Monday 23 July 2012

The science of good skin care

23 July 2012
Last updated at 03:01












Sun protection is one of the main issues in good skin care

Looking younger for longer is a popular obsession but what's the scientific truth about younger looking skin, asks plastic surgeon Dr Rozina Ali.
Plastic surgeons are not exempt from ageing or the concerns of ageing. We really are all in this together.
But I was in for a nasty

Read more ...

Is there a future for luxury care homes?

23 July 2012
Last updated at 13:11











By Nick Triggle
Health correspondent, BBC News



West Hall has more than 100 en-suite rooms

The not-for-profit group Anchor, best known for its sheltered housing, is opening a luxury care home. The charity believes it marks the start of a new model of care for the baby boomer generation. But with doubts

Read more ...

UK's hidden world of mutilation

23 July 2012
Last updated at 12:22











By Sue Lloyd Roberts
BBC Newsnight



Women throughout the world come to Paris to have female mutilation reversed


Every year around 20,000 young women in the UK and France are "at risk" from female genital mutilation (FGM), but the way each country's authorities deal with those who carry it out are very

Read more ...

Demo over child heart surgery axe

23 July 2012
Last updated at 16:52





















Please turn on JavaScript. Media requires JavaScript to play.











Campaigners said the journey to the unit in Newcastle was too long





Thousands of people have

Read more ...

Re: I cured my scalp Psoriasis completely through Juice and water Fasting!!

Hey guys!!! I had scalp P for 2 years and it was horrible!! I hated it and refused to live with it..I also refused to believe it is incurable. So I did as much research as i could on possible natural ways to boost the immune system into ridding my body of this horrid disease. Through much trial and error with supplements, herbs, vitamins, and natural topical treatments, I was finally led to the amazing healing power of Juice Fasting and Water Fasting. I successfully cured my horrible scalp P

Read more ...

Drug-resistant HIV 'on increase'

23 July 2012
Last updated at 03:09












Monitoring of patients helps in detecting drug resistance

Drug-resistant HIV has been increasing in parts of sub-Saharan Africa over the last decade, according to experts writing in the Lancet.
Studies on 26,000 untreated HIV-positive people in developing countries were reviewed by the team.
They said resistance could build up if people

Read more ...

Re: Deodorant

News:
Follow PHO You are not allowed to view links.

Read more ...

Salty food link to stomach cancer

Monday July 23 2012













Eating more than 6g of salt a day can be dangerous





Read more ...

Reducing salt 'would cut cancer'

23 July 2012
Last updated at 00:33















Salt is in many foods, such as bread.


Cutting back on salty foods such as bacon, bread and breakfast cereals may reduce people's risk of developing stomach cancer, according to the World Cancer Research Fund (WCRF).
It wants people to eat less salt and for the content of food to be labelled more clearly.
In the UK, the WCRF

Read more ...

Sunday 22 July 2012

The challenges of ageing with HIV

22 July 2012
Last updated at 10:01











By Genevieve Edwards
Terrence Higgins Trust



Loneliness and isolation are common fears


People with HIV are living into old age - something that was inconceivable a few years ago. But while longer lives are of course welcome, it brings new challenges.
It is 16 years since delegates at the World

Read more ...

NHS assault claims passed to CPS

22 July 2012
Last updated at 13:52












The three members of staff have been suspended since the allegations first emerged from Beech Ward


Claims that three NHS staff assaulted "vulnerable" patients at a hospital in east London have been passed to prosecutors, Scotland Yard has said.
Patients at Whipps Cross University Hospital in Leytonstone were alleged to have suffered "physical

Read more ...

Eating out? Watch for trans fat

Privacy policy (Updated May 24, 2012) Terms and conditions of use policy (Updated Aug. 2, 2011)LEGAL CONDITIONS AND TERMS OF USE APPLICABLE TO ALL USERS OF THIS SITE. ANY USE OF THIS SITE CONSTITUTES YOUR AGREEMENT TO THESE TERMS AND CONDITIONS OF USE.© 1998-2012 Mayo Foundation for Medical Education and Research. All rights reserved. nbsp We comply with the HONcode standard for trustworthy health information: verify here.

Read more ...

Saturday 21 July 2012

Re: shaving and psoriasis

News:
Join PHO You are not allowed to view links.

Read more ...

Our new film is coming to public television!

NETA, an organization that distributes media for public television, is offering our new film I’m Just Like You to its member stations nationwide for broadcast starting in August.
August is also Psoriasis Awareness Month – perfect timing for this wonderful opportunity to touch the lives of many, many families who are wrestling with the challenges of living with the disease.
We are very excited about this, and hope that you too will be inspired to order our DVD and share the messages of

Read more ...

Re: A very honest question.

Could I please ask if anyone here has really cleared their psoriasis (gone into remission /not cured!!!!) through diet/juicing etc? Genuinely. A very honest question? Well here is a very honest answer........Yes. I cleared with diet. Genuinely.I was born with psoriasis and had patches pretty much permanently for almost 40 years.I did clear briefly in 2006 / 2007 with a hemp oil moisturiser. But due to a combination of events that occurred around the same period; the P reappeared. Thankfully

Read more ...

Test post

News:
Join PHO You are not allowed to view links.

Read more ...

A UVB Question

News:
Support PHO You are not allowed to view links.

Read more ...

Stores to sell asthma inhalers

21 July 2012
Last updated at 15:32












There are more than five million people in the UK who suffer from asthma


Asthma inhalers will go on sale in supermarkets for the first time this month, allowing sufferers to get the medicine without seeing their doctor.
Asda said it would start selling blue reliever inhalers over the counter without prescription from Tuesday.
Customers

Read more ...

We’re on the air!

We are thrilled to announce that as of today, 68 Public Television stations have chosen to broadcast our new film. Tune in to the following stations to see I’m Just Like You:
WQED Channel 13 – Pittsburgh, PA – Sunday, August 5, 6 PM
UNC MX – North Carolina – Tuesday, August 7, 8 PM
KRCB, TV 22 – Sonoma, CA – Tuesday, August 7, 9

Read more ...

Friday 20 July 2012

999 recordings highlight pressures

19 July 2012
Last updated at 18:14











By Michael Fitzpatrick
BBC News



Ambulance emergency medical dispatchers are often called the unsung heroes of the health service

Dialling 999 could be the most important call you ever make.
The Northern Ireland Ambulance Service receives 400 such calls a day at their Regional Emergency Dispatch

Read more ...

VIDEO: Do popular sports products actually help?

