who isn't on Facebook.

'If you’re of a certain age and you meet someone who you are about to go to bed with, and that person doesn’t have a Facebook page, you may be getting a false name. It could be some kind of red flag,' he says.
Yoffee points out that these judgements don't apply to older people who were already productive adults before social media became widespread.
The tech news site Slashdot summed up Der Taggspiegel's story about social networking as 'not having a Facebook account could be the first sign that you are a mass murderer.'
James Holmes
Loner: James Holmes, the accused Colorado theater shooter, does not appear to have friends and did not have a Facebook page
It points out that Holmes, who is accused of killing 12 people and an unborn child and wounding 58 others at a movie theater in Aurora, Colorado, and Breivik, who murdered 77 people with a car bomb and mass shooting, did not use Facebook and had small online footprints.
Breivik used MySpace and Holmes was reportedly on the hookup site Adult Friend Finder.
Psychologist Christopher Moeller told the magazine that using Facebook has become a sign of having a healthy social network.
Psychologists have noted that Holmes, along with several noted mass murderers, have lacked any real friends.
And this is what the argument boils down to: It's the suspicion that not being on Facebook, which has become so normal among young adults, is a sign that you're abnormal and dysfunctional, or even dangerous, ways.


Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2184658/Is-joining-Facebook-sign-youre-psychopath-Some-employers-psychologists-say-suspicious.html#ixzz238inF11N

The Inconvenient Truth about Privatization of Correctional Health Care Revealed

The Inconvenient Truth about Privatization of Correctional Health Care Revealed
Physician uncovers what happens behind the walls of private health care facilities
St. Augustine, FL (PRWEB) August 10, 2012
Xlibris, the print-on-demand self-publishing services provider, announced today the release of Greed Versus Love: An Inconvenient Truth About the Privatization of Correctional Health Care, a book by Raquel Sanchez-Castro, made available through Xlibris.
This book narrates the experience of a physician working in the correctional system. It describes the difference in the modus operandum and the attitude of the two types of administrative personnel (public and private correctional health care). With true clinical cases, the author uncovers the sad reality of the corruption existing in the private correctional facilities, where the main priority is the profit and not the patient.
A gripping journey of a young Puerto Rican girl with a proclivity for healing to a practicing physician in an American penal system, Greed Versus Love: An Inconvenient Truth About the Privatization of Correctional Health Care will find readers thinking about those who suffer from illnesses and diseases that are too often left with a pill, when they need surgery, or an aspirin, when they need a more powerful medication. For more information on this book, interested parties may log on to http://www.Xlibris.com.
About the Author
Raquel Sanchez-Castro, MD was born in San Juan, Puerto Rico, on January 28, 1971. In 1995, she completed her BS in Natural Sciences with a Major in Biology. At the age of twenty-nine, she graduated from medical school in Dominican Republic. She worked one year in a HIV clinic and five years in the emergency room. From 2005 to 2006, she completed a training program in Chinese medicine and acupuncture and migrated to Florida. Since 2007, she has been working in the correctional system as a physician.
Greed Versus Love * by Raquel Sanchez-Castro
An Inconvenient Truth About the Privatization of Correctional Health Care
Publication Date: July 14, 2010
Trade Paperback; $15.99; 72 pages; 978-1-4535-1236-4
Trade Hardback; $24.99; 72 pages; 978-1-4535-1237-1
eBook; $9.99; 978-1-4535-1238-8
Members of the media who wish to review this book may request a complimentary paperback copy by contacting the publisher at (888) 795-4274 x. 7879. To purchase copies of the book for resale, please fax Xlibris at (610) 915-0294 or call (888) 795-4274 x. 7879.
For more information on self-publishing or marketing with Xlibris, visit http://www.Xlibris.com. To receive a free publishing guide, please call (888) 795-4274.

