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Wiley-Blackwell Publishes Inaugural Issue Of Asia-Pacific Psychiatry
Wiley-Blackwell, the scientific, technical, medical and scholarly publishing business of John Wiley & Sons, Inc (NYSE: JWa), (NYSE: JWb), has announced that the inaugural issue of its new journal, Asia-Pacific Psychiatry, is now live online.

Group Files Petition Over Enforcement Of Regulations In Adult Film Industry To Prevent Sexually Transmitted Diseases
The AIDS Healthcare Foundation last week filed a petition in Los Angeles County Superior Court asking "the court to order the Los Angeles County Department of Public Health to enforce regulations that require condom use in adult-film production or take other reasonable steps to stem the spread of disease," the Los Angeles Times reports (Yoshino, 7/17). In the petition, "the group claims that in the month since an actress tested positive for HIV, the county Department of Public Health has done little to address what it considers to be a serious health threat" (AP/San Jose Mercury News, 7/16). In a statement released last week, the department, said, "The county continues to strongly support state legislation and the regulatory role of the [California Division of Occupational Safety and Health] as the most appropriate means to regulate the practices in the adult-film industry that expose performers to unnecessary and preventable occupational risks of acquiring and transmitting these diseases," adding, "The department does not believe that litigation is the best means to deal with this issue" (Yoshino, 7/17).
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Quark Pharmaceuticals Announces Data Indicating Potential Utility Of QPI-1007 For Treatment Of Glaucoma
Quark Pharmaceuticals, Inc., a development-stage pharmaceutical company discovering and developing novel RNA interference (RNAi)-based therapeutics, announced data suggesting that QPI-1007 prevents progressive retinal ganglion cell (RGC) loss in an increased ocular pressure (IOP) rat model of glaucoma. The experiments performed by Prof. Adriana Di Polo of the Department of Pathology and Cell Biology, Universite de Montreal, indicate that QPI-1007 has the potential to treat patients with glaucoma. QPI-1007 is being evaluated in advanced IND-enabling preclinical studies as a neuroprotective agent for eye diseases.
Diagnostics

Support For Reform Softens, Pollster Reflects On How Public Mood Is Shaped

A new survey suggests that "most Americans support an overhaul of the health system, but the percentage who believe they (and their family) will be worse off from the change" has gone from 11 percent to 21 percent in the past five months, Kaiser Health News reports. "The survey, conducted July 7 to July 14 by the Kaiser Family Foundation, found 56 percent of Americans say now is the time for the country to overhaul the health system. That"s down from 61 percent in June." (note: KHN is a program of Kaiser Family Foundation). "The softening of support for a broad health overhaul mirrors results in other recent polls, including one conducted by Zogby International and released last week. A Washington Post/ABC News poll this week showed approval for the way President Obama was handling health reform had slipped to under 50 percent for the first time" (Galewitz, 7/23). Gallup released the findings of a June poll detailing the demographics of the uninsured, The New York Times reports. According to the poll, 41.5% of Hispanics, 28.6% of people earning less than $34,000 and 27.6% of people aged 18-29 are uninsured. "Gallup also found that a slightly higher percentage of Americans over all are uninsured today than in the same period last year." The Times noted that "young people, who are more likely to support a major health care overhaul, are also (not coincidentally) less likely to have health insurance" (Rampell, 7/22). NPR interviewed Frank Newport, editor in chief of the Gallup poll. "Part of the debate over health care is a debate over word choices. Every side uses words calculated to persuade people before they even think about it." Newport explains that "these are complex policy matters which the average American could not be expected to understand, particularly the nuanceṣ€¦ The public listens for cues... In public policy debate, if you can grab the public"s imagination by continually stressing something negative about something complex, that"s what they will tend to agree to in the short term." For example, "what President Obama refers to as a "public option" that will keep private insurance companies "honest," for example, Republican Sen. Orrin Hatch of Utah has called a "government plan." ̣€¦ "The key there is: a public option that would be in existence along with a private plan," Newport says. "And when you put it that way, and when you stress that, every bit of polling I"ve looked at shows a majority approve that idea." But many Americans have said they want a choice of insurance, doctors and hospitals, Newport says, so "if you simply say, "Do you want the government to run health care?" the polling is much less positive"" (Inskeep, 7/22). 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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