DNA test helps hospital choose right medication

A new DNA test offered at Thomas Memorial Hospital is helping psychiatrists more quickly determine which drugs work best for their patients.

Thomas Memorial started offering the DNA tests in January at its South Charleston imaging center.

"You walk to the laboratory, the representative takes a giant cotton swab, swabs the inside of your cheek and you leave. It could not be much more simple," Dr. Tara F. Ray said.

The hospital then ships the swabs to a company called AssureRX, where lab technicians run DNA tests on the samples.

"Based on certain kinetic DNA types, you can determine what medication a patient may not tolerate well or what drug might work well," Ray said.

In a few days, doctors get the test results back with medication suggestions. Ray said the information is separated into three columns: medications that should work, medications that might work but should be monitored closely and medications that patients should avoid.

"It really helps narrow the focus of where to start," she said.

Doctors receive several bits of information from the DNA results, including how fast their patients' bodies break down certain enzymes. People with quick metabolisms need a higher dosage, because their bodies break down medications faster.

A person with a slower metabolism, however, needs a lower dosage because their body doesn't break down drugs as quickly. That leads to higher concentrations of medication in their bloodstream, creating greater potential for side effects.

Ray said the medication list is limited at this time, but AssureRX is always adding more to the list. She said even with the short list, the DNA testing has helped limit the amount of experimentation she has to do when prescribing new drugs.

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DNA test helps hospital choose right medication

Posted in DNA

State to get Skinner evidence for DNA testing

LIVINGSTON - Henry Skinner is a small man with a crooked nose, acid tongue and keen mind. Convicted of fatally pummeling his lover with an ax handle and stabbing her adult sons in a 1993 New Year's Eve Texas Panhandle rampage, he has used his 17 years on death row to assail Texas' criminal justice system as "cunning and deceptive."

In a case that has become an international anti-death penalty cause clbre, Skinner since 2001 has battled to obtain DNA testing of items he believes will clear him of the Pampa killings of Twila Busby and her sons, Randy and Elwin.

Skinner's campaign for more testing twice has prompted courts to stay his scheduled executions. His quest has been complicated by his first lawyer's decision to abandon DNA testing after examination of clothing worn by Skinner on the night of the killings revealed traces of the victims' blood.

Despite prosecutor-sanctioned testing of a few items in 2000 and a 2011 U.S. Supreme Court ruling that opened a new avenue to such testing, rape kit specimens, knives, fingernail scrapings and an apparently bloodstained windbreaker found near Busby's body still have not been examined.

All that changed last month when the Texas Attorney General's Office dropped its opposition to testing and, in tandem with Skinner's lawyers, compiled a list of more than 40 items for high-tech examination.

The items are to be turned over to Texas Department of Public Safety lab technicians on Thursday.

"This nightmare is almost over," Skinner said in a recent death-row interview. "I'm looking forward to the day I can leave. I'll either leave with a few boxes under my arm or in a box. I've already spent 18 years in hell."

Key evidence lost

The state's seeming capitulation appeared a breakthrough for Skinner, who has orchestrated a "Free Skinner" campaign through frequent prison cell pronouncements and postings on his website, "Hell Hole News."

Even as Skinner's lawyers and supporters breathed a sigh of relief, though, it once again appeared the victory may only be partial. State lawyers admit that, after a thorough search, they cannot find the windbreaker, which Skinner attorney Rob Owen called a key piece of evidence.

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State to get Skinner evidence for DNA testing

Posted in DNA

Mindray Medical to Present at AACC Clinical Lab Expo 2012

SHENZHEN, China, July5, 2012 /PRNewswire-Asia-FirstCall/ -- Mindray Medical International Limited (MR), a leading developer, manufacturer and marketer of medical devices worldwide, announced today that it will present at the American Association for Clinical Chemistry's 2012 Clinical Lab Expo in Los Angeles, California from July 17 to July 19, 2012.

Mindray will exhibit its full range of in-vitro diagnostic products and new products including the BS-2000 Auto Biochemistry Analyzer and EH-2050B Plus Automatic Urine Sediment Analyzer.

