Monday, March 24, 2008

Welcome to the Podcast of Another 15 Minutes, Health News from the Fade Library. Full links to the articles detailed can be found at www (dot) fade the blog 2 (dot) blogspot (dot)com

New Section
UK Health News


Ministers were yesterday battling to defuse a growing crisis over whether dissenting Labour MPs should be entitled to vote against parts of the human embryology and fertilisation bill. The health secretary, Alan Johnson, who is responsible for piloting the bill through the Commons, said no MPs would be forced to vote against their conscience, but stopped short of a commitment that MPs would be entitled to vote against parts of the bill.

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Shopkeepers could be banned from displaying cigarettes under plans being considered by the Government, according to reports. In a bid to cut the number of smokers and prevent children from taking up the habit, ministers have drawn up proposals including a bar on displaying tobacco products and the removal of vending machines from pubs, The Times said. Measures that make it easier to sell nicotine replacement gums and patches are also on the table.

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Cigarettes to be sold under shop counters - The Times 24th March 2008

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Cigarette display ban considered - BBC Health News 24th March 2008

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Alarmist condemnation of all alternative therapies ignores the crucial role some could play in the human healing process Suckers: How Alternative Medicine Makes Fools of Us All; Snake Oil Science; and next month sees another, Trick or Treatment: what these new books have in common is varying degrees of frustration at the seemingly inexorable rise of complementary medicine. It seems the aim of some of these authors is to finish off a burgeoning health industry that they believe is based on charlatans and quacks preying on the gullible and desperate.

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Hard drug use and heavy drinking have been highlighted as key problems for Britain in a study by the Government’s Strategy Unit. The report also gives warning of changing trends in gun crime, including the use of firearms to “win respect”, particularly in urban areas. The study suggests that the criminal justice system would be unable to cope with law and order problems unless it undergoes sweeping reforms. It says that changes over the past ten years have not led to higher public satisfaction with the overall system.

New Story

The idea of choice as used by the Government is a cop-out, says Max Pemberton You need a hip replacement. You have a choice of hospitals at which to have this done. Do you choose a) the hospital with a dreadful reputation and incompetent doctors where you are practically guaranteed to contract some hideous ward?acquired infection?

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Women born with cardiac problems endanger their lives when they undergo childbirth. Victoria Lambert meets some of the risk-takers The moment 33-year-old Catherine Baker realised that her pregnancy had put her life in danger occurred not while she was pregnant but, incredibly, 18 months after her son Joshua was born. For only when she decided to have a second child did she learn that her aorta - the principal artery that carries blood to the heart - had stretched so much due to her first pregnancy that it had weakened considerably. Were she to become pregnant again, she was told, there was every chance it would burst, killing her before the nine months were up.

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Two superbugs are causing the deaths of more than 10,000 hospital patients every year, an expert has disclosed. The number of deaths from MRSA and clostridium difficile is being underestimated by about 20 per cent, one of the country's leading authorities on superbugs has said. Official figures put the number of deaths from the two infections at about 8,000 a year.

New Story

As a last resort, insomniac Maria Fitzpatrick tried reflexology - with surprising results 'Have you had problems with your spine, madam?" There it is, I think to myself: the question that confirms that I was right to doubt reflexology. I would have been impressed, even hopeful, if the therapist, who knows next to nothing about me (except that I'm seeking a solution for chronic insomnia), had put his finger on my history of kidney problems while kneading my feet, or even found something disrupting the "energy pathway" to my tired brain.

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For five years they lived under the shadow of a rare condition that threatened to kill their four sons before they left their teens. But David and Allison Hartley can at last put the nightmare behind them after the final bone marrow transplant which means each boy can now enjoy a normal life. The youngest, eight-year-old Luke, had his operation in November at Great Ormond Street children's hospital and is now home and healthy.

New Story

A woman who discarded male IVF embryos in an attempt to prevent a life-threatening disorder being passed on to her child is suing after giving birth to a boy. The 30-year-old Australian woman and her husband used IVF with the aim of producing a baby girl because they feared a boy would be born with the inherited blood disorder haemophilia.

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Best-selling children's author JK Rowling has revealed that she considered committing suicide when she was a single mother struggling to survive and succeed as a writer. The Harry Potter writer has admitted she thought of taking her own life when she was in her mid-20s after separating from her first husband Jorge Arantes, a Portuguese journalist.

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Internet addiction is a serious public health problem and should be officially recognised as a clinical disorder, a psychiatrist claims. Dr Jerald Block says there are four main telltale symptoms which include: Losing all track of time or neglecting basics such as eating or sleeping; cravings and feelings of withdrawal, including anger, tension or depression, when a computer cannot be accessed; an increased need for better computer equipment and software; and negative effects such as arguments, lying, fatigue, social isolation and poor achievement.

