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Office Of Tobacco Control Welcomes Removal Of All Tobacco Advertising From Retail Premises, Ireland
The Office of Tobacco Control (OTC) today (July 1, 2009) welcomed the commencement by the Department of Health and Children of further provisions of the Public Health (Tobacco) Acts, 2002 and 2004. The key provisions now commenced are:
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Results From A European Caregiver Survey Highlight The Impact Of Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) On The Child And The Family
Shire plc (LSE: SHP, NASDAQ: SHPGY), the global specialty biopharmaceutical company, today announced results of a European survey that found a child"s Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) symptoms at school were a key concern for parents, yet outside of school their child"s ADHD also had significant impact on parents" personal time.1 The survey also revealed key findings surrounding parents" role in assessment and treatment for their child.1 Additionally, the survey suggested that informational needs may not be met adequately for these children with ADHD and their families.1 Conducted in partnership with ADHD advocacy groups in four EU countries, the survey analysed parental impressions surrounding the impact of ADHD on their child, themselves and their family, as well as their child"s ADHD treatment plan.
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NewYork-Presbyterian/Columbia Physician-Scientists Present At 2009 American Transplant Congress In Boston
NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital/Columbia University Medical Center physician-scientists presented new research at the 2009 American Transplant Congress in Boston, May 30 to June 3. Topics included minimizing steroid exposure for liver transplant patients with hepatitis C; hypothermic machine perfusion vs. cold storage for preserving donor livers; and the effectiveness of neutrophil-lymphocyte ratio in predicting colorectal liver metastases in liver cancer patients undergoing transplantation.
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The Obama Administration Ramps Up Push For Health Care Reform

The Obama administration ramps up efforts to promote health care reform and reacts to a sobering announcement by the Congressional Budget Office about the scoring of a health care bill. CBS News/Associated Press reports on the president"s presence at a New Jersey rally: "President Barack Obama returned to campaign-style rhetoric on Thursday, telling a political rally that inaction is not an option and urging allies to push for his overhaul of the nation"s health care system. ... Obama told the gathering, which drew more than 17,000 people on a sweaty afternoon - the president"s first political rally since taking office - that he is confident Congress will take action on health care before they leave on an August recess. The lawmakers" action, however, is only the first step toward the president"s goal. ... Obama said recession is linked with the burden of the health care system on the economy. He said the nation"s fiscal future depends on changing the health care system: "Health care reform is deficit reform"" (7/16). The Star Tribune/Associated Press puts the president"s action in context: "Up one day. Down the next. Sometimes legislation to remake the nation"s health care system moves in both directions at once. President Barack Obama"s top domestic priority is on an unpredictable, midsummer trajectory as the White House and Democrats struggle to bring the complex, controversial issue to a vote in both houses before lawmakers leave town for their August break." The AP also reports on the administration"s reaction to CBO Director Douglas Elmendorf announcement"s that there were not any net federal savings for the health bill. "But a few hundred miles away, all was not well for the president and his allies. Elmendorf"s remarks gave ammunition to Republican critics of the bill" (Espo, 7/17). NBC"s Today Show interviewed the President who began by saying: "The American people have to recognize that there"s no such thing as a free lunch, right? So we can"t just provide care to everybody, it has no cost whatsoever, you don"t end up having to make any decisions." Obama talked about self-responsibility, business responsibility and an individual mandate. He said: "I have changed my mind on this, because what I was persuaded of was that if we can phase this in so that we know there"s affordable insurance out there -- and, in fact, a lot of the uninsured are relatively young people who can be insured fairly cheaply -- that that actually will drive down the costs for everybody." (Snyderman, 7/16). Meanwhile, The Associated Press reports on the appearances of Vice President Joe Biden and Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius at a health care forum in Alexandria, Va., on Thursday. "Biden says there has never been a better time to overhaul the nation"s health care system because the industry now recognizes that helping the uninsured will ultimately bolster its bottom line.... he said drug companies recognize the potential profits in extending coverage to nearly 50 million Americans without health insurance" (7/16). This information was reprinted from kaiserhealthnews.org with kind permission from the Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation. You can view the entire Kaiser Daily Health Policy Report, search the archives and sign up for email delivery at kaiserhealthnews.org. © Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation. All rights reserved.


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