The BS-2000 modular system is the fastest biochemistry analyzer designed by the company, with a throughput range from 2,000 photometric tests per hour for a single module to up to 4,400 tests per hour for dual modules with electrolyte tests. Hospitals and clinical laboratories with high sample volumes will benefit the most from its fast speed. The BS-2000 also has a complete line of original reagents and calibrators with methodological traceability and controls, making it a versatile option for customers seeking a high level of efficiency, automation and scalability. This model will integrate easily with future Mindray products.

The EH-2050B Plus fully automatic urine sediment analyzer performs comprehensive urinalysis for patients. The equipment can automatically track and analyze different elements, such as red blood cells, in urine samples. It can connect with different urine dry-chemistry analyzers and use their data to form an integrated urinalysis report.

"We are excited to showcase our products to the clinical laboratory professionals at this high-profile and reputable conference," said Mr. Jie Liu, Mindray's Chief Operating Officer. "We will continue to create innovative, high-quality and high-performance products in order to meet the needs of our customers worldwide."

Exhibition Details:

Date:July 17-19, 2012 Location: Los Angeles Convention Center, Los Angeles, California, USA Booth:#2235, South Hall

About AACC

The AACC is an international society comprising medical professionals with an interest in clinical chemistry, clinical laboratory science and laboratory medicine.

About Mindray

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Mindray Medical to Present at AACC Clinical Lab Expo 2012

A gem of a computer boosts research base

A gem of a computer boosts research base

11:00am Wednesday 4th July 2012 in News

A SUPER COMPUTER capable of helping combat swine flu and finding new planets was unveiled in Oxfordshire yesterday.

The million-pound machine called Emerald will be used by researchers to crunch medical research data on Tamiflu, create software for the worlds most powerful radio telescope and see how human action is likely to affect the climate.

It will also be able to look at swine flu as well as finding better ways to process medical images.

The Government has provided 3.7m to fund two computers, Emerald and Iridis, and their running costs.

Emerald will be based at the Rutherford Appleton Laboratory (RAL), Harwell, while Iridis is at Southampton University. Prof Anne Trefellen, of Oxford University, said Harwell was chosen because it also houses the Diamond Light Source and the Isis neutron source.

Emeralds super-fast processing is combined with high energy efficiency.

Prof Trefellen said: Scientists there are creating a lot of data and it makes sense to avoid moving it large distances.

We are also hoping that as Harwell expands, more businesses will be able to use these facilities.

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A gem of a computer boosts research base

Astronaut outlines life in space

Stephanie Wilson

She is in Dunedin for the New Zealand International Science Festival and shared her journey with an audience of about 500 in a sold-out event at St David St lecture theatre.

They learned about astronaut training at the Johnson Space Centre in Houston, Texas, including the "vomit comet" which had a tendency to make people sick on its flight path set to create 20-second bursts of microgravity.

Ms Wilson also shared a video of a mission to the International Space Station in April 2010.

Along with footage of take-off and docking, the audience saw how astronauts moved around, both inside and outside the station and shuttle, transferring equipment.

"We use our hands to get around, rather than our feet," she said.

An exercise session, complete with aerobics and resistance training; an evening meal in which an M&M was put into a floating sphere of water; measuring of astronauts, because spines expand with no gravity; and shots of astronauts tucking up into their sleeping bags at night were also included.

Ms Wilson enjoyed sharing images of lightning storms and the Southern lights and described the space station, an "orbiting laboratory", as "just a phenomenon".

She will speak again at TedxDunedin's function at The Apartment tonight. The science festival ends on Sunday.

- ellie.constantine@odt.co.nz

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Astronaut outlines life in space

NASA Signs Agreement with Craig Technologies for Kennedy's Unique Equipment

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. -- NASA has signed a new partnership with Craig Technologies of Melbourne, Fla., to maintain an inventory of unique processing and manufacturing equipment for future mission support at the agency's Kennedy Space Center in Florida.

Under a five-year, non-reimbursable Space Act Agreement, NASA will loan 1,600 pieces of equipment to Craig Technologies. The equipment supported Space Shuttle Program capabilities such as flight hardware and cable fabrication. It was used in manufacturing, repair and inspection processes necessary for spaceflight hardware, avionics and ground processing.