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Hyperactive young girls are more likely to have "serious" problems in adulthood, research suggests. A study of more than 800 girls up to the age of 21 found hyperactivity was linked to poor job prospects, abusive relationships and teenage pregnancy. Previous research on the lasting impact of childhood hyperactivity has focused on boys, who are more likely to be diagnosed and treated.

New Story

Every time Richard Tate visited the Royal Marsden Hospital the news got worse. "I went to see the specialist and he told me there was a shadow on the X-ray, on the lung. "I definitely had lung cancer and it had metastasised and spread to the liver. I also had prostate cancer."


New Section
International Health News

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Scientists have shown that stem cells produced by therapeutic cloning are effective for treating Parkinson's disease, in the first convincing demonstration that stem cells derived from the subject can be used to treat a serious disease. The technique has only been tried in mice, but scientists have hailed it as proof that a similar approach could be successful in humans.

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Parkinson's: the breakthrough - The Independent 24th March 2008

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Cloning treats mouse Parkinson's - BBC Health News 24th March 2008
Last week's death of Chantal Sébire has provoked an emotional reaction in France likely to result in a change in the law, to allow doctors a limited right to assist a patient's suicide. The way the French decide the issue could be a lesson to Britain, suffering similar legal defects and uncertainties. Sébire, a 52-year-old former teacher with three children, developed a rare, incurable form of cancer, which gradually destroyed her senses of smell, taste and sight and disfigured her face grotesquely, so that, she explained on television, children ran away at the sight of her.

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Thousands of heart surgery patients may be at risk from transfusions of blood that has been stored for two weeks or more. A study of more than 9,000 patients in the US has shown that those given blood more than 14 days old are 65 per cent more likely to die before discharge, and 50 per cent more likely to die within a year.

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A serious form of meningitis and pneumonia that is resistant to drugs has emerged in children. Twelve cases have been identified over six years and five children died. Most had been treated with antibiotics for a drug-resistant form of tuberculosis and it is thought this led to the emergence of the resistant form of pneumoccocal disease, which includes meningitis, pneumonia and septicaemia.




Full links to the articles detailed can be found at www(dot) fade the blog 2 (dot)blogspot (dot)com, This has been a Podcast of Another 15 Minutes ... Health News from the Fade Library.

Sunday, March 23, 2008

Welcome to the Podcast of Another 15 Minutes, Health News from the Fade Library. Full links to the articles detailed can be found at www (dot) fade the blog 2 (dot) blogspot (dot)com

New Section
UK Health News


Gordon Brown faces a growing revolt over embryo research as former cabinet minister Stephen Byers last night joined calls for a free vote. The former Trade and Industry Secretary said the public would 'look on in disbelief' if politicians were whipped into supporting controversial issues such as the creation of human-animal hybrid embryos.

Link to Article

Additional Stories

Brown stands firm as Cardinal urges free vote on 'monstrous' Bill to allow human-animal embryos - The Independent on Sunday 23rd March 2008

'Iron fist' Gordon Brown faces revolt - The Sunday Times 23rd March 2008

Pressure mounts over embryo bill - BBC Health News 22nd March 2008

One in five of all children's deaths is 'preventable', according to a paediatrician appointed by the government to conduct research into child morbidity. Around 5,000 children die every year in the UK and, based on his analysis of official data, Dr Peter Sidebotham estimates between 500 and 1,000 could be prevented. Sidebotham, associate professor in child health at Warwick University, said addressing factors that can contribute to deaths including the role of parents, health officials and social workers, could have a big impact.


Most adults says they are scared of socialising without alcohol, study finds Most people in Britain do not believe they could lead their lives enjoyably or successfully without alcohol - but don't consider this to be a problem either, according to new research. The fear of a life without alcohol is so endemic that most adults say they are scared by the idea of socialising, relaxing, taking part in any celebration or trying to have a good night's sleep without drinking.

Link to Article
Patients with an asbestos-related form of cancer who had been hoping for compensation now fear they will run out of time under new government rules on payouts. Around 2,000 people a year in Britain die from mesothelioma, a cancer which attacks the thin membrane coating the lungs and abdomen. The disease is triggered by exposure to asbestos fibres in building materials and most commonly affects workers involved in construction, as well as shipyard and metal workers.

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Did you hear about the doctor, the train and the soup plate? This is not the beginning of a joke - although it bloody should be. A certain Dr Russell Walshaw, 66, was up before the General Medical Council last week to discuss a police caution he received in May last year. The caution was for assault. The assault involved dropping a soup plate near a railway steward.

