Strokes cause more disability than just about any other disease, but they don’t have to. Effective treatments are known for the most common type of stroke; delivering them to the right patients has proven to be difficult. Now a group of researchers is proposing some changes in how stroke care is organized, with the hope….
Continue ReadingArchives for May 2009
Doctors Urged to Stop Accepting Gifts – A Step toward Eliminating Conflicts of Interest
An Institute of Medicine report released on April 28, 2009, denounces the adverse effects that the health care system suffers from the free gifts regularly pumped into hospitals, medical schools, and doctors’ offices, writes New York Times’ Gardiner Harris. The report strongly advises doctors to stop accepting the gifts. The report says that accepting gifts….
Continue ReadingFDA Imposes Tighter Regulations on Internet Ads of Drugs
In its letters sent to 14 pharmaceutical companies in March 2009, FDA required risk information to be included in the Internet search advertisements of drugs – a move welcomed by consumer advocates, reports Stephanie Clifford in a New York Times story. The short text ads that appear to the right of Google search results are….
Continue ReadingFDA Issues Warnings for Weight-Loss Diet Supplements
On May 1, 2009, the FDA issued a warning for consumers to immediately stop using dietary supplements containing Hydroxycut, which has been linked to dozens of serious health problems including jaundice and liver damage. The dietary supplement is also responsible for one death from liver failure. Other reported health problems include seizures, muscle damage and….
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