"This is an innovative way to ensure that space shuttle era technology and tools are reused for other hi-tech, private sector purposes along the Space Coast," said David Weaver, NASA's associate administrator for the Office of Communications."This is all part of NASA's plan to support the transition to the next era of exploration, creating good-paying American jobs and keeping the United States the world leader in space."

Craig Technologies will be able to use the equipment for five years beginning January 2013 or until NASA requires use of it, whichever comes first. Craig will be required to operate, maintain and store the property at a single location within a 50-mile radius of Kennedy.

"Kennedy continues to work with the commercial community to find inventive ways to share our unique capabilities," said Joyce Riquelme, manager of the Kennedy Center Planning and Development Office. "This partnership benefits new customers who will use the equipment now, and keeps it close for our use in future spaceflight projects."

The equipment currently is located in the NASA Shuttle Logistics Depot in Cape Canaveral, Fla., and managed by United Space Alliance (USA). The equipment will remain there through the end of the year when the current USA lease expires.

For more information about Kennedy, visit: http://www.nasa.gov/kennedy

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NASA Signs Agreement with Craig Technologies for Kennedy's Unique Equipment

Nasa's relief centre plan 'irked China'

U-TAPAO

BEIJING : China was not worried about Nasa's now-cancelled weather research project but more concerned about the US request to use U-tapao airport as a centre for its regional Humanitarian Assistance and Disaster Relief (HADR) project, Foreign Minister Surapong Tovichakchaikul says.

Mr Surapong said he discussed the two issues with his Chinese counterpart Yang Jiechi during a working lunch meeting yesterday.

While some in Thailand believed China was worried about Nasa's request to use the Thai naval air base to research weather conditions over Southeast Asia, Beijing, in fact, voiced more concern about the US request to use the base for the HADR project, he said.

Mr Surapong did not elaborate on why Beijing was worried about the use of U-tapao as an HADR centre, saying he would reveal more details when he speaks to the media at the Foreign Ministry tomorrow.

"Everything will be clear that day. Those who do not understand the issues and try to mix them together will know that they, in fact, do not know anything. I believe the opposition party which opposed the Nasa project will be lost by the facts if they learn them from me," Mr Surapong said.

Nasa scrapped the project to conduct the climate study using U-tapao airport as a base after the cabinet decided to forward the issue to parliament for a joint debate next month.

The US request to use U-tapao airport for HADR has not been finalised, pending talks between Bangkok and Washington.

The US government would like to use U-tapao airport because it is centrally located for use in helping other countries in the region.

Former prime minister Abhisit Vejjajiva proposed at the Asean-UN Summit in 2010 that U-tapao airport be used as a base for HADR as Southeast Asia had experienced natural disasters more frequently in recent years.

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Nasa's relief centre plan 'irked China'

NASA Launching New Sun Observing Spacecraft Thursday

July 4, 2012

Image Caption: SUMIs instruments are designed to study magnetic fields of the suns chromosphere -- a thin layer of solar atmosphere sandwiched between the visible surface, photosphere and its atmosphere, the corona. Hinode, a collaborative mission of the space agencies of Japan, the United States, United Kingdom and Europe, captured these very dynamic pictures of our sun's chromosphere on Jan. 12, 2007. Image credit: JAXA/NASA

Lee Rannals for redOrbit.com Your Universe Online

While the nation shoots off plenty of fireworks for the Fourth of July, NASA will be sending off its own rocket the next day.

The space agency will be launching its Solar Ultraviolet Magnetograph Investigation (SUMI) on Thursday to study the magnetic fields on the sun.

SUMI will set out to study the constantly changing magnetic fields in an area of the suns low atmosphere called the chromosphere.

These magnetic fields lie at the heart of how the sun can create huge explosions of light, like solar flares and eruptions of particles like coronal mass ejections (CMEs).

Whats novel with this instrument is that it observes ultraviolet light, when all the others look at infrared or visible light, Jonathan Cirtain, a solar scientist at NASAs Marshall Space Flight Center, said in a prepared statement. Those wavelengths of light correspond to the lowest levels in the suns atmosphere, but SUMI will look at locations higher in the chromosphere.

The higher layer of the chromosphere is known as the transition region, because the chromosphere transitions there into the part of the suns atmosphere called the corona. NASA said this region is dominated by the magnetic fields, in which solar material heats up dramatically forming the corona and the base of the solar wind.