Prices of public-private building projects such as hospitals are also being forced up by banks' reluctance to lend. Taxpayers face higher bills for new hospitals, schools and roads built under the controversial private finance initiative (PFI). Banks' reluctance to lend money is forcing up borrowing costs despite the best efforts of central bankers to reduce interest rates. As a result, the price of the UK's much needed infrastructure improvement is escalating sharply.

As the cost of dental and cosmetic treatments rises, patients are taking package trips to a Polish city escaping its industrial past

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Harry Potter author J K Rowling has revealed she was close to suicide during her time as a struggling young single mother. The writer for children has since seen her books translated into 65 different languages and has gathered a personal fortune estimated at £545m. But during her twenties Rowling was a single mother trying to cope following her separation from her first husband, a Portuguese journalist.

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I contemplated suicide, says Harry Potter creator, JK Rowling - The Sunday Times 23rd March 2008

Celebrities from Beyoncé to Victoria Beckham still swear by them, but for the mass of the British population it seems that the fad diet has lost its allure. Despite soaring obesity rates, research shows that people are turning their backs on so-called miracle diets that promise much but deliver little more than bad breath and short-lived relief in the tight trouser department.


Fifty years after the drug was launched in Britain, its victims are still fighting for compensation from its German makers Gary Skyner and Freddie Astbury had waited a long time for the meeting. The man they had arranged to see, Chris Matijasevic, was the managing director of the UK subsidiary of Grünenthal, a German company that is little known in this country to those outside the pharmaceutical industry.

The number of patients in British hospitals dying from superbug infections has reached more than 10,000 every year, according to an expert. The new figure is about 20% higher than the official toll of 8,000 a year. Mark Enright, professor of molecular epidemiology at Imperial College London, said that the real number of those succumbing to methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) and Clostridium difficile (C difficile) in the UK is higher than the government’s records show.

The number of British teenagers having breast enlargement operations has increased by more than 150% in the past year. Doctors believe girls undergoing the procedure are aping celebrities who have surgically enhanced their figures. Statistics from three of Britain’s largest cosmetic surgery chains show almost 600 teenagers had the surgery last year.

Women who drink alcohol during pregnancy may be putting their babies at risk of developing autism, according to new research. The consultant psychiatrist who alerted the medical profession to the finding that drinking while pregnant can give babies a condition called foetal alcohol syndrome (FAS) has now found that the consumption of alcohol by expecting mothers can also cause autism.
More than a million people will suffer from dementia within 20 years, Government forecasts show. The number of patients diagnosed with diseases such as Alzheimer's will rise by 70 per cent to more than 1.2 million by 2028.

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Since its introduction a decade ago, Viagra has transformed the sexual landscape for men - and women - of a certain age. Olga Craig reports It has spawned an industry of "nudge, nudge" jokes and is the basis for a forthcoming Hollywood comedy. It has saved thousands of relationships, restored the fragile egos of millions of men and has put a smile on the lips of an awful lot of women.
One in 23 teenage girls in parts of Britain has had an abortion, according to figures released by ministers. South London and pockets of the North of England are shown to be teenage abortion "hotspots" by a regional breakdown showing the number of terminations in each primary care trust area.

More than 8,000 people have died in the past decade as a result of taking medicines intended to help them, figures have revealed. Almost 42,000 other patients have been hospitalised after suffering harmful side-effects or serious allergic reactions to prescription drugs and other medication.

For several months Huw Jones has been helping to monitor his own heart condition from the comfort of his living room. As soon as Huw, a 43-year old, from East Yorkshire, gets up he weighs himself, monitors his blood pressure and heart rate and then sits back and switches on his TV.

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New Section
International Health News


New evidence shows that heavy users suffer isolation, fatigue and withdrawal symptoms Tense? Angry? Can't get online? Internet addiction is now a serious public health issue that should be officially recognised as a clinical disorder, according to a leading psychiatrist. Excessive gaming, viewing online pornography, emailing and text messaging have been identified as causes of a compulsive-impulsive disorder by Dr Jerald Block, author of an editorial for the respected American Journal of Psychiatry. Block argues that the disorder is now so common that it merits inclusion in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, the profession's primary resource to categorise and diagnose mental illnesses. He says internet addiction has four main components

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The United Nations is to hold its first debate on road safety amid warnings that the problem is a 'public health crisis' on the scale of Aids, malaria and tuberculosis. Next week's meeting will follow research by the World Heath Organisation which forecast that between 2000 and 2015 road accidents would cause 20 million deaths, 200 million serious injuries and leave more than one billion people killed, injured, bereaved or left to care for a victim.