Consumers could be wasting their money on sports drinks, protein shakes and high-end trainers.
That's according to a new joint investigation by the BBC's Panorama programme and the British Medical Journal into the performance-enhancing claims of some products.
Shelley Jofre reports on the new study that aims to separate the science from the sell when it comes to some of the country's most popular sports products.
Panorama: The Truth About Sports

Read more ...

Re: ? reaction to Humira

News:
Support PHO You are not allowed to view links.

Read more ...

'Gym and tonic' – doubts about sports drinks

Thursday July 19 2012













Do expensive trainers really make you run faster?





Read more ...

Europe nears gene therapy first

20 July 2012
Last updated at 16:11











By James Gallagher
Health and science reporter, BBC News



Gene therapies alter a patient's DNA


Europe is on the cusp of approving a gene therapy for the first time, in what would be a landmark moment for the field.
Gene therapies alter a patient's DNA to treat inherited diseases passed from

Read more ...

Can a Gabonese director cure the Albert Schweitzer hospital?

19 July 2012
Last updated at 10:34











By David Baron
PRI's The World, Gabon



Albert Schweitzer (r) wanted to atone for the sins of white Europeans


A famous charitable institution in Africa, the Albert Schweitzer hospital in Gabon, is nearing its hundredth birthday. But after a century spent healing the sick, the hospital has spent the past

Read more ...

Team tackling contraception myths

19 July 2012
Last updated at 02:19











By Jane Dreaper
Health correspondent, BBC News



Gloria Isheku says she cannot provide adequately for more than three children


A big international meeting in London has raised £3bn to help couples in the world's poorest countries plan the size of their families. I went to a clinic in Nassarawa in the

Read more ...

Thursday 19 July 2012

VIDEO: Call for curb on alcohol marketing

Tougher rules on alcohol marketing may be needed, including possibly a ban on sports sponsorship, MPs say.
The House of Commons health committee said the measures could be required as the industry was still not doing enough to tackle problem drinking.
The cross-party group came to the conclusion after reviewing the government's English alcohol strategy.
Dominic Hughes reports.

Read more ...

AUDIO: Alcohol adverts and sport

MPs say the Government needs to do more research into its plans to introduce minimum pricing for alcohol in England.
Members of the cross-party Health Select Committee have been examining the Alcohol Strategy.
They also concluded that there may need to be tougher regulation of the drinks industry, including a ban on sports advertising.
Alcohol misuse is estimated to cost the taxpayer £21bn and causes thousands of deaths every year.

Read more ...

First aid party held on Facebook

Page last updated at 09:27 GMT, Thursday, 19 July 2012 10:27 UK

Read more ...

Egg allergies 'treated with egg'

19 July 2012
Last updated at 03:15











By James Gallagher
Health and science reporter, BBC News





Omelettes, meringues and pasta could one-day be back on the menu for some people with egg allergies after they are treated with the very food they are allergic to, say US researchers.
The only option for patients is to completely avoid

Read more ...

Hospital balcony fall firm fined

18 July 2012
Last updated at 20:43











A private healthcare firm has been fined £100,000 after an 85-year-old patient fell from a hospital balcony following an operation.
Michael Walsh fell 15ft from the balcony at BMI Shelburne Hospital in High Wycombe, Buckinghamshire, after becoming confused.
He died the following day of pneumonia resulting from his injuries.
Aylesbury

Read more ...

Drink price law legal challenge

19 July 2012
Last updated at 13:25












Whisky producers believe the minimum price law may not stand up to a challenge in court

The Scotch Whisky Association (SWA) has said it will challenge legislation on a minimum price for alcohol.
The law, which was overwhelmingly backed by MSPs earlier this year, would increase the price of some cheaper drink brands in Scotland.
The SWA

Read more ...

Stafford Hospital concerns lifted

19 July 2012
Last updated at 03:21












The trust said the CQC report confirmed the hospital was "definitely well on the way"


All "essential standards" are being met at Stafford Hospital, a regulator says, three years after a damning Healthcare Commission report.
Mid Staffordshire NHS Foundation Trust said it was "delighted" after the Care Quality Commission (CQC) lifted all of its

Read more ...

Lack of proof sport products work

19 July 2012
Last updated at 02:23












Puma shoes carried Jamaica's Usain Bolt to Olympic Gold in the 100-metre sprint in Beijing in 2008


Consumers could be wasting their money on sports drinks, protein shakes and high-end trainers, according to a new joint investigation by BBC Panorama and the British Medical Journal.
The investigation into the performance-enhancing claims of some

Read more ...

Alzheimer’s drug 'stops symptoms for 3 years'

Wednesday July 18 2012













IVIG may attack 'toxic' Alzheimer's proteins and halt symptoms





Read more ...

BMA lifts pension action threat

18 July 2012
Last updated at 18:20











By Nick Triggle
Health correspondent, BBC News



Doctors have said the demanding nature of the NHS means working until 68 would not be safe


Doctors' leaders have lifted the threat of industrial action to re-enter talks with the government in their dispute over pension changes.
The British Medical

Read more ...

Re: Methotrexate and the Sun

News:
Support PHO You are not allowed to view links.

Read more ...

Alcohol marketing crackdown urged

19 July 2012
Last updated at 03:08











By Nick Triggle
Health correspondent, BBC News



MPs said the alcohol strategy was too focused on binge drinking


Tougher rules on alcohol marketing may be needed, including possibly a ban on sports sponsorship, MPs say.
The House of Commons health committee said the measures could be required as

Read more ...

Re: Scalp Psoriasis

News:
Support PHO You are not allowed to view links.

Read more ...

Could new polypill save thousands of lives?

Thursday July 19 2012













Can a £1 pill containing four drugs prevent thousands of deaths?





Read more ...

Obesity, Psoriatic Arthritis Linked

By Nancy Walsh, Staff Writer, MedPage TodayAction Points Women who are obese are at increased risk of developing psoriatic arthritis whether or not they already have psoriasis, a large, prospective study indicated.Compared with women whose body mass index (BMI) is below 25, relative risks for psoriatic arthritis were 1.83 (95% CI 1.15 to 2.89) for those with a BMI tween 25 and 30 and 3.12 (95% CI 1.90 to 5.11) for BMI between 30 and 35, according to Abrar A. Qureshi, MD, and colleagues from

Read more ...

Polypill 'could save thousands'

18 July 2012
Last updated at 20:13











By James Gallagher
Health and science reporter, BBC News



Could a once-a-day pill reduce the numbers of heart attacks and strokes?


A "polypill" combining a statin with blood pressure drugs could prevent thousands of heart attacks and strokes every year, according to researchers.
A UK study of 84

Read more ...