Friday, August 3, 2012

Mental health metrics: the misery map | Editorial - via Comment is free | guardian.co.uk by on 8/2/12

The Guardian home   Mental health

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  • 2 Aug 2012: Editorial: Mental health is one of those subjects on which there are more strongly-held than well-informed opinions 52 comments

Mental health is one of those subjects on which there are more strongly-held than well-informed opinions
Like the costs and benefits of staging the Olympics, or behavioural differences between boys and girls, mental health is one of those subjects on which there are more strongly-held than well-informed opinions. One problem is that such hard facts as there are can be twisted to fit every prejudice. New figures on antidepressant prescriptions confirm a runaway rise that has now pushed use up by 500% in 20 years. But what exactly does this prove?
For the stiff upper-lip brigade it is another sign of post-Diana national decline – of people mistaking life's slings and arrows for a pathology, and of soft-hearted physicians pandering to them. Kinder souls will regard the news as a welcome sign of an old taboo fading – evidence of patients, who would once have suffered from a crippling condition in silence, finally having the confidence to come forward and get help. Those with faith in scientific progress will discern GPs getting better at diagnosing and pharmaceutical companies producing smarter drugs. Materialists preoccupied with the economy will notice that last year's 9.1% rise exceeds the 6.8% average over the past decade – and blame the double dip.
So we can't settle arguments about the meaning of medicated misery by simply counting prescriptions. If we map them, however, we start to get a few insights. The BBC's Mark Easton shrewdly spotted that Blackpool, which topped the antidepressant chart, was also the lowest-scoring English town on happiness, as measured by the official life satisfaction survey released the week before. Scotland's Highlands and Islands boasted the broadest smiles in that data, and – sure enough – separate Scottish statistics confirm antidepressants are rarer in these corners of the kingdom too. The fit between self-rated misery and prescriptions for depression suggests, first of all, that both are measuring something real.
A deep north-south divide in prescriptions is, in part, a reminder that unemployment hurts. Redcar, Gateshead and Newcastle are all near the top of this table, and all have far more than their share of jobseeker's allowance claims. But economics is not the end of the story. Conurbations further south – from Birmingham to inner-London – are often also short on jobs, and yet anti-depressants are much rarer in these places, even where they have poor life satisfaction scores.
The most obvious difference between these places and the north-east is the ethnic mix. One fashionable view says too much diversity can impose strains, but here is an indicator of distress which points the other way. In truth, it is less likely to be a case of diversity vanquishing depression than a sign of continuing stigma about mental health in some immigrant communities. Mapping misery reveals a good deal about where it needs to be tackled.

guardian.co.uk © 2012 Guardian News and Media Limited or its affiliated companies. All rights reserved. | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds
 
 
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James Holmes-Colorado-shooting-Batman-Aurora The University of Colorado
27 Jul 2012:
Dr Lynne Fenton revealed as university employee who was mailed a notebook from Holmes detailing plans for an attack

Friday, July 27, 2012

Mike Nova: World - 7/27/2012

Mike Nova: World - 7/27/2012: World "World" bundle created by Mike Nova A bundle is a collection of blogs and websites hand-selected by your friend on a particul...

Mike Nova: 10:25 AM 7/27/2012 - Mike Nova's starred items

Mike Nova: 10:25 AM 7/27/2012 - Mike Nova's starred items: 10:25 AM 7/27/2012 - Mike Nova's starred items Mike Nova: News Review - July ‎27, ‎2012 via Mike Nova by Mike Nova on 7/...

Mike Nova: News Review - July ‎27, ‎2012

Mike Nova: News Review - July ‎27, ‎2012:   News Review - ‎July ‎27, ‎2012 News Review: Facebook's stock tumbles after 1st public quarter | Facebook loses more Wall S...

Mike Nova: Health News Review - 7/27/2012

Mike Nova: Health News Review - 7/27/2012: Health News Review - 7/27/2012   Mike Nova's starred items Suspect in hepatitis C outbreak was fired in Ariz. via A...