Veronica Akol is a typical Ugandan mother. She is 37 and has seven children with no plans to stop. 'I will continue having children, maybe until my womb finishes producing them,' she says, blowing dust from the head of the latest addition to her family, six-month-old Anna. Akol recently attended a training session by the African Medical and Research Foundation (Amref) for village health team members at Atirir trading centre in Katine sub-county, where The Observer and the Guardian are co-funding a three-year development project.

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'Killer' marrow transplant hope - BBC Health News 23rd March 2008

Some leukaemia patients who do not respond to conventional treatments may benefit from bone marrow transplants selected to target the cancer directly. The technique, pioneered in Italy, uses transplants from family members who are not a perfect match.

Link to Article


New Section
Cheshire and Merseyside Health News



THOUSANDS of people are backing a campaign to save two Liverpool care homes from closure. Leighton Dene, in Fazakerley, and Boaler Street rehabilitation unit, in Kensington, are set to shut within months. They are used by hundreds of elderly patients, many with debilitating illnesses such as Alzheimer’s or dementia.


Love from around the world delivered to hospital - Liverpool Echo 22nd March 2008

HOSPITAL patients are being given a pick-me-up with relatives’ and friends’ e-mails delivered to the bedside. A new service for Arrowe Park and Clatterbridge on the Wirral allows website visitors to e-mail a greeting or get-well message, which is printed and delivered to in-patients by volunteers.

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New Section
Cumbria and Lancashire Health News



THE hospital library service across North Cumbria has been rated one of the best in the North West. The library service, which provides new learning for all areas of the health sector, was rated ‘excellent’ in 25 out of 30 categories following a recent external inspection.

HOMELESS people in Carlisle will benefit from a multi-million pound investment to build a new shelter in the city centre. Plans for a women and families accommodation took another step forward after the Government announc-ed £1.9m of funding for the scheme.

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Work begins on new dental education site - Carlisle News & Star 22nd March 2008

BUILDING work has started on a new dental education centre at the Cumberland Infirmary in Carlisle. It is the first of its kind in north Cumbria and is part of a project to train a new generation of dentists. The project involves the universities of Central Lancashire, Liverpool, Cumbria and Lancaster.

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New Section
Greater Manchester Health News


CHILDREN are to be taught how to ride a bike safely after the Government awarded £40,000 to Bolton Council. The cash will be used to coach 1,000 youngsters across the borough to level two standard of the national Bikeability scheme. Council chiefs lodged a bid for cash when the Local Authority Cycle Training Grants were announced earlier this year.

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Maternity unit was closed to new admissions - The Bolton News 22nd March 2008

THE MATERNITY unit at the Royal Bolton Hospital was forced to close twice last year because the delivery suite was full. Bosses were forced to close the doors of the Princess Anne maternity ward to new admissions for three hours, once in July and once in September. They were the first closures at the unit since it opened 20 years ago.

Link to Article


Full links to the articles detailed can be found at www(dot) fade the blog 2 (dot)blogspot (dot)com, This has been a Podcast of Another 15 Minutes ... Health News from the Fade Library.

Sunday, March 16, 2008

Welcome to the Podcast of Another 15 Minutes, Health News from the Fade Library. Full links to the articles detailed can be found at www (dot) fade the blog 2 (dot) blogspot (dot)com

New Section
UK Health News



According to the Collins dictionary, 'reform' means 'improvement, or change for the better'. Perhaps only in public services could it have come to signify something like the reverse: a grim trial of strength in which the centre imposes a new set of untried methods, often free-market-oriented, on reluctant consumers and providers in an attempt to alleviate the worst effects of previous reforms, often making things worse and dearer. The GP contract, the full horror of which is still unfolding, is a good example.

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David is 11 and profoundly autistic, one of half a million Britons with a condition for which there is no cure. Christopher Stevens tells of his family's struggle to understand their son's inner world

Raw milk is packed with vitamins and it's kinder to the planet. So why is an unpasteurised pint seen as such a risk? Some time last year, small crowds began forming at farmers' markets (farmersmarkets.net) around certain stalls where bottles were being handed out. The crowds swelled and consumers formed underground appreciation societies to support 150 British producers. They made pilgrimages to farm shops and signed up for a product unavailable via any conventional retail establishment on either side of the Atlantic. But what is this subversive substance, banned in Scotland since 1983 and which comes with a health warning almost as apocalyptic as the script on cigarette packets? Is it moonshine or liquid crack?

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As the face of Portsmouth's anti-smoking campaign last week, I would be a hypocrite if I didn't confess my own 15-year 20-a-day habit. As ludicrous as it now seems, I spent most of my career puffing away on fags: after training, before matches and even on the team coach. It makes me feel ill just thinking about it.

