Popular Articles

Drug May Prolong Survival In Melanoma Patients
The Northern California Melanoma Center (NCMC)"s research showed patients who received GM-CSF (Sargramostim, trade name Leukine) may experience prolonged survival. The study appears in next month"s Journal of Immunotherapy (July/August issue) and will appear online today.

Lixte Biotechnology Holdings' Lead Compound, LB-1.2, Enhances The Effectiveness Of Standard Cancer Chemotherapy In Animal Models
Lixte Biotechnology Holdings (OTC Bulletin Board: LIXT) announced that investigators of the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NINDS) and the National Cancer Institute (NCI), National Institutes of Health and Lixte reported that its novel compound, LB-1.2, enhances the effectiveness of two standard chemotherapy drugs in mouse models of human cancers. This research is being conducted under a Cooperative Research and Development Agreement between NINDS and Lixte. The report was published online in the early edition (June 29) of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Science (US). The print version will appear July 14.
News of the day
'World First' Shows Heart Can Recover, Says British Heart Foundation
In response to the publication of the story of heart transplant patient Hannah Clark in the Lancet , Professor Peter Weissberg, Medical Director of the British Heart Foundation (BHF), described the operation as "an exciting and important event".
Mental Health

Australian Medical Association: Put Increased Tobacco Tax Into Health

The AMA welcomed a proposed increase in tobacco tax. The AMA has always supported increased tax and price signals on products that are bad for your health in order to reduce consumption. This is an opportunity to make health gains for individuals, and the revenue could support essential health care for the increasing unemployed. AMA President, Dr Rosanna Capolingua, said doctors were deeply concerned for the one million Australians expected to lose their jobs over the next few years as a result of the recession. "Unemployment has a huge impact on health. The physical and emotional health needs of these Australians, and of their dependants and families, were ignored in the budget and this needs to be fixed. "Increasing the tax on tobacco and using that money for essential health services will help. "We aren"t happy about the government"s broken promise on the 30% Private Health Insurance Rebate. The AMA is never happy about money being taken out of health. These funds must be directed towards supporting health services. "This means strengthening our struggling public hospitals in preparation for longer queues. It means supporting the affordability of health services for the casualties of the recession. It means supporting mental health services to help people deal with the incredible stress on families and entire communities caused through unemployment. "Doctors are worried about the pressure points in the health system which will be further strained by the recession including public hospitals, health services in the community and particularly mental health services. This is an opportunity for the budget to address these problems. "This is where Government attention, and funding, needs to be focused." Australian Medical Association


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