Researchers Say HIV Attacks the Brain and Causes Dementia

Researchers Say HIV Attacks the Brain and Causes Dementia:
Researchers say they have found the cause of dementia and depression-like symptoms that afflict more than fifty percent of HIV-positive people during their lifetimes. As VOA's Vidushi Sinha reports, their finding could point the way to new treatments.
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FDA approves two weight loss drugs

FDA approves two weight loss drugs:
Do they work and are they safe?
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If the Supreme Court accepts the case, it could profoundly affect drug prices an...

If the Supreme Court accepts the case, it could profoundly affect drug prices an...: If the Supreme Court accepts the case, it could profoundly affect drug prices and health care costs. The stakes are enormous for brand-name drug makers, which would face lower profits, and for pharmacies, insurance companies and patients, who could benefit from the savings.


Deals to Keep Generic Drugs Off Market Get a Court Rebuff
www.nytimes.com
Going against a decade of rulings, a federal appeals court said payments aimed at holding back generic drugs are anticompetitive, setting up possible review by the Supreme Court.

Thursday, July 26, 2012

DEA launches raid on sellers of designer drugs

DEA launches raid on sellers of designer drugs: The Drug Enforcement Administration is leading a national crackdown against manufacturers, distributors and vendors of synthetic designer drugs.

App gives autistic children a voice

App gives autistic children a voice:
An app is giving a voice to children with autism. For more CNN videos, check out our YouTube channel at www.youtube.com Or visit our site at www.cnn.com
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Alzheimer’s: tale of two proteins

Alzheimer’s: tale of two proteins: It now becomes clear that the best chance of preventing the disease lies in blocking the formation of both bap and tau, writes Clive Cookson

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July 6, 2012 9:11 pm

Alzheimer’s: a tale of two proteins

The best chance of preventing the disease lies in blocking the formation of both bap and tau
Human brain©Corbis
Drugs are being developed that target two proteins that build up in the brain of Alzheimer’s sufferers
The slow but inexorable spread of Alzheimer’s disease through millions of ageing brains is one of the 21st century’s great public health challenges – and research organisations are stepping up efforts to find better treatments than today’s drugs, which offer little more than short-term relief.
The fundamental problem is that scientists still understand little about the underlying processes that destroy the Alzheimer’s brain. Although researchers have known for decades that insoluble proteins build up and poison patients’ brains, they have long wrangled over the relative importance of the two main culprits: plaques of beta-amyloid protein (also known as bap or abeta) and tangles of tau. The dispute between “baptists” and “tauists” is a classic in the annals of academic argument.

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IN FT Magazine

Now peace is breaking out, as it becomes clear that the two proteins are essential elements in Alzheimer’s development, and that in the long run, the best chance of preventing the disease or stopping its progress lies in blocking the formation of both bap and tau.
It is unlikely a single drug will successfully block both proteins but biotech companies and academic groups are developing new-wave drugs that target bap and tau individually. In future, these could be combined to make a dual-targeting Alzheimer’s treatment.
At the recent Bio conference in Boston a leading proponent of this approach – AC Immune, a Swiss biotech company – announced a new $418m research and development alliance with its commercial partner Genentech, the biotech arm of Switzerland’s Roche.