According to the space agency, understanding the structure of the magnetic fields in the transition region will allow scientists to understand how the corona is heated and how the solar wind is formed.

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NASA Launching New Sun Observing Spacecraft Thursday

Alan Poindexter dies: Space community mourns NASA astronaut

Alan Poindexter dies: NASA and astronauts around the world remember the former US Navy Captain and NASA astronaut as a man who 'proudly served his country for 26 years'.

NASA officials and astronauts around the world are mourning the death of retired space shuttle commander Alan Poindexter, a two-time space shuttle flier who died Sunday (July 1) in a tragic jet ski accident in Florida.

Poindexter, known as "Dex" at NASA, died while vacationing with his family in Pensacola, Fla. He was jet skiing with his two sons when one of the jet skis unexpectedly hit him, according to media reports.

News of the accident and Poindexter's death stunned NASA's astronaut corps. Poindexter retired from NASA's astronaut ranks in 2010 to serve as dean of students at the U.S. Navy's Naval Postgraduate School.

"We in the astronaut family have lost not only a dear friend, but also a patriot of the United States," said Peggy Whitson, chief of the Astronaut Office at NASA's Johnson Space Center in Houston, in a statement. "He proudly served his country for 26 years as a fighter pilot, test pilot, astronaut and commander of a space shuttle. I am proud to have both flown in space and worked with him for so many years. Dex will be deeply missed by those of us at Johnson and the entire NASA family."

Hailing from Rockville, Md., Alan Poindexterwas a U.S. Navy Captain selected to join NASA's astronaut corps in 1998. He flew on two space missions, with his first as the pilot of shuttle Atlantis on STS-122 a 2008 mission that delivered the European Columbus laboratory module to the International Space Station. Later, Poindexter commanded the shuttle Discovery's STS-131 mission to deliver supplies to the station. [Photos: Discovery's Amazing STS-131 Launch]

In all, Poindexter logged 28 days in space. He is survived by his wife Lisa and their two grown sons.

"Alan and I joined the astronaut corps in 1998 and flew together on STS-122, which was truly an incredible experience," said NASA Associate Administrator for Education and former astronaut LelandMelvin. "He was a passionate, caring and selfless individual who will be missed by all."

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Alan Poindexter dies: Space community mourns NASA astronaut

2.7.2012 – 1/4 – Mars, Energy,

03-07-2012 13:50 Mp3 Mars, Energy, & Mind Uploads: On Monday's show, aerospace and defense systems developer Sir Charles Shults discussed his work with alternative energy sources, the discovery of new extrasolar planets, the new rover which will land soon on Mars, and the concept of mind uploading into virtual worlds which could lead to a form of immortality. The Curiosity rover is scheduled to arrive on Mars on August 5th-- it's a larger vehicle than the previous rovers, and has advanced testing and photographic equipment. It's due to land in Gale Crater-- an area where water would have been present over a great period of time, and Shults believes there is a high probability that fossils of primitive life may be found there. (Check out our Insta-Poll on whether you believe there's current or past life on Mars.) There may be some simple ways to develop interstellar travel, Shults declared. One possibility is a reactionless thruster, which could be thought of as a quantum mechanics device "that could produce thrust in one direction without throwing exhaust out the other side," he explained. Regarding energy, he'd like to see the end of burning petroleum for fuel, and one development he expressed enthusiasm for is a new type of fuel cell that can also act as a kind of battery. By 2025, Shults foresees the ability for people to upload the contents of their brain, or back-up their memories to a computer. This capability could prove highly useful if someone suffered a brain ...

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2.7.2012 - 1/4 - Mars, Energy,

Æ7 Fyte’s "Funnies" | Funnies And Fails – Video

03-07-2012 15:46 Thumbs up & Favorite for Æ7 Fyte! (Open Description for Info!) Æ7 Fyte: "Leave a like for my first funnies and fails! Make sure to subscribe if you want more of these and comment. Also my Episode 3 should be my next upload." Æ7 Fyte's Channel: Æ7 Fyte's Twitter: /// Note: Please keep in Mind that this is NOT MY Video, i got the Permission to Upload and Claim this. If you're the owner of this Video, and don't want it uploaded anymore, contact me and I'll remove it as soon as Possible. Thanks. Follow us on Twitter:

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Æ7 Fyte's "Funnies" | Funnies And Fails - Video

India to give free medicine to hundreds of millions

By Henry Foy

MUMBAI (Reuters) - India has put in place a $5.4 billion policy to provide free medicine to its people, a decision that could change the lives of hundreds of millions, but a ban on branded drugs stands to cut Big Pharma out of the windfall.

