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Posts Tagged ‘treatment’

Are we failing HIV/Aids patients?

Millions of Africans are missing out on treatment for HIV/Aids. Is it time for a new strategy to tackle the disease?

HIV care ‘should switch to villages’

By Navdip Dhariwal
BBC News, Cape Town

An HIV patient receives treatment in South Africa

Scientists say the largest HIV/Aids clinical trial ever done in Africa should make it easier and cheaper to get life-saving medicines to villages.

The results of the Dart clinical trial are to be announced at an international conference in South Africa.

They show that expensive routine lab tests, part of normal treatment, have only a small benefit because they do little to extend survival rates.

Without the testing, patients would not need to travel to clinics in cities.

The tests are very hard to carry out in most of Africa, the research suggests.

Despite promises of universal treatment for HIV/Aids, only a third of the six million Africans who need treatment are getting it and there are concerns that money for Aids programmes is running short.

There is still no cure for HIV/Aids, but anti-retroviral drugs can stop the disease from developing.

The difficulty for rural Africa is that normal Aids treatment requires patients to undergo regular laboratory tests to check for side-effects and make sure the medicines are working.

These test are expensive and require sophisticated laboratories that are often only available in cities – many hours’ drive away from the villages where people live.

Three countries

Now the results of Africa’s largest ever HIV/Aids clinical trial, called the Dart trial, show the regular tests which patients undergo have either no benefit or very little benefit.

Scientists in Uganda, Zimbabwe and Britain followed almost 3,500 patients over six years.

If regular laboratory tests are not needed, doctors say it will be much easier and cheaper to give treatment in village clinics – rather than making patients travel to centres with laboratories.

Practitioners say with trained healthcare workers they can provide close supervision and support, and give HIV treatment to many more patients close to where they live.

And for many in rural Africa this is the only way of getting treatment for a disease that has spread rapidly across the continent.</p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Common cold virus may help treat cystic fibrosis

Scientists from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill School of Medicine have found what may be the most efficient way to deliver a corrected gene to lung cells derived from cystic fibrosis patients, renewing hope that gene therapy for CF lung disease could be a successful future treatment.
Scientists have worked for 20 [...]

Ian Welsh: Americans Lives vs. Insurance Company Profits: the real battle in healthcare reform

Lying about healthcare, indeed fear-mongering about healthcare, has ramped up as insurance companies attempt to keep their profits. Those profits are created by a system…

Immune therapy Alzheimer’s hope

Intravenous injection

An immune system therapy given to cancer patients could have the added benefit of reducing the risk of Alzheimer’s disease, a study suggests.

A US team found patients who had received antibody treatment had more than 40% less risk of Alzheimer’s than people who had not.

Writing in Neurology, they said a bigger study was needed to confirm their findings.

UK experts said immunotherapy was an important area of research.

So far, scientists have been looking at it as a way of treating people who already have Alzheimer’s.

The idea is that immune based therapies affect the formation of beta-amyloid plaques in the brain, which are characteristic of Alzheimer’s, possibly by suppressing the inflammatory response in the brain.

People with the disease have lower levels of anti beta-amyloid antibodies, so experts are looking at ways of boosting levels – including immunisation.

But this study investigated whether or not people who had been given the treatment already, for another condition, had some protection.

‘Treat the cause’

The team from Mount Sinai School of Medicine in New York looked at the records of 847 people who had been given at least one intravenous immunoglobulin

(IVIg) treatment for cancers, such as leukaemia, or immune system disorders.

All were over 65 and had received the treatment between April 2001 and August 2004.

Their records were then compared with those of 847,000 people who had not needed the therapy who were similar Alzheimer’s risk factors to the treated group.

The records were held by a medical insurance company, and so detailed the illnesses and treatments people had claimed payments for.

Patients were followed up to August 2007. It was found that only 2.8% of those treated with IVIg developed Alzheimer’s, compared with 4.8% of those not treated.

Dr Howard Fillit, who led the study, said: "IVIg has been used safely for more than 20 years to treat other diseases but is thought to have an indirect effect on Alzheimer’s disease by targeting beta-amyloid, or plaques in the brain.

"Our study provides evidence that previous IVIg treatments may protect against Alzheimer’s disease.