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As the Clintons play the race card against Barack Obama, the young senator from Illinois has many outraged supporters rallying to his cause, but not Britain's most prominent opponent of racism. Trevor Phillips is wary for good reasons. He suspects Obama is 'helping to postpone the arrival of a post-racial America' by offering white Americans a deal: vote for me and I'll stop you feeling guilty by keeping quiet about racism.

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I'm so tired I'm falling asleep at work - The Observer 16th March 2008

When I sit still I fall asleep, which is embarrassing, especially during meetings at work. I only drink alcohol at weekends and have eight hours' sleep a night. What can I do?
Some 60,000 doctors will be specially trained to detect patients with an alcohol problem, the Department of Health said yesterday. Dawn Primarolo, the public health minister, said she would instruct all medical schools in England to make the identification and treatment of alcohol misuse part of the compulsory curriculum for undergraduate doctors. Within 10 years, that would produce 60,000 clinicians with the skills needed to tackle an epidemic of persistent binge drinking.

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Food and drink companies should be banned from marketing unhealthy snacks and drinks to young children via new media such as social networking sites and text messaging, a coalition of international consumer groups and health bodies recommends today. The group is urging governments to adopt a code that they say would curb the rising obesity rates among children. The code would restrict junk food marketing, including outlawing the use of cartoon characters, celebrity tie-ins, free gifts and competitions aimed at younger audiences.

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David Cameron will today try to define the Conservatives as the most family-friendly political party when he unveils plans to provide intensive support for new parents and boost health visitor numbers by 2,700 by the end of his first Tory government. The Conservative leader will use his closing speech at the party's two-day spring conference in Gateshead to woo voters by promising to do "all we can to support families and parents".

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Additional Story

David Cameron puts the family at heart of Conservative ideas - The Sunday Telegraph 16th March 2008

Cameron vows more health visitors - BBC Health News 15th March 2008

Doctor, doctor - The Guardian 15th March 2008

My sister is in hospital with an MRSA infection and is being barrier nursed. Can I visit her? Will procedures be in place so visitors won't be infected? By all means write to her, but don't complicate things for her and for the hospital by trying to visit. A short period of isolation to ensure that the infection is cured and to prevent others from carrying it is a small concession to make. Your sister will surely understand.

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Radical government plans to rid the NHS of "problem" GPs could pave the way for a wholesale privatisation, senior doctors warned yesterday. Health Department proposals to force "underperforming" GPs into short-term contracts were criticised last night by angry doctors' leaders. They fear it will make it easier for local primary care trusts (PCTs) to sack doctors and bring in private companies to run surgeries. They claim uncertainty caused by such a proposal might deter doctors from investing in patient services and could damage GPs' relationships with patients.

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Doctors condemn super-clinic push - BBC Health News 14th March 2008

Huge rise in number of home births - The Independent on Sunday 16th March 2008

A revolution is under way in how women give birth, and it is surgery, drug and even hospital-free. Inspired by celebrities such as Charlotte Church, Davina McCall, Thandie Newton and Maggie Gyllenhaal, record numbers of mums-to-be are having their babies at home. More pregnant women are braving the pain and forgoing elective Caesarean sections in certain parts of the country because local midwives are teaching them that birth is a natural, not a medical, procedure in the vast majority of cases. Many women are also increasingly worried about hospital infection rates.

Women may be at risk of mental health breakdowns if they have abortions, a medical royal college has warned. The Royal College of Psychiatrists says women should not be allowed to have an abortion until they are counselled on the possible risk to their mental health. This overturns the consensus that has stood for decades that the risk to mental health of continuing with an unwanted pregnancy outweighs the risks of living with the possible regrets of having an abortion.

The government’s new fertility bill is under fire on religious, moral and even scientific grounds When Liz Shipley was diagnosed with motor neurone disease (MND) it came as little surprise. The 36-year-old from Newcastle had lost her mother to the same condition when she was just three years old. Several other members of her family, including her sister and uncle, had died or were suffering from the muscle-wasting disease.

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Measures to end Britain's sick note culture that will see doctors, social services and councillors brought in to get long-term absentees back to work will be unveiled in a Government-backed review next week. The aim is to prevent people suffering with minor conditions from joining the long-term sick and draining the public purse by claiming benefits. Under the plans, GPs signing someone off work sick would monitor and report patients' problems with debt, stress and childcare.

Link to Article

The devoted father of Britain's 13-year-old diving prodigy reveals the profoundly moving story of his other battle... The surface of the swimming pool was as still as glass. Ten metres above, my 13-year-old son Tom balanced on the edge of the topmost diving board. He was about to make his final dive of the Olympic qualifying competition in Beijing. So far, Tom had given me a bit of a scare. Even though he is only a boy competing against men twice his age, I expected him to qualify. So did his coach. But he was in 11th place.