Veggie how to: Glazed root vegetables

By Mayo Clinic staff


Want a new way to enjoy fresh veggies? Try glazed root vegetables. In a saucepan, add 1 1/2 cups water, and 1/2 cup pearl onions, 1/2 cup baby carrots, 1/2 cup small turnips, and 1/2 cup new potatoes, all cut into 1-inch pieces. Simmer uncovered over medium heat until veggies are tender and the water is almost absorbed, about 15 minutes. Sprinkle with 2 teaspoons sugar and 1 teaspoon olive oil. Turn heat up and continue to cook, shaking pan until veggies are

Read more ...

Wednesday 18 July 2012

Five lesser-spotted things in the census

17 July 2012
Last updated at 11:55











By Lucy Townsend and Kathryn Westcott
BBC News Magazine




The census throws up some surprising details about the UK. Why is Manchester growing so fast? And why are there so many more women than men?
Here are five lesser-reported facets of the census.
Women v men
According to the census women

Read more ...

Fukushima's disease risk: A major fallout?

17 July 2012
Last updated at 17:51







Article written by
Richard Black

Environment correspondent
More from Richard
Follow Richard on Twitter














Nakoso beach, 65km south of Fukushima Daiichi, opened for holidaymaking this week

What claims to be (and indeed appears to be) the first formal attempt to

Read more ...

Hair removal regulation 'needed'

By Amy GladwellNewsbeat reporter











Please turn on JavaScript. Media requires JavaScript to play.










Laser hair removal process explained





Leading skin specialists say they are

Read more ...

How fast can psoriasis spread/develop?

News:
Support PHO You are not allowed to view links.

Read more ...

US approval for weight loss drug

18 July 2012
Last updated at 03:02












More than one-third of adults in the US are now obese, according to official figures


The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has approved a new weight-loss drug from the pharmaceutical company Vivus.
The FDA approved Qsymia for patients who are overweight or obese and have at least one other weight-related condition.
The approval

Read more ...

Vacinations and Methotrexate Travel advice

News:
Support PHO You are not allowed to view links.

Read more ...

Re: barney

News:
Support PHO You are not allowed to view links.

Read more ...

'TOWIE lifestyle' link to type 2 diabetes

Tuesday July 17 2012













Do phthalates in nail varnish really raise diabetes risk?





Read more ...

Baby heart risk for beauticians?

18 July 2012
Last updated at 02:01












Solvents may pose a slight risk to unborn babies, a study has found


Pregnant women exposed to organic solvents at work have a slightly higher chance of having a baby with a heart defect, a study shows.
The risk applied to hairdressers, nail bar workers plus women working in factories that make these chemicals, US researchers found.

Read more ...

Re: NATURAL WAYS: DIET / JUICE / SMOOTHIES / RELAXING

PART THREESecondly Venus Bergner touches on diet and lifestyle.........Ok, I am going to be a bit creepy here and write in the third person. DIETARY AND LIFESTYLE CHANGES TO IMPROVE YOUR SKIN COMPLAINTS:* Optimise your diet with fresh wholefoods. Be sure to have a balanced diet with adequate protein, plenty of low load carbohydrate foods such as fresh fruit, fresh vegetables, grains, legumes and essential fats.LPP did all this whilst clearing P, and is still doing it now to maintain

Read more ...

Minister: No NHS report collusion

18 July 2012
Last updated at 15:46












Health Minister Lesley Griffiths has faced opposition calls to resign


Wales' health minister says it was "entirely appropriate" for her civil servants to be in contact with the author of a report into the NHS.
Lesley Griffiths defended emails between senior officials and the academic behind the report.
Officials were also challenged

Read more ...

Re: Vacinations and Methotrexate Travel advice

News:
Support PHO You are not allowed to view links.

Read more ...

Seaside living leads to health boost

Tuesday July 17 2012













Seaside living leads to sunnier moods, claims study





Read more ...

Inactivity 'as deadly as smoking'

18 July 2012
Last updated at 01:26














By Nick Triggle
Health correspondent, BBC News












Please turn on JavaScript. Media requires JavaScript to play.











Report co-author Dr

Read more ...

Tuesday 17 July 2012

Sightseeing when you can't see

16 July 2012
Last updated at 17:15












Emma Tracey getting hands on in Kenya

German performance artist Christian Jankowski went sightseeing blindfolded in Dubai for the BBC's Collaboration Culture project. But what is it like for blind people travelling abroad, asks Emma Tracey, a producer on the BBC Ouch! disability blog and talk show.
Blind from birth, the concept of sightseeing is

Read more ...

The agony of feeling no pain

17 July 2012
Last updated at 01:11












Steven (right) with his brother Chris in 1983

Steven Pete and his brother were born with the rare genetic disorder congenital analgesia. They grew up - in Washington state, US - with a sense of touch but, as he explains in his own words, without ever feeling pain.
It first became apparent to my parents that something was wrong when I was four or

Read more ...

Needles found in US airline food

17 July 2012
Last updated at 09:45












Needles were found in five sandwiches on board four separate flights (File image)

The FBI has opened an investigation after needles were found in sandwiches served on four Delta Air Lines flights bound for the US from the Netherlands.
The needles, which the authorities said appeared to be sewing needles, were found in five sandwiches prepared by

Read more ...

Polio doctor attacked in Pakistan

17 July 2012
Last updated at 12:33












Pakistan is one of three countries where polio is still endemic


Gunmen have attacked a UN vehicle, critically injuring a doctor who was administering polio vaccines in the southern Pakistani city of Karachi.
The foreign doctor was in the run-down Sohrab Goth area of the city, officials say. His driver was also hurt.
No group has said

Read more ...

People with cancer 'need more exercise'

Monday July 16 2012













Exercise: good for cancer patients, says Macmillan





Read more ...

Hospital repairs bill nears £1m

17 July 2012
Last updated at 12:50












The hospital closed in 1995 and planning permission lapsed in 2009


The bill to carry out urgent repairs at the former North Wales Hospital at Denbigh has reached £930,000.
Denbighshire council sent in contractors last year to carry out work due to concerns about the state of the Victorian building.
The council's cabinet committee

Read more ...

Re: shoulder injection

News:
Follow PHO You are not allowed to view links.

Read more ...

People 'healthier' beside the sea

17 July 2012
Last updated at 01:40















Are areas like the Wirral coastline good for health?


People living on the English coast are more likely than those living inland to say they are fit and well, an analysis of census data suggests.
The researchers said living in areas such as Skegness, St Ives or Scarborough was linked to a "small, but significant" improvement in

Read more ...