Down to Earth

The world’s oldest impact crater, a shallow bowl 100km across and formed when a comet or asteroid hit Earth three billion years ago, has been detected in Greenland.
The latest agreement adds a new anti-tau antibody to the companies’ existing $300m programme to produce an anti-abeta antibody, already in clinical trials under the name crenezumab.
“It seems that abeta appears in the brain earlier than tau in the development of Alzheimer’s – well before symptoms appear – but both are linked to later stages of the disease and a cure will need to address both,” says Andrea Pfeifer, AC Immune chief executive.
Crenezumab is about five years ahead of the anti-tau programme. The US National Institutes of Health selected crenezumab for the world’s first attempt to stave off Alzheimer’s in people at high risk of developing the disease. The 300 participants in the $100m NIH trial come from an extended family in Colombia whose members share a rare genetic mutation that typically triggers Alzheimer’s around the age of 45. The trial will show whether or not suppression of abeta plaques in the brain can delay the onset of memory loss and then dementia.
A significant delaying effect from crenezumab could make it an important drug – and a future partner for one of the anti-tau drugs at earlier stages of development.
.......................................................................
Stem cell treatment gives sight to sore eyes
Although embryonic stem cells remain a hot political issue on both sides of the Atlantic, only one small biotechnology company is actively testing them in patients.
Last November, Geron stopped the world’s first clinical trial of embryonic stem cells – to repair nerve damage following spinal cord injury – for financial reasons. That left the embryonic field to Advanced Cell Technology (ACT), one of whose products aims to treat various forms of blindness.
Speaking to the FT at the recent Bio conference in Boston, Gary Rabin, ACT chief executive, and Bob Lanza, chief scientist, said the seven patients treated so far – for two progressive eye diseases, Stargardt’s disease and age-related macular degeneration (AMD) – were all doing well.
“Though the primary aim of these ‘phase one’ trials is to assess safety, we are seeing significant improvements in all seven patients,” says Lanza. “There is a real biological signal that the treatments are working.”
The treatment involves injecting retinal cells, grown from embryonic stem cells, into the eyes of people whose own cells have been destroyed by disease. As the new cells grow in the retina, the patient’s sight improves. It is unlikely anyone with advanced disease who is almost blind will have good eyesight restored; but the treatment could arrest the deterioration and preserve good sight for people still in early stages of Stargardt’s or AMD.
ACT’s schedule calls for a total of 36 patients to have been treated by early next year. These will include 12 Stargardt’s patients in the UK. In the US, another 12 Stargardt’s patients and 12 AMD patients will be treated.
The company says one advantage of its embryonic stem cells is that they are all derived from a single cell isolated “non-destructively” in 2005 from an embryo at an early development stage. Other embryonic stem cell lines used for research came from slightly older embryos, which would have been destroyed in the process.
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A father with his baby©Dreamstime
Children of older fathers could age more slowly
Slow down ageing: get an old dad
Delaying paternity has had a bad press over the years, as more harmful mutations are likely to be transmitted to offspring by older fathers. But now there is some good news: if you avoid one of these disease-causing mutations, you are likely to age more slowly if you have an older father or grandfather.
A study of almost 2,000 people and their parents in the Philippines carried out by scientists from Northwestern University, Illinois, found that children of older fathers inherit longer telomeres. These are the protective DNA caps at the end of chromosomes. Longer telomeres are linked with slower ageing.
The association of paternal age with offspring telomere length is cumulative across multiple generations, so that someone with an older father and grandfather benefits more than someone with an older father and younger grandfather. The results are published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
Christopher Kuzawa of Northwestern says evolutionary biology can explain the findings: “If our recent ancestors waited until later in adulthood before they reproduced, perhaps for cultural reasons, it would make sense for our bodies to prepare for something similar by investing the extra resources necessary to maintain healthy functioning at more advanced ages.”
However, the authors said men should not take their study as a recommendation to delay reproduction.
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Give it a shot: the nicotine vaccine
A genetic vaccine against nicotine, which could help people stop smoking, has been tested successfully in laboratory mice.
Researchers at Weill Cornell Medical College in New York showed that a single shot of the novel vaccine protected mice against nicotine addiction for their lifetime. The study appears in the journal Science Translational Medicine.
The vaccine contains the genetic sequence of an antibody against nicotine inserted into a harmless virus, together with instructions that direct it to infect liver cells. The liver then acts as a bio-factory, making a steady stream of antibodies that consume nicotine when it enters the bloodstream, preventing most of the chemical from reaching the brain.
“As far as we can see, the best way to treat chronic nicotine addiction from smoking is to have these Pacman-like antibodies on patrol, clearing the blood as needed before nicotine can have any biological effect,” says lead author Ronald Crystal. “Our vaccine allows the body to make its own monoclonal antibodies against nicotine.” Previous vaccines failed because they delivered the antibodies directly and lasted only a few weeks.
“The use of gene therapy to treat ... a non-genetic psychological problem is a concept that would have been unthinkable 10 years ago,” says Robert MacLaren, a stem cell expert at the University of Oxford. “Whilst there may be easier ways of quitting smoking, it could be an exciting concept for other types of drug addiction.”
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Colorado Shooting Suspect's Notebook Described Attack