"The current Alzheimer’s drugs on the market treat the symptoms of the disease. Immunization could treat the underlying cause."

But he added: "These findings do not constitute an endorsement of IVIg treatment for Alzheimer’s disease. A large scale clinical trial is underway to determine whether IVIg could be an effective treatment for Alzheimer’s."

Neil Hunt, chief executive of the Alzheimer’s Society, said: "This is a really encouraging epidemiological study.

"Clinical trials are now underway in this area and we look forward to the results."

But he added: "Introducing large amounts of antibodies could cause serious side effects so important questions will need to be answered before this treatment becomes available."</p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Right-to-die teenager changes mind on transplant

A critically ill teenage girl who refused to have a heart transplant against doctors’ advice has changed her mind and now wants to have the life-saving operation.

Hannah Jones, 14, from Marden, Herefordshire, who has been in and out of hospital since the age of four, said in November she did not want to go through the “trauma” of any more operations.

But she has now been asked to be placed on the waiting for a heart transplant, after doctors found she had grown stronger and said that the operation would be less risky than previously thought.

“I know I decided I definitely didn’t want this, but everyone’s entitled to change their mind,” Hannah said.

Her decision is likely to focus attention once again on a number of medical and ethical questions. Last year it was reported that health officials applied to remove her from her home because they believed her parents were preventing her treatment.

Her parents, Andrew and Kirsty Jones, said it was Hannah’s decision to refuse the treatment and that she was mature enough to understand the consequences. At the time Hannah, who was then thought to be terminally ill, convinced a child protection officer to argue for the abandonment of the court action.

Doctors had warned her that the operation was risky and that even if it succeeded, she would need another heart within 10 years. Now doctors believe she could make a full recovery.

“The right side of my heart isn’t beating at all and, after lots of tests, I realised there were more benefits to having a new heart to staying like I was,” she said.

“If I had a new heart, I’d be on less tablets than I am at the moment.”

She made her decision to go on the waiting list having suffered kidney failure after her 14th birthday party. Speaking from Hereford hospital, Hannah added: “I fell ill last Sunday but I just thought I’d overdone it on my birthday. Actually, it turned out it was my kidneys.” She could not go on dialysis because her heart was too weak.

A spokesman for NHS Herefordshire said: “Our paediatricians work closely with Hannah and her family to ensure she has the care and support she needs.”

“In our discussions with Hannah we are convinced she has the maturity and experience to make decisions for herself about her treatment and truly understands the implications.”

The trust denied it had tried to make her a ward of court last year in a bid to force her to undergo a heart transplant.

“No one can be or would ever be forced to undergo an operation if they do not wish it,” the spokesman said.

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


Beastie Boys’ Adam Yauch Cancer Diagnosis

Adam Yauch, of pioneering rap group the Beastie Boys, has been diagnosed with what is described as a “very treatable” cancerous tumor in his salivary gland.
The announcement came from the group, which has cancelled all scheduled tour dates and is postponing the release of its upcoming album whie Adam undergoes treatment.
“Luckily it was caught [...]

Elaine Shannon: Eco-chic? Or cheap chic?

Environmental Working Group has just released a bottled water scorecard that grades almost 200 brands for labels or websites that disclose their sources, treatment methods and results of contaminant testing

Woman who gave birth through IVF at 66 dies

• Carmen Bousada lied to clinic to obtain treatment
• Case shows need for age limit for IVF, say experts

A Spanish woman who became the world’s oldest mother at the age of 66 has died of cancer just two-and-a-half years after giving birth to twins, raising fresh questions about the ethics of fertility treatment for women past natural childbearing age.

Maria del Carmen Bousada, a single mother and retired sales assistant from Cádiz, southern Spain, leaves behind her orphan sons, Pau and Christian. It was unclear who would look after them.

Bousada, who had reportedly been diagnosed with a tumour just a few months after the birth in December 2006, had been living with her sons in a one-bedroom apartment and was being helped by her brother and sister-in-law, who are both in their 70s. They lived off the €600 (£515) she received for her pension and from child benefit payments. Her brother, Ricardo Bousada, reportedly said he had sold the rights to her story to a television company and that the proceeds would go towards raising the children.