Re: Anti TNFs and benefit vs potential side effects

News:
Follow PHO You are not allowed to view links.

Read more ...

TV-watching tots risk turning into ‘telly tubbies’

Monday July 16 2012













Could too much time watching telly make your toddler tubby?





Read more ...

US approves HIV-prevention drug

16 July 2012
Last updated at 18:30












Truvada is already used in combination with other drugs to treat HIV-positive patients


US health regulators have for the first time approved a drug to prevent HIV infection.
Truvada can be used by those at high risk of infection and anyone who may engage in sexual activity with HIV-infected partners, said the Food and Drug Administration

Read more ...

Tired of walking alone? Team up!

By Mayo Clinic staff


There's motivation in numbers. To start a walking group, just spread the word. Talk up your walking group among family, friends and neighbors. You might be surprised to find you're surrounded by people who are ready to lace up their walking shoes and hold each other accountable for regular exercise. Agree on how often to walk, when and where to meet, what to do in case of bad weather, the speed to walk, and the distance to cover. Then get moving!



See

Read more ...

Monday 16 July 2012

VIDEO: NHS pay cuts 'a sign of chaos'

A proposal to cut the pay and change the conditions of health workers in south-west England is a sign of "the chaos engulfing the NHS", Labour has said.
The idea is one of those being considered by a group of health trusts, as hospitals tackle an escalating funding crisis.
According to a leaked document, if changes can not be negotiated, thousands of doctors and nurses could be dismissed and then re-employed on new contracts.
Dominic Hughes

Read more ...

VIDEO: How hospital 'failed my son'

A coroner has ruled neglect by medical staff contributed to the death of a man who died from dehydration while a patient in hospital.
Kane Gorny, who was 22, had been so desperate he called police to ask for a drink of water.
Officers were turned away when they arrived at St George's Hospital in Tooting.
Kane's mother, Rita Cronin, wants a corporate case brought against the hospital trust, which has apologised.
''Everybody along the

Read more ...

Fitness class for cancer patients

16 July 2012
Last updated at 12:37











Exercise classes for cancer patients to help aid their recovery have begun.
Macmillan Cancer Support said research showed almost half of people in Scotland who had completed treatment for cancer said they were not told about the importance to their recovery of being physically active.
CANmove is thought to be the UK's first class for cancer

Read more ...

Armstrong doctor denies doping

12 July 2012
Last updated at 16:26











By Matt McGrath
Science reporter, BBC World Service



Dr Michele Ferrari says the doping charges are untrue


An Italian sports doctor accused of doping with cyclist Lance Armstrong has branded the charges "false and ridiculous".
Dr Michele Ferrari was given a lifetime ban this week for his

Read more ...

GM veg dangerous for psoriasis sufferers!

News:
Follow PHO You are not allowed to view links.

Read more ...

Legal action over 'toxic homes'

16 July 2012
Last updated at 11:25












Watling Street estate residents claims toxic land has affected their health


A couple from North Lanarkshire have launched legal action against a housing association over fears their home was built on toxic land.
Angela and Robert McManus live on the Watling Street estate in Motherwell, which has a history of industrial use.
They claim

Read more ...

Re: Meds and alcohol

News:
Join PHO You are not allowed to view links.

Read more ...

England and Wales population up

16 July 2012
Last updated at 13:15















The population has grown by 7% in a decade, the Census showed

The population of England and Wales has reached 56.1 million, up by 3.7 million in a decade, the 2011 Census shows.
It is the largest growth shown by any census since they began in 1801.
The population in England was 53 million on 27 March 2011 when the census was taken, about

Read more ...

Re: Coolmax memory Mattress Topper

News:
Follow PHO You are not allowed to view links.

Read more ...

Aspirin could be a 'no brainer'

16 July 2012
Last updated at 13:12











By Susan Watts
Newsnight science editor, BBC News



About a third of 50- to 70-years-olds carry the bacterium Helicobacter pylori


A mass-screening programme for 50- to 70-year-olds could cut the risk of stomach bleeds due to daily doses of aspirin, cancer experts have said.
About a third of this

Read more ...

Re: A strange feeling

News:
Join PHO You are not allowed to view links.

Read more ...

TV habits 'predict kids' weights'

16 July 2012
Last updated at 03:58















Experts say children should not watch more than two hours of TV a day


Children who increase the number of hours of weekly television they watch between the ages of two and four years old risk larger waistlines by age 10.
A Canadian study found that every extra weekly hour watched could add half a millimetre to their waist

Read more ...

Sunday 15 July 2012

VIDEO: Surgeons 'seek to protect title'

Leading doctors are calling on the government to legally protect the title "surgeon".
A Royal College of Surgeons (RCS) poll of 2,000 people found 95% expect someone using the title "surgeon" to be medically qualified.
There are no restrictions on who can use the title - but the RCS wants only those with a medical degree and surgical training to be able to do so.
But others who use the title defended their right to do so.
The BBC's Simon

Read more ...

Surgeon warning on child obesity

15 July 2012
Last updated at 09:05





















Please turn on JavaScript. Media requires JavaScript to play.











The case of Georgia Davis from Aberdare was an extreme example of obesity





A leading surgeon

Read more ...

Surgeons 'seek to protect title'

15 July 2012
Last updated at 00:01












Not all surgeons have undergone the same training


Leading doctors are calling on the government to legally protect the title "surgeon".
A Royal College of Surgeons (RCS) poll of 2,000 people found 95% expect someone using the title "surgeon" to be medically qualified.
There are no restrictions on who can use the title - but the RCS

Read more ...

Saturday 14 July 2012

Re: Back in the land of the living!

News:
Join PHO You are not allowed to view links.

Read more ...

Rooney hair-loss drug ‘can shrink men’s genitals’

Friday July 13 2012













Does Propecia lead to a loss in sex drive?






Read more ...

Compositions and methods for treating proliferative diseases

07/12/12 - Class 514 Info Monitor Keywords Archive Organizer Account | Prev - Next

SEARCH FreshPatents: Monitor Keywords | Custom RSS


Abstract: Synergistic pharmaceutical compositions and the methods for preventing and treating proliferative diseases such as cancer and psoriasis. The compositions comprise synergistic combinations of: (i) an acyl-CoA-synthetase enzyme inhibitor (AcsI4), (ii) a compound having an inhibiting effect on enzymes with

Read more ...

Re: MTX and Early Menopause

News:
Follow PHO You are not allowed to view links.

Read more ...