  • James Holmes
  • James Holmes (Batman Shootings, Aurora, Colo.) - NYTimes Topic
  • James Holmes - YouTube

  • _______________________________________

      


    http://www.voanews.com/content/colorado-shooting-suspects-notebook-described-attack-officials-say-/1446964.html 


    July 26, 2012

    Colorado Shooting Suspect's Notebook Described Attack

    by VOA News

    Law enforcement officials say the suspect in Friday's mass shooting at a Colorado movie theater sent a package to a university psychiatrist containing a notebook describing an attack.

    The package, which reportedly included stick figure drawings of a gunman shooting people, was sent before the shootings. The exact date is unknown.

    The University of Colorado Denver said the postal service delivered a suspicious package Monday, which was turned over to authorities within hours.

    Holmes was a Ph.D. student in neuroscience at the university before dropping out of the program last month.

    Prosecutors expect to formally charge Holmes on July 30, and he could face the death penalty if convicted.

    The July 20 shooting killed 12 people and wounded 58 others.

    Meanwhile, the first funeral was held Wednesday in the wake of the shooting. Gordon Cowden, who was 51, was the oldest of the victims.



    The Daily Star


    Batman shooter sent warning package to psychiatrist: report
    The Daily Star
    AURORA, Colorado: Alleged Colorado shooter James Holmes reportedly sent a warning package to a psychiatrist at his former university with a notebook and drawings of his plans to massacre people. Holmes, 24, is accused of shooting 12 people dead and ...
    Denver shooting suspect James Holmes may have shown plan to psychiatristThe Independent
    Experts didn't see trouble brewing with alleged Colorado shooterThe Daily Advertiser
    James Holmes spent year with neuroscientists before shootingABC7Chicago.com
    Newser -The Asian Age -Huffington Post
    all 241 news articles »

    Wednesday, July 25, 2012

    7/25/2012 - James Holmes News

    AURORA, Colorado (Reuters) - The man accused in the movie house massacre at a Denver-area screening of the new "Batman" film mailed a notebook detailing his plans to a psychiatrist at his university before the attack, Fox News reported on Wednesday, as the first funeral was held for one of the 12 people killed. The package allegedly sent by 24-year-old James Eagan Holmes remained unopened in a mailroom at the University of Colorado, for as long as a week before its discovery on Monday, FoxNews.com reported, citing a law enforcement source. Reuters could not immediately verify the report. ...



    2:37 PM 7/25/2012 - James Holmes News

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    Batman Shooting: Funerals Begin For Aurora, Colo. Theater Shooting Victims ...
    Huffington Post
    Twenty-four-year-old James Holmes is suspected of killing 12 and injuring 58 others during a shooting rampage at a screening of 'The Dark Knight Rises.' (Photo by Joshua Lott/Getty Images). DENVER — A Colorado .... as 24-year-old James Holmes, US ...
    Colorado killings leave gun group silentSan Francisco Chronicle
    'Batman' shooting puts gun control in political spotlightnewjerseynewsroom.com
    Colorado residents buy guns in wake of theater shootingKING5.com
    Metro -Examiner.com -The Age
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    The Star-Ledger - NJ.com