From city hospitals to tiny rural clinics, India's public doctors will soon be able to prescribe free generic drugs to all comers, vastly expanding access to medicine in a country where public spending on health was just $4.50 per person last year.

The plan was quietly adopted last year but not publicised. Initial funding has been allocated in recent weeks, officials said.

Under the plan, doctors will be limited to a generics-only drug list and face punishment for prescribing branded medicines, a major disadvantage for pharmaceutical giants in one of the world's fastest-growing drug markets.

"Without a doubt, it is a considerable blow to an already beleaguered industry, recently the subject of several disadvantageous decisions in India," said KPMG partner Chris Stirling, who is European head of Chemicals and Pharmaceuticals.

"Pharmaceutical firms will likely rethink their emerging markets strategies carefully to take account of this development, and any similar copycat moves across other geographies," he added.

But the initiative would overhaul a system where healthcare is often a luxury and private clinics account for four times as much spending as state hospitals, despite 40 percent of the people living below the poverty line, or $1.25 a day or less.

Within five years, up to half of India's 1.2 billion people are likely to take advantage of the scheme, the government says. Others are likely to continue visiting private hospitals and clinics, where the scheme will not operate.

"The policy of the government is to promote greater and rational use of generic medicines that are of standard quality," said L.C. Goyal, additional secretary at the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare and a key proponent of the policy.

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India to give free medicine to hundreds of millions

Nuclear Medicine Imaging Devices: Global Market Prospects 2012-2022

NEW YORK, July 4, 2012 /PRNewswire/ -- Reportlinker.com announces that a new market research report is available in its catalogue:

Nuclear Medicine Imaging Devices: Global Market Prospects 2012-2022

http://www.reportlinker.com/p0923283/Nuclear-Medicine-Imaging-Devices-Global-Market-Prospects-2012-2022.html#utm_source=prnewswire&utm_medium=pr&utm_campaign=Medical_Imaging

Report Details

Our latest pharma report -Nuclear Medicine Imaging Devices: Global Market Prospects 2012-2022- offers a comprehensive view of the global nuclear medicine imaging systems market. The report analyses recent trends in this market and anticipates the progression in the market over the next decade with global, regional and submarket forecasts. The report also reveals the market's strengths and weaknesses, revealing areas that will experience growth and present new business opportunities. Visiongain analyses predict the global value of the nuclear medicine imaging systems market in 2011 to be worth $1.5bn. Growth in this market will be driven by new technology and varied uses of the technology.

Despite experiencing a decline in sales volume and reduced demand in the aftermath of the global economic recession, the nuclear medicine market recovered well, and has seen strong growth in recent years. Much of this growth has been linked to the advent of hybrid units, such as positron emission tomography/computed tomography (PET/CT) scans, where both anatomical and functional images can be captured. For example, the combination of Positron Emission Tomography (PET) with other imaging modalities, such as MRI (Magnetic Resonance Imaging) has allowed for the imaging of cartilage damage, previously thought unreliable.

Nuclear Medicine Imaging Devices: Market Global Market Prospects 2012-2022report forecasts the size and value of leading national/regional markets including the US, Europe, Japan, India and China. For each of these, visiongain identifies prevailing trends and strategies that will steer this diagnostic technology over the forecast period. Developed nuclear medicine markets such as the US and UK are highly saturated and the focus is likely to be towards upgrading stand-alone PET and SPECT system with fully integrated hybrid units, that offer a high level of anatomical and functional detail. Emerging countries such asChinaandIndiawill offer more opportunity, due a lack of nuclear medicine facilities and technologies, and increased healthcare spending. It has been predicted that healthcare investment in these countries is expected to double in the next seven years.