Heterocyclic compounds as jak receptor and protein tyrosine kinase inhibitors

Abstract: The invention relates to compounds of general formula (I) wherein A, R1, R2, R3, R4, R5, R9, m and n are defined as defined herein, and pharmaceutically acceptable salts, hydrates, or solvates thereof, for use—alone or in combination with one or more other pharmaceutically active compounds—in therapy, as JAK kinase and protein tyrosine kinase inhibitors for preventing, treating or ameliorating diseases and complications thereof, including, for example, psoriasis, atopic

Read more ...

'My three dyslexic sons and music'

14 July 2012
Last updated at 00:33












Robert, Patrick and Luke Baldwin (l to r) all started piano aged five


Three brothers with dyslexia have overcome their struggles with reading music to be chosen to play in the National Schools Symphony Orchestra.
"I shudder to think what it would have been like without music," says Sasha Baldwin, mother to three teenage sons who are all

Read more ...

Back on the UV

News:
Support PHO You are not allowed to view links.

Read more ...

One in 20 hospital deaths preventable

Friday July 13 2012













An estimated 12,000 hospital deaths a year are preventable





Read more ...

Inhibitor of inflammatory conditions

Abstract: The invention relates to Boswellia frereana and particularly an extract of same for treating a range of inflammatory disorder or conditions selected from the group comprising: articular cartilage degradation or arthritides, osteoarthritis, rheumatoid arthritis, inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), all forms of muscular dystrophy especially Duchenne muscular dystrophy, sepsis, sepsis syndrome, osteoporosis, ischemic injury, graft vs. host disease, reperfusion injury, asthma, diabetes,

Read more ...

Quiz show social selection clue

14 July 2012
Last updated at 00:31












How would you choose?

A study of behaviour on the Weakest Link quiz show suggests there is a basic instinct to be nicest to those closest to you, psychologists say.
A team from the University of Lincoln looked at 72 shows, and at who was picked to go out.
They found they were much less likely to select those standing next to them.

Read more ...

Control your portions, control your weight

Privacy policy (Updated May 24, 2012) Terms and conditions of use policy (Updated Aug. 2, 2011)LEGAL CONDITIONS AND TERMS OF USE APPLICABLE TO ALL USERS OF THIS SITE. ANY USE OF THIS SITE CONSTITUTES YOUR AGREEMENT TO THESE TERMS AND CONDITIONS OF USE.© 1998-2012 Mayo Foundation for Medical Education and Research. All rights reserved. nbsp We comply with the HONcode standard for trustworthy health information: verify here.

Read more ...

Friday 13 July 2012

'No truth' to lying eyes theory

12 July 2012
Last updated at 13:54












New research says the lying eyes theory is a myth

Research by academics at two universities have concluded that the common belief of lying eyes is a myth.
Many psychologists think when a person looks up to their right they are likely to be telling a lie and glancing up to the left is said to indicate honesty.
However, the experts from

Read more ...

Virgin could take on child care

12 July 2012
Last updated at 20:12












Child protection services will continue to be managed by Devon County Council


Virgin Care has been named as preferred bidder to run a £130m contract for children's services in Devon.
The company, which runs children's services in Surrey, could take over in March 2013 for three years.
It beat off competition from Devon Partnership Trust

Read more ...

100th Legionnaires' case reported

12 July 2012
Last updated at 19:30












Three people have died since the outbreak began in May


One more person has been confirmed as having Legionnaires' disease - bringing the total number of cases to 100 since the outbreak began in Edinburgh in May.
The health secretary said the person had been unwell for some time, and was being treated in hospital.
It brings the total

Read more ...

Elderly 'low prescribing' warning

13 July 2012
Last updated at 01:18












Statins are cholesterol-lowering drugs


More elderly patients should be prescribed drugs to tackle high blood pressure and cholesterol, experts say.
Oxford and Birmingham university researchers said older patients were "largely ignored" after looking at prescribing for nearly 37,000 people.
They found for blood pressure-lowering drugs

Read more ...

Re: Good ending to a bad week

News:
Follow PHO You are not allowed to view links.

Read more ...

Swine flu vaccine 'link' to 'deadly' nerve condition

Thursday July 12 2012













The swine flu vaccine is far safer than many widely used medications




Read more ...

Breast cancer 'reoperation risk'

13 July 2012
Last updated at 01:17












Surgery to conserve the breast can cause scarring


One in five women with breast cancer who has part of the breast removed, rather than the whole breast, ends up having another operation, a BMJ study suggests.
The reoperation rate increases to one in three for women whose early-stage cancer is difficult to detect.
In England, 58% of

Read more ...

Thursday 12 July 2012

The challenge of family planning in rural Nigeria

11 July 2012
Last updated at 17:08











By Jane Dreaper
Health correspondent, BBC News



The primary health centre in Kiyawa had temporarily run out of contraceptive injections


On the road to Nigeria's northern state of Jigawa, you soon notice life becoming more rural after leaving the outskirts of Kano city.
Men on motor-bikes are

Read more ...

Why have food 'traffic-light' labels?

11 July 2012
Last updated at 23:58





















Please turn on JavaScript. Media requires JavaScript to play.











Research suggests people are more likely to eat food they are told is healthy





Britain came close

Read more ...

VIDEO: Melinda Gates on contraception funding

The government says it will provide around £1.3bn over eight years to pay for family planning services in the world's poorest countries.
Ministers say the increase in aid will save a woman's life every two hours.
The pledge is being announced at a conference in London organised by Bill Gates's charity foundation and the Department for International Development, his wife Melinda said the money was vital.

Read more ...

VIDEO: PM: Family planning aid to double

David Cameron has announced that Britain is to double its annual investment in family planning overseas, and will contribute more than £500 million between now and 2020.
Speaking at a summit on family planning, the prime minister said that allowing women to make choices about getting pregnant was good for them, their families and their countries.

Read more ...

AUDIO: Social care: Dilnot regrets no immediate action

Andrew Dilnot, the economist responsible for a government-commissioned report into social care, has said he is pleased that the government recognised "that we came up with the right way forward".
But speaking on The World At One, he said he would have liked it to have implemented the changes he recommended "immediately".
"It would have been best for all of us," he told Martha Kearney.
The report from Mr Dilnot, published last summer, recommended

Read more ...

Portugal medical staff on strike

11 July 2012
Last updated at 12:56












Unions say those who can least afford to pay will be worst hit

Thousands of doctors and nurses have gone on strike in Portugal to protest against cuts in the health budget.
The health ministry has warned that as many as 4,500 operations and 400,000 appointments may be cancelled.
The government has promised to reduce its budget deficit as

Read more ...