    James Holmes Spits Frequently At Guards In Jail
    Huffington Post
    Twelve people were killed and dozens were injured in the shooting attack early Friday at an Aurora, Colo., theater during a showing of the Batman movie, "The Dark Knight Rises." (AP Photo/Alex Brandon). Family members of a victim from last week's ...
    James Holmes Bought Rifle After Failing Oral Exam at University of ColoradoABC News
    James Holmes's first hearing, arrests, threats in other 'Dark Knight ...Washington Post
    Alleged shooter was surrounded by brain expertsSan Francisco Chronicle
    Examiner.com -Slate Magazine -The Star-Ledger - NJ.com
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    Enstarz




    Theater Massacre Lawsuits Won't Be Easy,...
    ABC News
    At least one victim of the Aurora, Colo., movie theater massacre has indicated he intends to sue, claiming that the theater failed to adequately protect its audience. Torrence Brown, 18, is being represented by attorney Donald ... In addition to the ...
    Colorado Shooting Survivor Plans to Sue For Violent MovieEnstarz
    James Holmes Is NOT A Victim! Stop Blaming Warner Bros. For His Doing!Global Grind

    all 50 news articles »


    TIME




    Aurora Shooting Victim's Fund At Nearly $2 Million, Warner Bros. Donates ...
    Huffington Post
    ... Century 16 Theater July 24, 2012 in Aurora, Colorado. Twenty-four-year-old James Holmes is suspected of killing 12 and injuring 58 others July 20, during a shooting rampage at a screening of 'The Dark Knight Rises. .... as 24-year-old James Holmes ...
    Students still see "Dark Knight Rises" despite Colorado shootingThe Depaulia

    all 984 news articles »





    'Gangster Squad' Release Date May Shift To 2013 After Aurora Shooting
    Huffington Post
    The shooting suspect in custody after at least 12 people were shot dead and around 50 were wounded at a movie screening in the United States has been identified as 24-year-old James Holmes, US media said Friday. Television networks cited the FBI as ...

    and more »

    Suspected gunman of worst mass-shooting in U.S. history makes his first court appearance in Colorado. ABC NEWS SPECIAL REPORT For more, click here: ... James Holmes Court Appearance: Aurora, Colo. Alleged Gunman in 'Dark Knight Rises' .... Colorado Movie Theater Shooting: Why Did James Holmes Choose Batman?by ABCNews160286 views · Colorado Shooting at The Dark Knight Rises Movie Premiere 14:38. Watch Later Error Colorado Shooting at ...


    Daily Mail




    James Holmes: Colorado Batman shooting witness says Aurora killer ...
    Daily Mail
    The Post also reported today on Holmes's erratic behaviour in custody after his arrest in connection with the shootings. Holmes, who dyed his hair red and called himself The Joker - in reference to the famous Batman villain - has been refusing to co ...
    Aurora shooting: Stephanie Davies and Allie Young 'played dead' to surviveBBC News

    all 138 news articles »


    CBS News




    Court appearance fuels theories about Colorado shooting suspect
    CNN
    (CNN) -- Colorado shooting suspect James Holmes' dazed demeanor during his first court appearance has given rise to a multitude of theories about his mental state, ranging from full-blown psychosis to little more than being "some freak," as one victim ...
    First memorial service scheduled for Colo. victimCBS News
    Dazed & Confused! The Reason Why James Holmes Went Off!Global Grind
    Victims' families urge less usage of Holmes' nameDanbury News Times
    ABC News
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    San Francisco Chronicle




    People leave messages at Colo. shooting memorial
    San Francisco Chronicle
    A visitor to the growing memorial to victims of last Friday's mass shooting at an Aurora, Colo., movie theater, walks past a chalk drawing of a heart and the "Batman" logo, Tuesday, July 24, 2012 across the street from the theater, where 12 people were ...
    Experts mum on warning signsAlbany Times Union

    all 14 news articles »


    New York Daily News




    James Holmes Spitting at Jail Guards
    ABC News
    In the hours after his arrest Friday for the massacre at the Aurora, Colo., movie theater, Holmes stared at the wall in the Arapahoe Police Headquarters with his eyebrows twitching. Holmes told police he was the fictitious Batman villain, the Joker ...
    Aurora maniac James Holmes a total spithead in jail, forced to wear mouthguard ...New York Daily News

