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OptumHealth Provides Free Counseling Help Line For People In Missouri And Oklahoma Affected By Tornadoes
OptumHealth Inc. announced that it is providing a free help line to people in Missouri and Oklahoma who are trying to cope with the emotional consequences of the recent tornadoes that hit the region. Staffed by experienced master"s-level behavioral health specialists, the free help line offers assistance to callers seeking help in dealing with stress, anxiety and the grieving process. Callers may also receive referrals to a database of community res to help them with specific concerns, such as financial and legal issues.

Blogs Comment On Health Reform Legislation, Maternal Mortality, Other Topics
The following summarizes selected women"s health-related blog entries. ~ ""Operation Rescue" Founder Warns of "Violent Convulsions" if Health Bill Doesn"t Ban Abortions," Ian Millhiser, Think Progress: Operation Rescue founder Randall Terry is "probably the first public figure to raise terrorism as a potential response to a health bill which allows Americans to keep the same access to reproductive care that they currently enjoy," Millhiser writes in a blog post responding to Terry"s warning "that his supporters may engage in violent acts of terrorism unless Congress prohibits abortion services from being covered in the new health reform legislation." According to Millhiser, Terry recently said that there are some people ""who will be tempted to acts of violence"" and that ""history will hold those in power responsible for the violent convulsions that follow"" the legislation. Millhiser writes that many conservative policymakers are "pushing a poison pill amendment" to Congress" reform bill that would prohibit the coverage of abortion services in plans offered within a national health insurance exchange. He notes that 71% of U.S. residents oppose an amendment that would "cut off women"s access to reproductive care" (Millhiser, Think Progress, 7/20).~ "Gestation Is a Life-Changing Experience for Women," Jessica Grose, XX Factor: Grose"s post responds to Francis Kissling"s recent Salon opinion piece discussing the ""new pro-lifers."" According to Grose, this movement "seeks to make bearing and raising children easier, and reducing abortion that way." She continues, "It almost sounds reasonable to pro-choice Kissling, except for one thing: making bearing children "easier" doesn"t acknowledge how gestation can change a woman"s life." According to Kissling, the ""new pro-lifers barely acknowledge the difficulties of childbirth,"" and the movement ""denies the reality that even in modern Western culture, in the high-tech U.S., every woman who agrees to be pregnant still risks dying if the pregnancy goes awry."" Kissling also wrote that the ""new antiabortionists want to use their rosy view of pregnancy as the frame for public policy, and that is where they become indistinguishable from the old antiabortion movement. For both groups, women are passive participants in gestation."" Grose writes that "many of the new pro-lifers don"t support efforts to bring contraception to women who don"t have access to it," an issue that is "likely to come back in a big way in the next few months as the administration"s new health plan is debated" (Grose, XX Factor, 7/20).~ "Thanks, Abstinence-Only Education!" Feministing: "Thanks to a decade of misinformation and masquerading as sex education, teens are having the same amount of sex, using contraception less and getting pregnant more," a Feministing blog entry states. A report from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention found that trends in reproductive and sexual health of U.S. teens and young adults ""have flattened, or in some instances may be worsening."" According to the blog entry, "We"re reaping what we"ve sowed." Although President Obama"s 2010 budget proposal includes cuts in abstinence-only education funding, "de-funding these programs is not enough," the blog says. It adds, "We have to undo the damage that"s been done to young people and support real solutions." The blog concludes, "The purity-pushers are not going anywhere, but this is about more than politics, ... it"s about our health and futures" (Feministing, 7/20).~ "Human Rights Resolution Spotlights Disparities in Maternal Health Care in the U.S.," Ximena Andion Ibanez et al., RH Reality Check: A "vast majority" of pregnancy- and childbirth-related deaths are "preventable and can therefore be understood to reflect widespread indifference to the rights of the world"s poorest women," Ibanez writes in a blog post co-authored by Center for Reproductive Rights Deputy Director Laura Katzive and Michelle Movahead, an attorney at the ce
News of the day
Nursing Shortage Leads To More Students, New Training Programs
"Long second shrift to other medical training, nursing education has taken on new relevance as the country faces a drastic shortage of nurses and a thin job market overall," The Dallas Morning News reports.
Sexual Health