Israeli jailed for US organ sales

12 July 2012
Last updated at 03:24












Rosenbaum was arrested during a huge operation into corruption in many walks of life

An Israeli convicted of arranging US kidney transplants for profit has been given a two-and-a-half-year sentence.
Levy Izhak Rosenbaum admitted brokering kidney transplants for profit, becoming the first person convicted over illegal organ sales in the US,

Read more ...

NHS 'faces catch-22 on funding'

12 July 2012
Last updated at 07:37












Local health boards have needed help to break even


The NHS in Wales faces a "catch-22" situation because its current services are unaffordable - but it may not have enough funds to pay for major reforms either.
That is the warning from a watchdog which said the NHS needs to change to make it cost effective.
The Wales Audit Office said

Read more ...

Anger over circumcision ruling

12 July 2012
Last updated at 07:14












Jewish and Muslim groups in Germany want legal protection for the rite of circumcision


European Jewish and Muslim groups have joined forces to defend circumcision for young boys on religious grounds after a German regional court ruled it amounted to bodily harm.
A joint statement says the practice is fundamental to their faiths and calls for it

Read more ...

Job centre diabetes checks urged

11 July 2012
Last updated at 23:58












People could be assessed for their risk of diabetes in a range of community settings


Diabetes checks should be offered to the over-40s in settings ranging from libraries to job centres across England, a health watchdog has said.
The National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence (NICE) says identifying those at high risk means they could

Read more ...

Care plans 'paper over cracks'

11 July 2012
Last updated at 15:14











By Nick Triggle
Health correspondent, BBC News












Please turn on JavaScript. Media requires JavaScript to play.











David Allen, multiple sclerosis

Read more ...

Alzheimer's 'early signs mapped'

11 July 2012
Last updated at 23:43












Protein plaques in the brain indicate Alzheimer's disease


Scientists have assembled a "timeline" of the unseen progress of Alzheimer's before symptoms appear.
A team at Washington University School of Medicine looked at families with a genetic risk of the disease.
Writing in the New England Journal of Medicine, they say signs appeared

Read more ...

Re: My MTX diary

News:
Support PHO You are not allowed to view links.

Read more ...

NHS trust put into administration

12 July 2012
Last updated at 13:04












The trust was created by merging three hospitals

South London Healthcare NHS Trust is to be put into administration after it ran into financial trouble, the government has announced.
Health Secretary Andrew Lansley has appointed a trust special administrator to go into the trust.
Mr Lansley said: "Past efforts have not succeeded in

Read more ...

Seeking advice on hand-held UVB Lamps.

News:
Support PHO You are not allowed to view links.

Read more ...

Rules broken at 14 abortion units

12 July 2012
Last updated at 11:18














Fourteen NHS abortion clinics have broken the rules by allowing doctors to pre-sign forms authorising a termination, the health service regulator in England says.
The Care Quality Commission also found "irregularities" at some clinics.
Ministers asked for over 300 private and NHS clinics to be inspected over concerns doctors were signing

Read more ...

Have a black eye? Here's what to do

Privacy policy (Updated May 24, 2012) Terms and conditions of use policy (Updated Aug. 2, 2011)LEGAL CONDITIONS AND TERMS OF USE APPLICABLE TO ALL USERS OF THIS SITE. ANY USE OF THIS SITE CONSTITUTES YOUR AGREEMENT TO THESE TERMS AND CONDITIONS OF USE.© 1998-2012 Mayo Foundation for Medical Education and Research. All rights reserved. nbsp We comply with the HONcode standard for trustworthy health information: verify here.

Read more ...

Wednesday 11 July 2012

A sitting person's guide to standing up

10 July 2012
Last updated at 13:52











By Vanessa Barford
BBC News Magazine




Office workers, bankers, IT experts and couch potatoes beware. Doctors are warning sitting down for too long can shorten lives. So how can the chair be countered?
Ever since the advent of the service industry, the nation has fallen in love with the swivel

Read more ...

The second brain in our stomachs

11 July 2012
Last updated at 01:53











By Michael Mosley
BBC TV












Please turn on JavaScript. Media requires JavaScript to play.











Michael Mosley swallows a tiny camera which streams live

Read more ...

VIDEO: 'Contraception key to saving lives'

Research published by The Lancet suggests providing more contraception around the world could save 100,000 lives every year, by stopping many women from dying in childbirth.
An international meeting in London is due to give details on funding for contraception in developing countries.
Jane Dreaper reports.
Contributors in this piece:
Professor John Cleland, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine
'I want to stop giving

Read more ...

'Posturing' claim over NHS emails

10 July 2012
Last updated at 15:18





















Please turn on JavaScript. Media requires JavaScript to play.











Lesley Griffiths said the process around the preparation of the report was "irreproachable"





The

Read more ...

Re: The future

News:
Support PHO You are not allowed to view links.

Read more ...

Saline inquiry sees 800 quizzed

10 July 2012
Last updated at 10:07












The deaths of seven patients at the hospital are being investigated


More than 800 staff members at Stepping Hill Hospital have been interviewed in the 12 months since the investigation into saline contamination began.
Twenty two people were affected by the poisoning at the Stockport hospital last summer and seven of them died.

Read more ...

What is best way to remove sclaes

News:
Support PHO You are not allowed to view links.

Read more ...

Ex-smokers 'may gain up to 5kg'

11 July 2012
Last updated at 03:10












Appetite and sense of smell may improve after quitting, possibly tempting quitters to snack more


The average weight gain associated with giving up smoking is much higher than previously thought, experts have found.
People can expect to put on up to 5kg (11lb) within a year of quitting, research published on bmj.com suggests.
This is

Read more ...

Re: What is best way to remove sclaes

News:
Follow PHO You are not allowed to view links.

Read more ...

Dogs protect against childhood infection claim

Tuesday July 10 2012













Does the family dog protect against infection in kids?





Read more ...

Plan to cap care costs 'on hold'

11 July 2012
Last updated at 13:06











By Nick Triggle
Health correspondent, BBC News












Please turn on JavaScript. Media requires JavaScript to play.











David Allen, multiple sclerosis

Read more ...

Tuesday 10 July 2012

'I want to stop giving birth'

10 July 2012
Last updated at 07:48











By Jane Dreaper
Health correspondent, BBC News



Zaliha Alhassan has had eight children and two miscarriages


One out of every 10 couples in Nigeria uses contraception - but in Jigawa, a rural state in the north I visited, the rate is 1%, although services are now being provided here that did not exist

Read more ...

