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Single-payer Advocates Challenge Democrats While Private Insurers Get Nervous
Democrats working feverishly on health care reform "face increasingly noisy protests from those on the left who complain that a national program like those in Europe has been excluded from the debate," The Washington Post reports.

Fate Of Tiller's Clinic Expected To Be Decided This Week
The family of murdered Kansas abortion provider George Tiller is expected to decide this week whether his Wichita clinic will reopen, NPR"s "Morning Edition" reports. Tiller"s clinic is one of the few in the U.S. that performs abortions later in pregnancy, and many abortion-rights advocates are concerned whether women in need of abortions in the second and third trimester would be able to obtain care if it were not reopened. LeRoy Carhart, a Nebraska abortion provider who worked with Tiller at his clinic for four years, said that although it is a difficult time for abortion providers, he hopes that the family will reopen the clinic. "This is a job that we took, and we were well-aware of the risks when we started, as was Dr. Tiller," he said. Providing abortion services in the second and third trimester is "a service that"s so needed that it"s worth the risks," he added (Lohr, "Morning Edition," NPR, 6/9). Carhart also said that although no decision on Tiller"s clinic has been made, he "want[s] to assure the press and the women of America ... that we will somehow, somewhere continue to provide abortions later in gestation" (Duin, Washington Times, 6/9).According to Carhart, there are only about 10 providers in the U.S. who perform abortions in the second and third trimesters, including a few hospitals that do not advertise the services. "Morning Edition" reports that most women"s health care providers either are not trained or do not want to receive training to perform the procedure later in pregnancy. Providers who do tend to be older and face extreme pressure from antiabortion-rights advocates. Data from the Guttmacher Institute show that about 1% of all abortions performed in the U.S. occur after 21 weeks" gestation. Elizabeth Nash of Guttmacher said that 37 states have laws that limit access to abortion after a certain point in pregnancy, "usually around 24 weeks, which is at the end of the second trimester." She added that most of those states only allow abortions to save the life of the woman or if her physical health is in jeopardy. Pratima Gupta, an ob-gyn in California, said that she is concerned about what will happen to Tiller"s patients. Gupta said Tiller "had patients that were scheduled for Monday morning. What happened to those patients for the rest of the week, the rest of the month? Those patients are the ones who need us" ("Morning Edition," NPR, 6/9).
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Chronic Pelvic Pain Syndromes: Clinical, Urodynamic, And Urothelial Observations
UroToday.com - Patients with pain can present with various symptom complexes that include interstitial cystitis, vulvodynia, irritable bowel syndrome, myofascial pain or various causes of dyspareunia but when carefully evaluated, the majority have very similar findings. No matter what their primary complaint might be over 70% of patients will have hypertonic pelvic floor dysfunction and/or pain as well as a component of at least one visceral pain syndrome such as interstitial cystitis (the most common), chronic pelvic pain or irritable bowel syndrome.
Cardiovascular

The 10th International Conference On Systems Biology Comes To Stanford University

Registration is underway for the 10th International Conference on Systems Biology (ICSB). The conference will be held at Stanford University from August 30th - September 4th. "This is the first time the International Conference on Systems Biology has come to the San Francisco Bay Area. Commemorating the ICSB"s tenth anniversary at the birthplace of both recombinant DNA and the personal computer industry seems appropriate," said Stephen Quake, member of the local ICSB organizing committee and Professor of Bioengineering & Applied Physics at Stanford and the Howard Hughes Medical Institute. "The bay area is home to some of the most significant academic and industrial efforts in systems biology -- most notably biotechnology, informatics and computing," he continued. ICSB celebrates and investigates achieving a systems-level understanding of biology. By integrating experimental and computational approaches, Systems Biology explores the basic structures and properties of biological networks, how biological systems behave over time under various conditions, how biological systems maintain robustness and stability, and how modification or construction of biological systems achieve desired outcomes. System Biology is driving breakthroughs in fields as varied as biology, chemistry, computer science, engineering, mathematics and others, together with an evolution of our social and educational structures so different disciplines can effectively bridge traditional, cultural, linguistic, conceptual, and experimental boundaries. For more information about the 10th International Conference on Systems Biology, please visit http://www.icsb-2009.org To register for ICSB, please visit http://www.icsb-2009.org/registration.php Entry to ICSB is free to accredited media, including full access to the partnering system, sessions, press conferences, and workshops. International Conference on Systems Biology

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17.05.2012


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