Saturday, August 27, 2016

It's Time for the United Nations to Compensate Haiti for Its Cholera Disaster and other top stories.

  • It's Time for the United Nations to Compensate Haiti for Its Cholera Disaster

    It's Time for the United Nations to Compensate Haiti for Its Cholera Disaster
    Janika Faneus is fed by her mother while receiving treatment for cholera at a MSF, Doctors Without Borders cholera clinic in Saint-Marc, Haiti, Saturday, January 22, 2011. (AP Photo / Rodrigo Abd) For the first time in five years, the United Nations has admitted what epidemiologists, human-rights researchers, and the UN’s own experts established long ago: that its peacekeepers were responsible for the inadvertent introduction of cholera into Haiti in 2010, causing the deaths of over 10,000 ..
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  • Brain Scans of Brazilian Babies Show Array of Zika Effects

    Brain Scans of Brazilian Babies Show Array of Zika Effects
    Another abnormality seen in most of the babies’ brains involved the ventricles or cavities of the brain becoming so full of cerebrospinal fluid that they “blow up like a balloon,” Dr. Levine said. The ventricles may be filling with fluid because Zika is obstructing their ability to drain normally, or because damage to other brain areas leaves a kind of vacuum that the enlarged ventricles fill.The fluid-filled ventricles can make the head size seem normal earlier in pregnancy, Dr. Levine said. B..
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  • He withered away for 7 years. Doctors didn't realize his passion was killing him.

    He withered away for 7 years. Doctors didn't realize his passion was killing him.
    Researchers have found a rare cause for serious lung inflammation: moldy bagpipes. (Jenny Starrs/The Washington Post) By the time the man arrived at the lung disease clinic in Manchester, England, it was almost too late. It was April 2014 and the 61-year-old had spent the past seven years finding it harder and harder to breathe. Once able to run 10 kilometers, he could now barely walk 20 meters. His lungs were operating at a third their proper capacity. Doctors were stumped. A petri di..
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  • Zion Harvey: A Year After Double Hand Transplant 9-Year-Old 'Can Do More Than I Imagined'

    Zion Harvey: A Year After Double Hand Transplant 9-Year-Old 'Can Do More Than I Imagined'
    Earlier this month, 9-year-old Zion Harvey got to experience what most kids can only dream about: he threw out the first pitch at a Baltimore Orioles game against the Texas Rangers. But Zion is no ordinary kid, and simply throwing a ball for him was no ordinary feat. Just a little more than a year ago, in July 2015, at the Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, Zion became the first child ever to undergo a double hand transplant. When he was just 2 years old, Zion lost both his hands and h..
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  • EpiPen Maker Also Hiked Prices on a Slew of Other Medications

    EpiPen Maker Also Hiked Prices on a Slew of Other Medications
    And you thought the EpiPen price hikes were big? The company whose big price increases for its lifesaving EpiPen device are drawing heavy fire from consumers and lawmakers has also sharply raised the prices of a slew of other drugs this year. Mylan's EpiPen, which counteracts the allergic reaction known as anaphylaxis, has seen a more than fivefold price increase since 2008, with some customers paying more than $600 for a package of two of the auto-injection devices. Beyond that, "Mylan ..
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  • August is a hot month for divorce filings

    August is a hot month for divorce filings
    August and March are the peak divorce-filings months in this state. A UW sociologist says the filings jump right after summer vacations but before school, and after the Thanksgiving/Christmas holidays. “Broken promises,” says Julie Brines. Attention all of you traveling the boulevard of broken dreams. Only a week left to be part of the annual August spike in divorce filings. After that, you’ll have to wait until March for the next peak month. You see, we still are traditionalists of sorts. ..
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  • Florida teen survives rare amoeba infection that kills most people

    Florida teen survives rare amoeba infection that kills most people
    ORLANDO, Fla. –  A South Florida boy has survived a rare brain-eating amoeba that kills most people, aided in part because a hard-to-get drug to fight the infection is made by a company based in Orlando where he was hospitalized, doctors said Tuesday. Sebastian DeLeon came to the hospital two weeks ago with sensitivity to light and a headache so severe the 16-year-old couldn't tolerate anyone touching him, doctors at Florida Hospital for Children said at a news conference. Hospital staffers had..
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  • Can anything contain US drug costs?

    Can anything contain US drug costs?
    The U.S., which spends more on drugs than any other country, might contain costs by limiting market exclusivity for brand name medicines and changing coverage requirements for government health plans, some doctors argue. Although brand-name drugs account for only 10 percent of all dispensed prescriptions in the U.S., they make up 72 percent of drug spending, doctors note in a paper in JAMA. Between 2008 and 2015, prices for the most commonly used brand name drugs surged 164 percent in the U.S.,..
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  • Use of Cancer-Linked Fibroid Device Declines After FDA Warning

    Use of Cancer-Linked Fibroid Device Declines After FDA Warning
    By Steven ReinbergHealthDay Reporter (HealthDay) TUESDAY, Aug. 23, 2016 (HealthDay News) -- The use of power morcellators -- cutting tools used in minimally invasive gynecological procedures -- has dropped significantly for hysterectomies since the U.S. Food and Drug Administration warned against their use two years ago, a new study finds. Power morcellators have small blades that rotate rapidly. When used in minimally invasive hysterectomies or for the removal of noncancerous grow..
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  • Sepsis is a medical emergency, CDC says. It can be stopped if caught in time.

    Sepsis is a medical emergency, CDC says. It can be stopped if caught in time.
    The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has declared sepsis a medical emergency, reporting Tuesday that about 72 percent of patients with this fast-moving and deadly illness have recently been seen by doctors and nurses, representing missed opportunities to catch it early or prevent it. The most common illnesses leading to sepsis include pneumonia and infections of the urinary tract, skin and gut, the CDC said in its report. There is no specific test for sepsis and symptoms can vary, wh..
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Fort Wayne Police looking to enforce Indiana's curfew law .Japan's trade shrinks in July, exports sink 14 percent .
Fort Wayne residents have an opportunity to go sky high in two rare ... .Fort Wayne - on the write track .

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