AUDIO: Younger men turning to steroid use

A growing number of young men are taking high levels of steroids, risking serious damage to their health.
Liverpool John Moores University surveyed bodybuilders and found that people in their teens and twenties are taking doses five or six times the levels they were 10 years ago.
5 liveBreakfast spoke to 'Jack' from Northampton, 23, who started taking them when he was 19.
To listen to other Radio 5 live interviews, please visit the

Read more ...

Cranberry 'stops urine infection'

10 July 2012
Last updated at 08:25











By Michelle Roberts
Health editor, BBC News online



Compounds present in cranberries stop bacteria sticking to the wall of the bladder, studies show


Drinking cranberry juice to prevent urine infections does work say medical experts who have found scientific backing for this folk remedy.
The

Read more ...

Steroid use 'doubling' each year

By Dan WhitworthNewsbeat reporter











Please turn on JavaScript. Media requires JavaScript to play.










See some of the substances people have taken to build a better body





The

Read more ...

Resign call over NHS emails row

10 July 2012
Last updated at 09:08












NHS bosses commissioned an academic report to support changing hospital services


The independence of a report calling for controversial changes to hospitals has been questioned after emails emerged between its author and Welsh government officials.
The Conservatives say it is "dodgy" and want Health Minister Lesley Griffiths to resign if she

Read more ...

Rich elderly 'must lose benefits'

10 July 2012
Last updated at 09:33















Reforming universal benefits for elderly people has been identified by Nick Boles as a way to make savings


Wealthy pensioners should stop receiving free bus passes and prescriptions, an ally of the prime minister is expected to argue later.
In a speech, Conservative MP Nick Boles is set to urge an end to universal benefits such

Read more ...

'Natural' molecule fights melanoma in mice

Monday July 9 2012













Mice became more melanoma-resistant with IL-9 injections





Read more ...

Hospital trust losing £100k a day

10 July 2012
Last updated at 07:36












The trust ended the past financial year with a £19.2m deficit


A cash-strapped NHS trust has set out plans for a major shake-up of services after revealing it is losing £100,000 a day through inefficiency.
Mid Yorkshire Hospitals NHS Trust has to save £24m by April 2013 but will still end the year with a £26m deficit.
Two options are

Read more ...

Less time sitting 'extends life'

10 July 2012
Last updated at 00:45














By Michelle Roberts
Health editor, BBC News online



The analysis assumes a causal association rather than proving that there is one


Limiting the time we spend sitting to just three hours a day could add an extra two years to our life expectancy, scientists calculate.
Similarly, if

Read more ...

Re: Looking for Psoriatic Arthritis Patients in the UK for a study -- $75 USD

News:
Join PHO You are not allowed to view links.

Read more ...

'Obesity vaccine' hope

Monday July 9 2012













A vaccine for obesity is still the stuff of fantasy





Read more ...

Doctors 'must report child abuse'

10 July 2012
Last updated at 00:37












Doctors should not fear reporting suspicions about child abuse, the regulator of the profession says.
The General Medical Council said high-profile cases and a concern about complaints by parents were deterring doctors from raising the alarm.
But it said new guidance it was issuing should give medics the confidence to act when they needed

Read more ...

Monday 9 July 2012

Re: Anti TNF

News:
Follow PHO You are not allowed to view links.

Read more ...

Gene flaw link to MS drug failure

9 July 2012
Last updated at 07:37












The findings provide more understanding of MS


Scientists have identified why a once-promising class of drugs do not help people with multiple sclerosis.
An Oxford University team say an genetic variant linked to MS means the drugs which work for patients with other autoimmune diseases will not work for them.
The team, writing in Nature,

Read more ...

Flaxseed for breakfast? You bet!

Privacy policy (Updated May 24, 2012) Terms and conditions of use policy (Updated Aug. 2, 2011)LEGAL CONDITIONS AND TERMS OF USE APPLICABLE TO ALL USERS OF THIS SITE. ANY USE OF THIS SITE CONSTITUTES YOUR AGREEMENT TO THESE TERMS AND CONDITIONS OF USE.© 1998-2012 Mayo Foundation for Medical Education and Research. All rights reserved. nbsp We comply with the HONcode standard for trustworthy health information: verify here.

Read more ...

Sunday 8 July 2012

AUDIO: Delay to social care cost plan

The shadow health secretary, Andy Burnham, has urged the government to produce a clear timetable for changing the system of social care funding in England. Ministers will publish a progress report next week which will back the principles of last year's Dilnot Report - which recommended a cap on the amount any individual would have to pay in care costs. But no decision on the details of the level of any cap, how it will be paid for or when it will be implemented are expected until late next

Read more ...

AUDIO: Martina: What cancer taught me

Martina Navratilova says being diagnosed with breast cancer taught her to stop worrying about the smaller things in life.
The former Wimbledon champion said she felt "helpless" after she was diagnosed in February 2010, but decided to go public with the news to help other women suffering similar health problems.
You can hear Martina Navratilova speaking to Kirsty Young on Radio 4's Desert Island Discs on Sunday 8 July at 11:15

Read more ...

Re: Laser eye surgery

News:
Join PHO You are not allowed to view links.

Read more ...

Social care plans 'not enough'

7 July 2012
Last updated at 16:37





















Please turn on JavaScript. Media requires JavaScript to play.











David Allen, Multiple sclerosis sufferer: "I do feel abandoned. And I do, at times, feel bullied"





Read more ...

Watch what you drink when dieting

By Mayo Clinic staff


When you're dieting, pay attention to what you drink, too. For instance, although juice and milk have important nutrients, they contain a lot of calories. Drink reduced-calorie juice or dilute juice with plain or sparkling water to help lower the calorie count. To help cut calories in milk yet still get your calcium, switch to fat-free milk. Water is still the best choice when it comes to satisfying thirst, though. And if you're hungry, snack on fresh fruit,

Read more ...

Saturday 7 July 2012

VIDEO: 'How social care let me down'

With an ageing population and pressure on local budgets, there are growing concerns over how costs are to be met for caring for the elderly and the disabled.
A draft bill on overhauling social care in England is due to be published next week.
Alison Holt talks to people about their experiences of the current system and how it should change.

Read more ...

VIDEO: Whooping cough: 'It was quite frightening'

Child health experts say a booster dose of whooping cough vaccine may be needed to deal with the biggest outbreak in 20 years in the UK which has led to the deaths of five babies.
So far this year across the UK there've been almost 2,398 cases of whooping cough, compared with 272 in the same period last year.
Katie Lodge from Weston-super-Mare got infected at nine weeks, just before she was taken for her first vaccination, and ended up in hospital needing

Read more ...