How will the nuclear medicine imaging systems market develop this decade? Which regions offer the most significant growth opportunities between 2012 and 2022? Which of the nuclear medicine based imaging devices are growing most strongly? Who are the leading companies in the nuclear medicine imaging systems market? What are some promising technological developments in the market?

Visiongain answers these critical questions and many more through the in-depth analyses that are presented in this report.

Why you should buyNuclear Medicine Imaging Devices: Global Market Prospects 2012-2022

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Nuclear Medicine Imaging Devices: Global Market Prospects 2012-2022

Postoperative delirium in cardiac surgery patients associated with prolonged cognitive impairment

Public release date: 4-Jul-2012 [ | E-mail | Share ]

Contact: Jim Fessenden james.fessenden@umassmed.edu 508-856-2600 University of Massachusetts Medical School

WORCESTER, MA Older patients undergoing cardiac surgery often experience changes in cognitive function, such as memory problems or an inability to focus, in the days immediately following their operations. While these changes are usually temporary, for unknown reasons, a significant number of cardiac patients will encounter long-term cognitive problems, lasting as long as a year after their surgeries.

Now, new research published in the July 5 issue of The New England Journal of Medicine (NEJM), establishes a link between postoperative delirium and prolonged loss of cognitive function in cardiac surgery patients. Led by investigators at the University of Massachusetts Medical School, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center and the Aging Brain Center at Hebrew SeniorLife, the findings suggest that interventions to prevent delirium in advance of surgery could help cardiac patients avoid long-term cognitive consequences.

A state of confusion that can develop following illness, infection or surgery, delirium is one of the most common complications in hospitalized patients over age 65. "Our findings now suggest that postoperative delirium, once thought of as an acute, transient cognitive disorder, may have longer-term effects on cognitive function in patients undergoing cardiac surgery," said co-lead author Jane Saczynski, PhD, assistant professor of medicine at the University of Massachusetts Medical School.

While delirium has been studied quite extensively in other patient populations, including general medical and surgical patients and orthopedic surgery patients, few studies of delirium have targeted cardiac surgery patients. "With the aging of the patient population undergoing cardiac surgery and increases in survival after surgery, clinicians and patients are increasingly concerned with factors associated with quality of life, including cognitive status, as major outcomes of surgery," the authors write. "Whether postoperative delirium is associated with prolonged cognitive dysfunction has been unclear."

The researchers followed 225 patients, aged 60 to 90, who underwent either coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG) or heart valve replacement surgery at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center (BIDMC), UMass Memorial Medical Center or the Boston VA Medical Center, for one year after their surgeries, assessing them for both delirium and cognitive impairment.

"One of the real strengths of our study is that we assessed patients' cognitive function preoperatively and an average of five times during the year after surgery," said co-lead author Edward Marcantonio, MD, section chief for research in BIDMC's Division of General Medicine and Primary Care and professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School. "Previous research had shown an association between postoperative delirium and functional decline in activities of daily living [such as grooming and dressing, driving, shopping, preparing meals and managing medications and finances.] But, believe it or not, the one thing that's been most uncertain is the association between delirium and long-term cognitive difficulties. This study allowed us to accurately model the course of cognitive function and to compare the rate of recovery among patients with and without postoperative delirium."

The results showed that compared with patients who did not experience delirium, the 103 patients who developed delirium after cardiac surgery 46 percent of the total experienced a more significant drop in cognitive performance immediately following surgery, as determined by the Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE). They also took significantly longer to recover back to their pre-surgical level of function than did patients who did not develop delirium. For example, five days after surgery, nearly half of those who did not develop delirium had returned to pre-operative levels of function while less than 20 percent of those who did develop delirium had returned to pre-operative level of function; six months after surgery, more than three-quarters of those without delirium had recovered cognitively compared to only 60 percent of those with delirium.

Although patients who developed delirium took longer to recover to their pre-operative levels of cognitive performance, they continued to improve in the weeks and months after surgery. Cognitive performance reached preoperative levels and stabilized one month after surgery in patients who did not develop delirium but continued to improve until six months after surgery in those with delirium.

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Postoperative delirium in cardiac surgery patients associated with prolonged cognitive impairment

MU med school, Cabell Huntington Hospital to be on TV

CHARLESTON, W.Va. -- Marshall University's medical school and Cabell Huntington Hospital will be featured in Thursday's episode of NBC's Rock Center, the hospital announced Tuesday.