Bousada became pregnant after repeated visits to a fertility clinic in Los Angeles, where she lied about her age. She told the Pacific Fertility Clinic that she was 55, the cut-off age. Bousada sold her apartment to pay for the treatment, which she did not start until her own mother, for whom she cared, had died.

An 18-year-old girl provided the egg and an Italian-American sperm donor provided the sperm so that, after hormone treatment to reverse menopause, an embryo could be implanted in her uterus.

“I picked them from photos in a catalogue,” she said of the donors. “It was a bit like studying an estate agent’s brochure and choosing a house.”

After a difficult pregnancy the twins were born by caesarean section at a clinic in Barcelona, eastern Spain, a week before her 67th birthday. Shortly after giving birth Bousada told the News of the World that she hoped to live until she was 101, like her mother. “Everyone has to have children at the right time for them. This was the right time for me. It was something I always dreamed of,” she said.

“No one at home knew what I was doing,” she added. “I told a few girlfriends that I loved the idea of having a baby, but none of them took me seriously. They thought it was impossible.”

The clinic’s director, Vicken Sahakian, had already expressed disappointment that Bousada falsified records. He said: “I figured something might happen and wind up being a disaster for these kids, and unfortunately I was right.”

Regulations for IVF vary greatly around the world and even within Europe, despite EU measures to unify safety standards for donated eggs and sperm. In the UK, the Human Fertilisation and Embryology Authority (HFEA) sets no age limit on fertility treatment but doctors are obliged by law to consider the future welfare of any child, which in practice rules out mothers in their 60s. Since Bousada gave birth, two women in India who doctors said were aged 70 have had children following fertility treatment, both last year.

Prof William Ledger, head of the reproductive and developmental medicine unit at Sheffield University medical school and a member of the HFEA, said he believed cases like Bousada’s might provide the impetus for closer controls.

“It’s a shame that policy often comes from these individual tragedies. It’s a very, very sad story,” he said. “What’s good about regulation in the UK is that we put the welfare of the child at the centre. There are many reasons to have misgivings about mothers so old, and I think this case has shown that we are right.”

A 66-year-old new mother was “clearly pushing the boundaries of what nature intended”, said Tony Rutherford, chairman of the British Fertility Society.

His own clinic, in Leeds, would not accept women for treatment who were over 45 as the chances of success with IVF were so small at that age, he said.

“Much beyond that, if someone gives birth you’re effectively asking them to cope with a teenager, and all the problems that potentially comes with, when they’re well into their 60s. This raises very serious questions.”

Josephine Quintavalle from the Comment on Reproductive Ethics, a pro-life pressure group which campaigns on IVF issues in the UK, said the primary problem was a general unwillingness to accept the limits of ageing when it came to parenthood.

“We get older, it’s the human condition, accept it. Move on to the next stage of life and live it to the full, but don’t expect to be able to have children at any cost,” she said. “If a woman in her late 60s announced she was going to go and play at Wimbledon she would be laughed at. Yet for some reason, when a woman of the same age decides she want to be a mother it’s OK.”

Bousada herself, who had never been married, told the News of the World that her family would look after the boys if she died. “They will never be alone,” she said. “There are lots of young people in our family.”

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Hague OKs medical treatment for Gen. Lazarević

The Hague Tribunal has extended the medical treatment period for retired Yugoslav Army (VJ) General Vladimir Lazarević for a second time. Lazarević was sentenced to 15 years in prison for crimes committed against Kosovo Albanians.

Woman who had twins at 66 dies

Single mother Maria del Carmen Bousada from Spain had IVF treatment in US after lying about age

A Spanish woman believed to have been the world’s oldest new mother when she gave birth at the age of 66 has died, leaving behind twin toddlers, Spanish newspapers have reported.

Maria del Carmen Bousada reportedly died on Saturday aged 69. She had given birth in December 2006 as a single mother after IVF treatment.

At the time, Bousada told an interviewer she had lied about her age to a California fertility clinic. “Yes, I am old of course, but if I live as long as my mum [who died aged 101], imagine, I could even have grandchildren.”

Bousada’s death was reported by the newspapers El Mundo and Diario de Cadiz. Cadiz is the southern province where Bousada lived for her whole life.

Diario de Cadiz quoted her brother, Ricardo Bousada, as confirming her death but refusing to disclose the cause. The newspaper said she had been diagnosed with a tumour shortly after giving birth.