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Honey has been used for medicinal purposes for thousands of years. The Ancient Egyptians and Greeks treated sores with it and soldiers in the Second World War wrapped bandages in it to heal their wounds. Today, honey can be found in wound dressings, creams, lozenges, tablets and in a jar.

Link to Article

Louise Banks was dismissed as a lazy child by her PE teachers when she fainted during sports day. Later, doctors told her she had epilepsy and she nearly died during the birth of her son Ben
because her heart fluttered erratically.
Doctors should cut down on prescribing antibiotics for common sinus infections because they are not effective, researchers said today. Sinusitis is a bacterial infection, which creates small air pockets inside the cheekbones and forehead, causing a high temperature, pain and tenderness in the face and forehead, and a blocked or runny nose.

Link to Article

Highly-educated parents were more prone to stop their children having the measles, mumps and rubella jab during the scare over the vaccine, research shows. A report into attitudes towards the joint MMR injection found a lower take-up rate among parents who had gone on to further education. They were also less likely to to have their children immunised against other diseases following the controversy surrounding MMR.

Link to Article

Children in Wales will be given free toothbrushes on the NHS - while English parents still have to pay. The scheme, which also provides toothpaste for three to five-year-olds, is the latest in a list of "health apartheid" benefits denied to the population in England. Welsh people already get free prescriptions and free hospital car parking, while dental costs have been frozen for a second year.

Link to Article

An anti-smoking group in Liverpool is calling for all movies with smoking scenes to be given an 18 certificate. SmokeFree Liverpool told BBC's Radio 5 Live it wanted to see the change but the film classification board said the idea was "heavy-handed". The push - backed by the city council - comes amid research showing young people pick up the bad habit from watching films containing smoking.
A year ago actor David Harewood got a call that was to change not only his life but that of a complete stranger. He was told his bone marrow could be a match for a desperately ill person. Six months on, David - who has starred in Blood Diamond, Babyfather, Fat Friends and The Vice - has heard the unknown recipient is doing well.

Link to Article

When the Neighbours character Susan Kinski started to suffer mysterious symptoms, doctors in the soap were baffled. She had had unusual symptoms for months, even blacking out behind the wheel of a car and being involved in a hit and run. It was only when Susan was given an MRI (Magnetic Resonance Imaging) scan that she was diagnosed with multiple sclerosis (MS).

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Many women are going into labour vastly underestimating how painful it can be and overly optimistic that they will be able to manage without drugs, a study suggests. How has this happened? Researchers at the University of Newcastle who looked at evidence from the UK and beyond found significant discrepancies between women's expectations of labour and their actual experience.

Link to Article

The number of doctors and nurses in the NHS has increased in the past year, but the number of support staff has fallen, official figures reveal. The number of professionally qualified clinical staff, such as consultants and midwives, has increased by 6,600 since 2006, the NHS Information Centre said.

Link to Article

Kidney hope for 'down under' twin - BBC Health News 14th March 2008

A Bristol pensioner is on standby to fly to Australia to donate a kidney to save her twin sister's life. Daphne Dearing, 62, only discovered last week she was an exact match for Susan Daunton, who has been ill for more than a decade. Mrs Daunton, who emigrated in 1980, now has polycystic kidney disease.

Link to Article


New Section
International Health News



The young man lies back on the hospital trolley and waits patiently as his head is secured in place with a vice. Marian Dolishny’s nervous smile and worried, flicking eyes, betray the certain knowledge that what he is about to undergo will be anything but pleasant. But he also knows that time is short: if the enormous tumour inside his head is not removed, it will soon kill him.

Most diabetes sufferers could be cured within four years if a revolutionary treatment involving the BCG vaccine works, scientists said yesterday. A human clinical trial with hopes of finding a cure for type 1 diabetes is to start at a leading American research hospital using BCG, universally given for many years in Britain to prevent tuberculosis.

A drug normally used to treat Parkinson's may also be effective against cancer, scientists have found. Synthetic dopamine is an artificial version of a chemical that allows messages to pass between motor neurons in the brain. In Parkinson's patients, loss of the chemical neurotransmitter leads to typical symptoms of muscle rigidity and shaking. Treatment with synthetic dopamine can help overcome the deficiency.

Link to Article


Scientists have discovered a key part of the chemistry which makes cancer cells so dangerous. They believe it could now be possible to tamper with the mechanism - and stop tumour growth in its tracks. Harvard Medical School identified an enzyme which enables cancer cells to consume the huge quantities of glucose they need to fuel uncontrolled growth.