The newsmagazine will feature the Maternal Addiction and Recovery Center at MU's Joan C. Edwards School of Medicine and the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit at Cabell Huntington.

NBC will air the newsmagazine at 10 p.m. Thursday on WSAZ-TV.

An NBC news crew spent time at the hospital in early April and interviewed Dr. David Chaffin, a maternal fetal specialist and Dr. Sean Loudin, a neontologist, about the medical school and hospital's work to address the issue of opiate drug addiction by pregnant women and its effect on newborns.

"It is our hope that the national media exposure will give pregnant women who are addicted the courage to seek care in treatment programs like our center," said Dr. David C. Jude, chairman of the Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology at MUSOM. "Receiving prenatal care early in the pregnancy significantly reduces the likelihood of complications of pregnancy, and we hope that increasing awareness of both the problem and places where help is available will inspire women to seek care sooner in their pregnancy.

"Our experience so far has shown us that a little more than half of these women can either use significantly less or come off the medications completely and by doing so significantly reduces the severity of neonatal withdrawal and may prevent some babies from having withdrawal symptoms," Jude said.

The newsmagazine will feature the Maternal Addiction and Recovery Center at MU's Joan C. Edwards School of Medicine and the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit at Cabell Huntington.

NBC will air the newsmagazine at 10 p.m. Thursday on WSAZ-TV.

An NBC news crew spent time at the hospital in early April and interviewed Dr. David Chaffin, a maternal fetal specialist and Dr. Sean Loudin, a neontologist, about the medical school and hospital's work to address the issue of opiate drug addiction by pregnant women and its effect on newborns.

"It is our hope that the national media exposure will give pregnant women who are addicted the courage to seek care in treatment programs like our center," said Dr. David C. Jude, chairman of the Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology at MUSOM. "Receiving prenatal care early in the pregnancy significantly reduces the likelihood of complications of pregnancy, and we hope that increasing awareness of both the problem and places where help is available will inspire women to seek care sooner in their pregnancy.

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MU med school, Cabell Huntington Hospital to be on TV

MEDICAL SCHOOL New bill says school should get $15 million

Posted on | July 3, 2012 | Comments

Newly amended legislation calls on lawmakers to put UC Riversides medical school at the top of the list for any money from the settlement of a federal lawsuit against the Senior Care Action Network health plan.

Until this week, the measure by Assemblyman Jeff Miller, R-Corona, dealt with improving roads needed for fire suppression. It passed the Assembly in May 2011 and was awaiting consideration in the Senate.

Mondays amendments would require the state to give the UCR Medical School $15 million from the impending settlement of what the bill says is the U.S. Department of Justices investigation of the senior health plans payment rates. The states share is expected to exceed $100 million, according to the bill.

Notwithstanding any other law, from any amount paid to the State of California as a result of an investigation into possible overpayments of state funds to the Senior Care Action Network (SCAN) Health Plan and available for expenditure for the purposes of this act, as the highest priority for the use of these funds, fifteen million dollars ($15,000,000) shall be transferred to the Regents of the University of California for allocation, without regard to fiscal year, to the School of Medicine at the University of California, Riverside, reads the bill.

Millers district doesnt include UC Riverside. The campus, though, is part of the 31st Senate District, where Miller faces Democrat Richard Roth, a Riverside attorney, in one of the states most competitive races. Roth touted his support for the medical school in campaign mailers leading up to the June 5 primary.

By: Jim Miller

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MEDICAL SCHOOL New bill says school should get $15 million

The Molyneux Problem

Stefan Molyneux is a popular libertarian broadcaster who has in recent years acquired a considerable following. In Universally Preferable Behavior, he takes on an ambitious task. He endeavors to provide a rational basis for morality. Should he succeed, he would not only have achieved something of monumental importance; he would also have rendered a great service to libertarianism. Molyneux's system of morality has resolutely libertarian implications. If he is right, surely a time for rejoicing is at hand.

It would be cruel to arouse false expectations, so I had better say at once that Molyneux does not succeed in his noble goal. He fails, and fails miserably. His arguments are often preposterously bad.

