Save The Children Report Finds Neediest Children In Many Developing Countries Are Overlooked

September 8th, 2010
The deaths of four million of the world's poorest children over 10 years could have been avoided if governments had not turned "a blind eye" to the neediest children, said a report from Save the Children, released on Tuesday, the U.K. Press Association reports (9/6)...


Antiabortion-Rights Group Capitalizes On Supreme Court Ruling On Campaign Ads

September 8th, 2010
AUL Action, the legislative arm of the not-for-profit antiabortion group Americans United for Life, will become one of the first groups to take advantage of a Supreme Court ruling in January that expanded corporations and unions' ability to directly influence elections, the AP/Washington Post reports. The group's one-minute ads launched on Friday and will run for one week. AUL is incorporated as a not-for-profit organization under the federal tax code...


Bristol Surgeon Receives Almost 120,000 Pounds For Pioneering Research Project

September 8th, 2010
A trainee heart surgeon from the Bristol Heart Institute has received a grant of £117,166 from national heart charity, Heart Research UK, for a project to help prevent irreversible damage to the heart. Mr Simon Duggan, 32, has been awarded a Research Training Fellowship Grant for an innovative project that will investigate 'reperfusion injury.' This irreversible injury to the heart can happen when patients undergo heart bypass surgery or angioplasty. Mr Duggan will examine what causes reperfusion injury by studying heart cells and how they become damaged...


ImmunoSolv Merges With Grampian BioConsultants & Secures Additional Funds, Scotland

September 8th, 2010
ImmunoSolv, a leading Edinburgh-based private company developer of immunology platform technology, is pleased to announce that it has completed a merger with Aberdeen-based Grampian BioConsultants Limited (GBC). The merged company will retain the name ImmunoSolv Limited. The merger provides ImmunoSolv with a complementary portfolio of immunology and immuno-technology expertise with which to exploit "a new biology of cell death" to target the key global emerging markets for its award-winning Dead-Cert® dead-cell removal technology platform and its anti-cancer therapeutics pipeline...


TPP Global Development Ltd Enters Into An Agreement With The University Of Edinburgh For Future Drug Development

September 8th, 2010
TPP Global Development Ltd (TPP) announced an agreement with the University of Edinburgh to collaborate on the development of novel pre-clinical intellectual property originated within the University. TPP and the University of Edinburgh will focus on commercialisation opportunities in the areas of nervous system disorders, immunology/inflammation and oncology. Initially the agreement will run for five years, after which it may be extended. Thomas Brown, TPP's CEO commented, "We are delighted to have entered into this agreement with the University of Edinburgh...


Measles Outbreak Linked To Youth Soccer Event

September 8th, 2010
An outbreak of measles at an international youth soccer event illustrates the risks of with "imported" measles, according to a study in the September issue of The Pediatric Infectious Disease Journal. The journal is published by Lippincott Williams & Wilkins, a part of Wolters Kluwer Health, a leading provider of information and business intelligence for students, professionals, and institutions in medicine, nursing, allied health, and pharmacy...


Explaining An Important Genetic Cardiovascular Risk Factor

September 8th, 2010
New findings reported in the September issue of Cell Metabolism, a Cell Press publication, appear to explain why people who carry specific and common versions of a single gene are more likely to have high cholesterol and to suffer a heart attack. Studies in mice show that the gene, known as sortilin (SORT1), controls the release of LDL (a.k.a. "bad") cholesterol from the liver into the bloodstream. The findings suggest that SORT1 may be a good target for new cholesterol-lowering drugs, according to the researchers...


FAO Names 15 Experts To New Food Security Advisory Body

September 8th, 2010
The U.N. Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) has named 15 experts to a committee "to help formulate policies to ensure food security and avoid a repeat of the food crisis of a few years ago," VOA News reports (DeCapua, 9/6). The experts will form a steering committee to will lead the Committee on World Food Security's "new advisory body, the High Level Panel of Experts on Food Security and Nutrition (HLPE)," according to an FAO press release (9/3)...


Ahead Of U.N. MDG Summit, Media Outlets Examine Various Aspects Of Goals

September 8th, 2010
Ahead of the U.N. Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) Summit on September 20-22, the media examines different aspects of the MDGs. The Daily Nation reports on a United Nations Development Program report which showed poverty eradication remained one of Kenya's greatest challenges to meeting the MDGs. "'Poverty is still at 2006 levels...


New Study Shows Promise For Identifying, Reducing Reproductive Coercion

September 8th, 2010
The latest research on reproductive coercion -- a type of intimate partner abuse in which the man threatens the woman to become pregnant -- shows that a simple intervention at a family planning clinic can empower women to protect themselves from future abuse, Time reports. Reproductive coercion, which usually coincides with other types of abuse within a relationship, is marked by physical or verbal threats against a woman for seeking birth control or an abortion. The male partner also might damage the woman's birth control pills or remove condoms during sex...