Junk food advert code launched - BBC Health News 15th March 2008

A global campaign aimed at reducing the marketing of unhealthy food to children has been launched. More than 50 consumer groups are backing a voluntary code of practice which includes tight restrictions on television and internet advertising.

Link to Article


New Section
Cheshire and Merseyside Health News


ELDERLY people in Liverpool are harming their health by binge drinking, health chiefs have warned. Alcohol experts today said drink problems in the city’s over 65’s are on the increase with a significant rise in the number admitted to hospital with alcohol-related illnesses. While older people’s drinking has not received the same attention as their younger counterparts, health bosses at Liverpool PCT are so concerned at the growing trend that they are now launching a campaign to stop the problem.

IAN FISHER’S drug habit landed him in prison and nearly cost him his life. The reformed addict from Moreton, Wirral, turned his life around and now teaches teenagers about the dangers of drugs and alcohol. His efforts have landed him a nomination for the Learning and Skills Council Young Achiever award.

A COUNSELLING organisation is struggling to bid for support – because a council’s email system blocks the word “sexual”. Wirral’s Rape and Sexual Abuse centre (RASA) emails automatically bounce back from Liverpool council. Despite months of protests about the web “profanity” filter, service co-ordinator Jo Wood has been told she must ring the council every time she clicks “send”.

THE MOTHER of a newborn baby dumped in a binbag in woodlands is still being urged to come forward 10 years to the day the body was found. The boy, named Callum by police officers, was found by a man walking his dog in Warrington, on Saturday, March 14, 1998. He had lived for a matter of hours after birth, before being asphyxiated.

BUILDING work on a new unit which will transform the lives of patients with kidney disease is under way in Southport. The long-awaited Southport NHS Dialysis Unit is expected to be fully operational early next year. It will house 12 dialysis stations and provide services for up to 60 patients, currently travelling many miles for dialysis elsewhere in the region.

Link to Article

SOUTHPORT’S town centre ambulance station is to close - with emergency vehicles being relocated as far as Formby. North West Ambulance Service (NWAS) has confirmed the Court Road station will cease to exist by November. The NWAS are studying alternative relocation options despite concern from town centre residents who fear increased waiting times.

Isaac Hughes is a contended, gurgling little boy, playing in the garden with his mum. But the happiness he feels inside will never show on his face – because he cannot smile. AN incredibly rare syndrome, which affects only 200 people in the UK, means Isaac Hughes will never smile, blink or show facial expression.
CHESTER-born striker Michael Owen turned out to open the new teenagers’ unit at the Countess of Chester Hospital. The £212,000 unit, which saw its first patients last autumn, is the latest project to be undertaken by the Chester Childbirth Appeal.

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Call to restrict smoking scenes - BBC Health News 16th March 2008

An anti-smoking group in Liverpool is calling for all movies with smoking scenes to be given an 18 certificate. SmokeFree Liverpool told BBC's Radio 5 Live it wanted to see the change but the film classification board said the idea was "heavy-handed". The push - backed by the city council - comes amid research showing young people pick up the bad habit from watching films containing smoking.

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New Section
Cumbria and Lancashire Health News


AN £80 million bid is now getting underway to secure funding to develop cottage hospitals across Cumbria. Health bosses have committed to retaining inpatient beds at all nine of the hospitals in north and west Cumbria, between 140 and 170 in total. Similar 20-bed facilities will also be developed at both the Cumberland Infirmary and West Cumberland Hospital.



A SENIOR county councillor has voiced concerns regarding the lack of public consultation over bed losses at the Cumberland Infirmary. But he has reassured the public that no changes will be allowed to go ahead until health chiefs have proved the plan is both viable and safe.

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Infirmary row over plans to cut beds - Carlisle News & Star 14th March 2008

Shocking inequality - Carlisle News & Star 15th March 2008

The annual report on the state of Cumbria’s health makes chilling reading. Cumbria’s Director of Public Health, Professor John Ashton, warns that if we continue boozing and bingeing our way into obesity, our life expectancy rates will plummet as chronic alcohol and weight-related illnesses rise.
A LONG history of money worries within the local NHS will be eradicated permanently as a result of the ongoing shake-up, say health bosses. Already the PCT has managed to persuade the Government to wipe out its historic debts on the back of the Closer to Home proposals. Now it is working to tackle its finances for the long term, ensuring that the books balance year-on-year.

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TELEVISION’S Street Doctors will be hitting Cockermouth next week. GPs from the BBC One show will give free consultations to people worried about health problems.