UK cuts £6.7bn more than planned

6 July 2012
Last updated at 23:04















George Osborne has been criticised for using some of the savings for tax cuts for the wealthy

Government departments cut spending by £6.7bn more than they had planned in the year to March, according to official data from the Treasury.
Spending was down £11bn compared with 2010-11, but government plans had been for a reduction of

Read more ...

Re: Getting light treatment on NHS at short term address

Author
Topic: Getting light treatment on NHS at short term address (Read 77 times)


annalou2006, carefulcharlie and 21 Guests are viewing this topic.







Blind Ned

Newbie






Posts: 38
Gender:
Member of the UK Psoriasis Help ForumView

Read more ...

Diabetes drug metformin 'could aid Alzheimer's'

Friday July 6 2012













Will Alzheimer's disease be cured by metformin?






Read more ...

Diagnostic and treatment methods for characterizing bacterial microbiota in skin conditions

Abstract: The present invention relates to methods for characterization of bacterial skin microbiota to provide diagnostic, therapeutic, and preventive measures for alleviating skin conditions. In certain embodiments, the invention relates to characterization of bacterial skin microbiota associated with psoriasis and related diagnostic, therapeutic, and preventive measures for alleviating psoriasis. These methods will be useful for detecting, diagnosing, and monitoring individuals who have or

Read more ...

Social care costs cap wins favour

7 July 2012
Last updated at 12:08





















Please turn on JavaScript. Media requires JavaScript to play.











David Allen, Multiple sclerosis sufferer: "I do feel abandoned. And I do, at times, feel bullied"





Read more ...

Friday 6 July 2012

Brain scan remote controls robot

5 July 2012
Last updated at 13:55












The man-machine link was used to control a small humanoid robot


Robot avatars have got a step closer to being the real world doubles of those who are paralysed or have locked-in-syndrome.
Scientists have made a robot move on a human's behalf by monitoring thoughts about movement, reports New Scientist.
The man-machine link joined a man

Read more ...

Bigger bra size 'linked with breast cancer'

Thursday July 5 2012













Breast cancer risk has been 'linked to larger breast size'





Read more ...

Councils 'ration' elderly care

5 July 2012
Last updated at 18:01











By Jane Hughes
Health correspondent, BBC News












Please turn on JavaScript. Media requires JavaScript to play.











Jane Hughes reports on time limits

Read more ...

so it is originating in the intestines ? new research

News:
Support PHO You are not allowed to view links.

Read more ...

Child heart surgery fight goes on

6 July 2012
Last updated at 05:05











By Nick Triggle
Health correspondent, BBC News



The number of child heart surgery units is to be reduced from 10 to seven under the plans


The fight to save child heart surgery at three leading units will go on, the hospitals and their supporters say.
An NHS review concluded on Wednesday that

Read more ...

Re: Starting Infliximab tomorrow

News:
Join PHO You are not allowed to view links.

Read more ...

Are organic tomatoes better for your health?

Thursday July 5 2012













Organic and ordinary tomatoes: health benefits compared





Read more ...

'Most real' robot legs developed

6 July 2012
Last updated at 04:58





















Please turn on JavaScript. Media requires JavaScript to play.











Experiment footage showing the robotic legs in action - Courtesy Journal of Neural Engineering





US

Read more ...

Thursday 5 July 2012

Afghans fear mysterious school 'poisonings'

4 July 2012
Last updated at 17:14











By Quentin Sommerville
BBC News, Kabul




A mysterious wave of sickness has affected a number of schools in Afghanistan. Hundreds of schoolgirls have been taken to hospital, and many teachers and officials suspect poisoners are to blame. But no poison has yet been found.
At the Bibi Hajera School in

Read more ...

Do you regret your tattoo?

4 July 2012
Last updated at 12:48











By Philippa Roxby
Health reporter, BBC News



Footballer David Beckham has an array of tattoos


David Beckham is just one of many celebrities to have adorned his body with permanent ink in dedication to his wife and four children.
The pitches of Ukraine and Poland were full of footballers sporting

Read more ...

Historic cases, but not a backlog

4 July 2012
Last updated at 15:16







Article written by
Martin Rosenbaum

Freedom of information specialist
More from Martin












For years the Nursing and Midwifery Council (NMC) has been failing to cope with the number of complaints it has to handle into whether particular nurses or midwives are fit to practise, leading to long delays.

Read more ...

Hearing-aid hackers do DIY tuning

5 July 2012
Last updated at 02:20











By Mark Ward
Technology correspondent, BBC News



Many frustrated hearing aid users want to have more control over the devices


If you are short-sighted, usually all it takes is a visit to an optician to get a pair of spectacles to help restore the world to sharp detail.
But if you suffer hearing

Read more ...

VIDEO: Paxman hunts truth on ageing Britain

Investigating the issues facing older people in Britain, Jeremy Paxman travels to Christchurch in Dorset which has one of the oldest average populations in Europe.
Newsnight's special programme, Senior Moment, focuses on the growing problem of caring for an ageing population.

Read more ...

AUDIO: Plight of UK's 'undernourished' children

The number of children who are going to charities to ask for food has grown significantly over the last year, according to the charity Kids Company. Angela, a single mother who is struggling to make ends meet, told the BBC's Philippa Thomas that most of the time she would just have water instead of eating or "leftovers from what my daughter didn't eat". Siobhan Freegard, the founder of Netmums, says a lot of children have parents who are "so chaotic" with significant drug or alcohol abuse

Read more ...

VIDEO: 'Devastation and anger' at heart decision

Child heart surgery should be stopped at three of the 10 hospitals that perform the procedures, NHS bosses have said.
An official review concluded the units at Leicester's Glenfield Hospital, Leeds General Infirmary and London's Royal Brompton should stop surgery.
The recommendation was greeted with dismay by parents in Leeds.
Steph Ward said that she was both devastated and angry at the news, and vowed that she would continue the fight to keep the

Read more ...

VIDEO: Newcastle 'relief' at heart unit review

Child heart surgery should be stopped at three of the 10 hospitals that perform the procedures, NHS bosses have said.
An official review concluded the units at Leicester's Glenfield Hospital, Leeds General Infirmary and London's Royal Brompton should stop surgery.
Newcastle's Freeman Hospital is home to one of the seven treatment centres that will remain open - a decision that was greeted with joy and relief by parents and staff there.

Read more ...

Caesarean model trains doctors

5 July 2012
Last updated at 07:43











By Anna-Marie Lever
Health reporter, BBC News



Emergency caesarean: a desperate situation for mother and baby


An emergency caesarean simulator has been launched by the NHS to help train doctors to perform complex C-sections.
Guy's and St Thomas' NHS Foundation Trust is the first to use the model,

Read more ...