Let us first be clear, in his own words, on what Molyneux wishes to accomplish:

The question before us is thus: can some preferences be objective, i.e., universal? When I talk about universal preferences, I am talking about what people should prefer, not what they always do prefer. (p. 33, emphasis omitted)

These preferences, furthermore, have to do with morality, behavior that can be forcibly imposed on people. "Those preferences which can be considered binding upon others can be termed 'universal preferences' or 'moral rules'" (p. 40).

Is there, then, behavior that is in his sense universally preferable? Our ever-generous author has an abundance of arguments in support of a positive answer to this question. His first claim is that the very fact of engaging in inquiry over the existence of universally preferable behavior suffices to answer the question in the affirmative. If I am engaged in debate about this topic, must I not prefer truth to falsehood? An attempt to deny this leads to contradiction: "If I argue against the proposition that universally preferable behavior is valid, I have already shown my preference for truth over falsehood as well as a preference for correcting those who speak falsely" (p. 40).

Molyneux is certainly right that someone who wants to discover whether universally preferable behavior exists, prefers, while trying to find the answer, truth over falsehood; but how does this generate a preference to correct others with mistaken views? Molyneux wrongly supposes that if someone wants to discover the truth, he must be in engaged in an actual debate with someone else. Why must he? Further, what has any of this to do with enforceable obligations, the ostensible subject of his inquiry?

Molyneux has many more arguments on offer. How can we deny the existence of universally preferable behavior, he asks: does not life itself depend on it? "Thus it is impossible that anyone can logically argue against universally preferable behavior, since if he is alive to argue, he must have followed universally preferable behaviors such as breathing, eating and drinking."

Is it not obvious that Molyneux has confused two different senses of "universally preferable behavior"? Biological laws are, as even our author elsewhere realizes, descriptive regularities; Molyneux fails utterly to show that acting in accord with such laws to keep oneself alive has anything to do with moral obligation.

Molyneux is not content with "proving" that moral obligations exist. He also has distinctive views about the nature of these obligations. Moral rules must be universal, in a very strong sense:

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The Molyneux Problem

Taiwanese vessel enters Japanese waters near Senkaku Islands

TAIPEI/NAHA, Okinawa Pref. A fishing boat carrying Taiwanese activists was spotted sailing Wednesday morning near the Japan-held Senkaku Islands in the East China Sea and eventually entering Japanese territorial waters, the Japan Coast Guard said.

"We do not know their objective but whatever the purpose, we will definitely not tolerate the action of entering (Japanese) waters," Chief Cabinet Secretary Osamu Fujimura told a news conference in Tokyo. A liaison team has been set up at the prime minister's office to keep watch, he said.

An aircraft of the 11th Regional Coast Guard Headquarters in Naha, Okinawa Prefecture, spotted the boat about 37 km west-southwest of Uotsuri Island, part of the disputed Senkaku Islands administered as part of Okinawa.

The location of the boat falls in the contiguous zone, which is defined by Japan in line with international law as an area where Japanese laws may be applied just outside its territorial waters.

The coast guard said the boat entered the zone around 6:35 a.m. and entered Japan's territorial waters around 7:15 a.m. Four Taiwanese patrol boats were also sailing nearby.

After the coast guard warned the vessels to leave the area, one of the Taiwanese patrol boats responded by displaying a sign saying the waters belong to Taiwan.

In Taipei, Taiwan's Coast Guard Administration officials said five patrol boats were sent to protect the Taiwanese fishing boat that sailed to the disputed islands with nine people on board ? three activists advocating Taiwanese sovereignty over the islands, three Taiwanese crew members and three Indonesian fishermen.

They said the fishing boat, which had left port at 11 p.m. the previous evening, reached a point 0.8 nautical miles (1.5 km) from Uotsuri, the main island of the Senkakus at 7:20 a.m.

At 8:25 a.m. three Japan Coast Guard vessels that arrived on scene lowered three smaller boats into the water, apparently to board the fishing boat for inspection, they said.

At 8:57 a.m., they said, three unarmed Taiwan Coast Guard members boarded the fishing boat, which left the area at 9:05 a.m. and headed back to Taiwan with the coast guard members still on board.

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Taiwanese vessel enters Japanese waters near Senkaku Islands