Today's
HealthNews
March 4, 2010
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Allina Hospitals & Clinics logoAllina in the News

Here's recent news featuring Allina Hospitals & Clinics, a not-for-profit family of hospitals, clinics and other care services dedicated to meeting the health care needs of communities throughout Minnesota and western Wisconsin.
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Doctor on treating ear infections with antibiotics

[KSTP News, March 3, 2010] There is a debate in the medical community over whether children should be given antibiotics if they get an ear infection. There is some concern it can do more harm than good. Dr. Eric Barth, a pediatrician with Allina Medical Clinic in Ramsey, spoke about the controversy. Read the full story on allinanews.com...

1st anniversary of the Backyard Initiative

[The Alley Newspaper, March 1, 2010] The community celebration of the first year of the Backyard Initiative included a review of the progress made by Allina Hospitals & Clinics and community leaders to evaluate and improve the health of people who live in South Minneapolis near Abbott Northwestern Hospital, Allina Commons and Phillips Eye Institute. Read the full story on alleynews.org...

Your schools: Teamwork abounds in this city

[River Falls Journal, February 25, 2010] In his column, the superintendent for schools in River Falls, Wisconsin, mentions how the River Falls Area Hospital Foundation is working with the school district to find ways to better meet community health needs. Read the full story on riverfallsjournal.com...

Healthday logo NATIONAL & INTERNATIONAL HEALTH NEWS

Read more headlines and news stories on Allina.com.

Here are some of the latest health and medical news developments, compiled by the editors of HealthDay:

FDA to Discuss Insulin Pump Recalls

A U.S. Food and Drug Administration advisory panel will hold a special meeting Friday to discuss an increasing number of hardware and software problems with insulin pumps, the agency said.

In 2007, there were 375,000 Americans with type 1 diabetes using insulin pumps, according to the FDA. The agency said there have been 18 recalls of insulin pumps over a five-year period, Dow Jones news wire reported.

"Device problems critical to insulin pumps exist across all manufacturers," the FDA said.

At Friday's meeting, the panel of outside medical experts will discuss what action can be taken to minimize risks associated with insulin pumps that have to be recalled, Dow Jones reported.

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USDA Ignored Slaughterhouse Safety Violations: Testimony

U.S. Department of Agriculture officials failed to take action when agency inspectors identified slaughterhouses with illegal and unsafe practices, says a supervisory veterinarian at the USDA's Food Safety and Inspection Service.

In testimony to be delivered Thursday at a hearing of the House of Representatives' Committee on Oversight and Government Reform, Dean Wyatt lists cases in which he says he and other inspectors were overruled and even threatened with demotion after citing slaughterhouses for violations, USA Today reported.

"When upper-level FSIS management looks the other way as food safety or humane slaughter laws are broken then management is just as guilty for breaking those laws," Wyatt said in his testimony, according to USA Today, which obtained a copy of the testimony in advance of the hearing.

In recent years, there have been a number of outbreaks of potentially deadly illnesses linked to contaminated meat.

The enforcement problems listed by Wyatt occurred before current Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack took over the agency, USDA spokesman Caleb Weaver told the newspaper. Weaver said Vilsack is "fully committed" to enforcing safe and human slaughtering rules.

Rep. Dennis Kucinich, D-Ohio, who will chair the congressional committee hearing, said, "The new administration must recognize past wrongs and ensure the proper treatment of animals and the safety of our food supply."

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Popular Fish Oil Products Contain PCBs: Lawsuit

Popular brands of fish oil dietary supplements contain unsafe and illegal levels of cancer-causing PCBs, charges a lawsuit filed by environmentalists in California.

The plaintiffs say their initial testing of the products found PCB levels ranging from 12 nanograms to 850 nanograms per recommended dose, CBS News reported.

The lawsuit by two citizen environmentalists and the Mateel Environmental Justice Foundation says the fish oil products violate California's Proposition 65, which requires manufacturers to warn consumers about all chemical exposures.

The eight supplement makers or distributors named in the lawsuit are: CVS Pharmacy, Rite Aid, General Nutrition Corp., Solgar, Twinlab, Now Health, Omega Protein, and Pharmavite, CBS News reported.

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Alzheimer's Hope Fails in Drug Trial

One of the world's great hopes for treating Alzheimer's disease fell flat Wednesday, when the drug failed a late-stage clinical trial.

The drug, called Dimebon, got its start as a hay fever pill in Russia in the 1980s, and appeared to stave off some of the mental problems tied to Alzheimer's in an earlier study.

But it showed no benefit in treating the mental decline or behavioral issues related to Alzheimer's when compared with a placebo, the drug developers, Pfizer and a California start-up called Medivation, said in a statement, The New York Times reported.

This current study involved 598 patients in Europe and in North and South America who had mild to moderate Alzheimer's disease, the Times said.

The failure appeared to dash the drug makers' hopes for the drug, at least for use of the drug on its own to treat Alzheimer's. However, Medivation and Pfizer will conduct other trials combining Dimebon with other Alzheimer's drugs.

Dimebon is also being tested as a medication for Huntington's disease, the Times reported.

Copyright © 2010 HealthDay. All rights reserved.

Published on: 03/04/2010

TODAY'S HEALTH NEWS, a compilation of local, national and international health news, comes courtesy of Allina.com.

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