There was no word on who would raise the children, named Pau and Christian. Bousada had once said she would look for a younger man to help her raise them.

In January 2007, she told theNews of the World that she sold her house to raise $59,000 (£36,000) for IVF. “I think everyone should become a mother at the right time for them,” Bousada said in a video of the interview provided to Associated Press Television News.

“Often circumstances put you between a rock and a hard place, and maybe things shouldn’t have been done in the way they were done, but that was the only way to achieve the thing I had always dreamed of, and I did it.”

The retired department store employee said she told the Pacific Fertility Centre in Los Angeles that she was 55, the clinic’s cut-off for treating single women. She said the clinic did not ask her for identification.

Bousada lived with her mother for most of her life in Cadiz. She came up with her plan to have children after her mother died in 2005, she said. Initially she kept it secret from her family, and when she finally told them that she was two months pregnant they thought she was joking.

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PMX205 Drug Rescues Memory Lost To Alzheimer’s Disease

A drug similar to one used in clinical trials for treatment of rheumatoid arthritis and psoriasis has been found to rescue memory in mice exhibiting Alzheimer’s symptoms.

China bans web addiction shock cure

Statement follows release of first definition of internet addiction last year – but critics say criteria for condition are too vague

China’s ministry of health has banned the use of electric shock treatment to cure internet addiction.

The move follows growing concern in the country about young people’s compulsive use of chat rooms, websites and online gaming – but also the methods used to wean them offline.

Doctors released the first diagnostic definition of internet addiction late last year, based on a study of more than 1,300 intensive users. It says addicts are those who spend at least six hours online a day and have shown at least one of a range of symptoms – including yearning to get back online, fear of social contact, irritation and difficulty concentrating or sleeping.

Other experts argue that the definition is far too general and that many non-addicts qualify under it because the criteria are so vague.

But critics warned that some of the “cures” promoted to anxious parents were as worrying as the original problem.

A notice on the ministry’s website said that the safety of the technology was not clear so use of the therapy should be stopped immediately.

Today’s ban follows reports that Dr Yang Yongxin from Linyi City’s psychiatric hospital in Shandong province was using electroconvulsive therapy (ECT).

According to the Beijing News, Yang said he had created the unique “xingnao” (“brain-waking”) therapy which involved sending a small current through the brain. He added that the stimulation might cause pain but was very safe and would not harm children in any way.

An earlier report by the Information Times claimed patients received electroconvulsive therapy if they broke any of the centre’s rules, which included eating chocolate, locking the bathroom door, taking pills before a meal and sitting on Yang’s chair without permission. It said parents had to sign a contract acknowledging their child would be given ECT before admission.

The ministry of health asked Shandong’s health department to stop the use of “electrical stimulation” for internet addiction while experts investigated. The researchers said both the safety and the effectiveness of the method was unclear.

The ministry added that people wanting to conduct medical research required official approval as well as full consent from patients. But there are said to be hundreds of internet addiction treatment centres across China and others are believed to use similar methods.

The centre’s public relations chief said it had stopped using electric shock treatment for internet addicts due to the pressure of public opinion, but was still treating them through other means.

According to the Beijing News, its reporter was unable to reach Yang. When the reporter called the centre posing as a consumer, staff said the treatment fee for internet addiction was 5,500 yuan (£500) a person every month.

Asked whether or not electric shock therapy would be used, the employee said it should be called “pulse therapy” and was only used in special circumstances.

Kong Lingzhong, who runs a website on ending internet addiction, said that electric shocks are usually used on mentally ill patients.

He added: “Most experts in the field do not agree with this therapy. No one knows whether there are side-effects or not.”

Tao Ran, who runs a well-known centre for curing internet addiction in the suburbs of Beijing, said: “There are about 300 million net users in China and 200 million of them are young people. More net users means more chances to be addicted to the internet. Young people are weaker in controlling themselves and when they find the computer games gripping they will quickly become addicted.”

He said his clinic treated around 200 patients a month for addiction, 80% of whom were aged 15 to 18 and 90% of whom were male. Most required around three months of treatment.

“We treat them in two ways: with psychological treatment and medicine. About 60% of the patients need medicines because they have other symptoms like depression, anxiety,” he said.

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