News From The Journal Of The National Cancer Institute, May 26, 2009

Effects of MYC Protein and CIP2A in Gastric Cancer The presence of the protein CIP2A in tumors is associated with early mortality for gastric cancer patients, according to a new study by Ari Ristimaki, M.D., Ph.D., of the Genome-Scale Biology Research program at the University of Helsinki and colleagues. CIP2A was previously reported to interact and promote the stability of the MYC oncoprotein and to be overexpressed in head and neck and colon cancers, but its role in gastric cancer was unclear. The researchers discovered that expression of CIP2A was associated with reduced overall survival among gastric cancer patients with tumors smaller than 5 centimeters, and that its presence increased proliferation and anchorage-independent growth. In addition, MYC appeared to promote expression of the CIP2A messenger RNA and protein. "MYC and CIP2A appear to reinforce each other"s expression (or inhibition) in a positive feedback loop that would appear to be an attractive target for cancer therapeutics," the authors write. Variability of Interpretive Accuracy of Diagnostic Mammograms among Mammography Facilities A new study found that diagnostic interpretative performance varies across mammography facilities. Prior work demonstrated that screening mammography interpretive accuracy varies substantially by facility, but performance of diagnostic interpretation (i.e., exams performed to evaluate a clinical breast lump) was unknown. To determine if such variability exits, Sara L. Jackson, M.D., of the University of Washington School of Medicine in Seattle, and colleagues surveyed 45 facilities in the Breast Cancer Surveillance Consortium to compare mammography facility structure, organization, and interpretive processes. Analyzing data from over 28,000 diagnostic mammograms read by 118 radiologists, they assessed whether facility characteristics were associated with facility interpretive performance of diagnostic mammograms. After adjustment for patient and radiologist characteristics, researchers found statistically significant variability for false-positive rates between facilities. False positive rates were higher at facilities reporting increased concern about malpractice. "Analyses comparing differences among mammography facilities that do not adjust for important patient characteristics may falsely conclude that there is more facility variation in overall accuracy than what actually exists," the authors write. RasGAP-Derived Peptide Improves Response to Chemotherapy in Mouse Models of Colon Cancer Tumor-bearing mice treated with a peptide derived from the RasGAP signaling protein and either cisplatin or doxorubicin had reduced tumor growth compared with mice treated with the chemotherapy agent alone. Tumors that lack proper activation of their cell death pathway may be resistant to chemotherapy. Therefore, restoring cell death, or apoptosis, signaling may restore drug sensitivity. Christian Widmann, Ph.D., of Lausanne University in Switzerland, and colleagues had previously shown that a small portion of the RasGAP signaling protein could increase cell death in tumor cells treated with cisplatin in vitro. In the current study, Widmann and colleagues modified the peptide to increase its stability in vivo. They tested the safety of the peptide and its ability to improve responses to genotoxic agents, including cisplatin and doxorubicin, in mice bearing tumors derived from human colon cancer cells. Mice treated with the modified peptide, known as RIò€¢TAT-RasGAP317-326, and cisplatin or doxorubicin daily for 7 days showed reduced tumor growth compared with mice treated with cisplatin or doxorubicin alone. "To our knowledge, this peptide is the only compound that has been shown to improve the efficacy of genotoxins and that behaves strictly as a chemosensitizer, that is, it has no effect on tumors by itself," the authors write. "This compound would therefore have the potential to improve the efficacy of chemotherapeutic agents that are currently used in the clinic, particularly in situations in which doses of genotoxin have to be lowered to reduce side effects." Steve Graff Journal of the National Cancer Institute


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