PARAMEDICS will be given responsibility to determine whether a patient would be best treated in Carlisle or Whitehaven as part of a shake-up of emergency care. It was feared that, under the new plans, the majority of cases from the west would be transferred to the Cumberland Infirmary for surgery, prompting safety concerns. But health bosses have confirmed the decision will be left entirely to emergency crews, who will assess each patient’s needs.

ONE of Cumbria’s coroners is to contact drug authorities because he fears people are killing themselves after taking antidepressants. Ian Smith is to write to the Committee on the Safety of Medicines – an independent advisory body – following the inquest into the death of Nigel Woodburn.

AS regional secretary for the British Beer and Pub Association (BBPA), I would like to comment on Alistair Darling’s first Budget. In my view, we are now looking at a £6.50 pint, just in time for the Olympics. This will escalate pub closures, which are already at record levels. And further depress beer sales which have sunk by 1 million pints a day over the last 12 months alone.

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PLANS to build a new acute hospital in west Cumbria took a significant step forward yesterday when health bosses gave it official backing. The approval means they can now press ahead with detailed proposals for the facility – to replace the crumbling West Cumberland Hospital. This includes securing capital funding for the project and determining exactly where the new hospital will be built.

TWO East Lancashire mums are appearing in a county-wide campaign to promote breastfeeding. Michelle Bromley, 23, of Colne, and Chantelle Baldwin, 20, of Blackburn, were given a makeover and posed as a pop star and a supermodel respectively for the Be a Star campaign to get more young mums to ditch the bottle. Their images will be featured on posters and billboards throughout Lancashire's shopping centres, bus shelters and buses, as well as appearing in promotional material for the campaign.

TEACHERS went back to school to learn how best to teach their youngsters about healthy eating. Smithills School put on a two-day food training course for primary school teachers from across the borough. The course was led by food technology teachers Sally Smith and Andrew Whittle, who themselves had attended a seminar on how to train their peers.

HRH Prince Edward opens the £7.5 Million Health Centre the new Accrington Pals Primary Health Care Centre in Accrington. He arrives

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Lack of Blue Light A & E Puts Lives at Risk - Lancashire Telegraph 14th March 2008

I hope Pendle Borough Council's unanimous Motion calling for the return of the full "Blue Light" A & E Facilities at Burnley General Hospital is successful. Burnley Borough Council have passed a similar Motion. Pendle MP, Gordon Prentice, has urged the 2 Councils to meet with East Lancashire Primary Care Trust, the NHS Commissioning Body, to review the decision to downgrade this Service. This would, hopefully, put pressure on the East Lancashire Hospitals NHS Trust to reinstate the full A & E Service.

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New Section
Greater Manchester Health News


A PATIENTS' watchdog has accused health bosses of failing to carry out a proper consultation when they decided to axe a unit for dementia sufferers. The Patient and Public Involvement Forum has launched a stinging attack on the way the Sycamores Day Hospital is being closed. The unit, based at Royal Oldham Hospital, is due to shut later this year.
A SCHOOLGIRL weighing just 2½st will jet to America to see top doctors after an appeal to help her raised £5,000 in one week. British doctors are baffled as to why 4ft Ellie Wiseman can't gain weight despite her SIX meals a day.
PATIENTS in nine out of 10 Greater Manchester districts are waiting longer for hospital treatment now than when Labour came to power 10 years ago. The new figures obtained by the M.E.N. show the average wait for treatment ranged from 42 days in Bolton and 52 in Tameside now compared to 21 in Central Manchester and 42 in North Manchester in 1997.
ERIC Mee is waiting patiently for a call that will change his life. And he hopes the phone will soon ring thanks to a push to raise awareness of a disease affecting him and hundreds of others across the north west. Eric, 74, from Northenden, is one of 491 people in the region with chronic kidney disease.

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A COMPUTER system, which is being piloted in Bolton, could save the NHS more than £1 billion by 2014. The National Programme for IT, which includes the Summary Care Record, a scheme where patient records are stored online and can be accessed by health professionals across the country, is saving the money because it has increased efficiency.

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CHRONIC Fatigue Syndrome (CFS) is long-term tiredness (fatigue) that does not go away with sleep, or rest, and affects everyday life. CFS is also known as ME (myalgic encephalomyelitis). ME is a commonly used term, although it can be thought to be too specific to cover all the symptoms. What are the symptoms?

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Work begins on new cancer centre - Altrincham Messenger 14th March 2008

WORK has begun on a new Macmillan Cancer Information and Support Centre at Wythenshawe Hospital. It will be a source of practical advice information and support for people with cancer and their sufferers.

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Full links to the articles detailed can be found at www(dot) fade the blog 2 (dot)blogspot (dot)com, This has been a Podcast of Another 15 Minutes ... Health News from the Fade Library.