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    TIME




    Justin Davis, Undeterred Aurora Shooting Survivor, Returns To See 'The Dark ...
    Huffington Post
    The shooting suspect in custody after at least 12 people were shot dead and around 50 were wounded at a movie screening in the United States has been identified as 24-year-old James Holmes, US media said Friday. Television networks cited the FBI as ...
    Batman Movie Theater Shooting in Aurora, ColoradoTIME
    James Eagen Holmes Shooting Batman Movie Itself is Not to BlamePolicyMic
    Students still see "Dark Knight Rises" despite Colorado shootingThe Depaulia
    KSDK -Daily Mail -Wall Street Journal (blog)
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    New York Daily News




    Aurora maniac James Holmes a total spithead in jail, forced to wear mouthguard ...
    New York Daily News
    Not a single person — no family, friends, clergy, no one — has visited clown-haired mass-murder suspect James Holmes behind bars, where he remains in solitary confinement wearing a mask to prevent him from spitting on guards, sources said Tuesday ...
    James Holmes Is NOT A Victim! Stop Blaming Warner Bros. For His Doing!Global Grind

    all 174 news articles »

    via James Holmes (Batman Shootings, Aurora, Colo.) - Google Blog Search by The Huffington Post News Team on 7/24/12
    AURORA, CO - JULY 21: Seen from the air, police and fire fighters surround the booby-trapped apartment of suspect James Holmes after he went on a shooting rampage at nearby Century 16 movie theatre during an early morning screening of the new Batman movie, 'The Dark Knight Rises,' on July ... Twelve people were killed and over 50 wounded in a shooting attack early Friday at the packed theater during a showing of the Batman movie, "The Dark Knight Rises.

    Colorado Batman shooting shows obvious signs of being staged. http://www.naturalnews.com/036536_James_Holmes_shooting_false_flag.html#ixzz21DegLaHY. James Holmes, the Aurora, Colorado shooter who reportedly ...


    The Star-Ledger - NJ.com




    Colorado theater suspect was surrounded by brain experts during year in ...
    The Star-Ledger - NJ.com
    Enlarge Star-Ledger Wire Services Police cars in front of the Century 16 theater in Aurora, Colo., where a gunman opened fire during the opening of the new Batman movie "The Dark Knight Rises. ... (JONATHAN CASTNER/AFP/GettyImages) Shooting at Colorado ...
    Experts didn't see trouble brewing with alleged Colorado shooterThe Daily Advertiser
    Alleged shooter was surrounded by brain expertsAtlanta Journal Constitution
    James Holmes spent year with neuroscientists before shootingABC7Chicago.com
    Newser -Huffington Post
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    Christian Science Monitor




    My baby survived the Batman shooting
    Herald Sun
    ONE of the victims of Friday's shooting massacre in Aurora, Colorado has become a new father but may not know it yet. Kate Medley, whose husband Caleb was shot in the eye, gave birth early Tuesday to a baby boy, ... her newborn son Hugo Jackson Medley ...
    Caleb and Katie MedleyNew York Daily News
    Colorado shooting: Wife of wounded victim gives birth to baby boyChristian Science Monitor
    Colorado shooting victim's wife has baby; 20 still hospitalizedReuters

    all 761 news articles »


    TIME




    Batman Movie Theater Shooting in Aurora, Colorado
    TIME
    A shrine for the victims of the shooting at an Aurora Century 16 theater where James Holmes, 24, allegedly killed 12 people and wounded many more in Aurora, Colo., July 22, 2012. People mourn for the 12 victims of the mass shooting at a shrine built ...
    Colorado Theater Shooting: Batman Mask Found At Suspect James Holmes ...Huffington Post
    Colo. suspect's mom learned of shooting from mediakypost.com
    Source: Batman mask found at suspect apartmentKSDK
    Daily Mail -U-T San Diego -New York Daily News
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