The News Review:
- … for Complementary Medicines’ World Congress of Integrate…
- Blaming bats when man may be culprit
- Desoto Sun Herald - 04/27/06
- US efforts will not slow flu pandemic much if it hits, computer model…
- Point Therapeutics Presents Talabostat’s Novel Dual Mechanism of…
… for Complementary Medicines’ World Congress of Integrate…
Free with registration - Business Wire - AccessMyLibrary.com - Apr 26, 2006
Open International University for Complementary Medicines’ World Congress of Integrated Medicine May 13-14 in New York — Press Invited With Advance Registration. | Business Wire (April, 2006).
Blaming bats when man may be culprit
International Herald Tribune - Apr 26, 2006
But the field challenges traditional academic divisions, especially the cultural divide between doctors and veterinarians. Epstein is a senior research scientist at the New York- based Consortium for Conservation Medicine at Wildlife Trust, which organizes projects that cross the old disciplinary boundaries. The consortium includes the Cummings School of Veterinary Medicine at Tufts University in Massachusetts, the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health in Maryland, and the United States Geological Survey National Wildlife Health Center in Wisconsin. As researchers do their detective work around the world, they are finding connections between human society and disease. Global warming could push mosquito-borne diseases like malaria and encephalitis into more northern countries. One new bat-borne disease, the Nipah virus, was tied to the expansion of pig farming in Malaysia. Outbreaks of avian flu have been tied to farms, and the disease's spread has been helped by farmers reluctant to come forward with sick birds.
Desoto Sun Herald - 04/27/06
Charlotte Sun-Herald - Apr 27, 2006
He is well-liked and respected by all of us and the patients think he’s wonderful. This makes him a great asset to the Center for Family Health, where we deal with all kinds of situations, including child and adolescent issues, worker’s comp, woman and family health, and of course, the everyday illnesses and injuries. ”
Pinsky said he continues to love the challenging nature of acute care, using his ability of relating basic science information to clinical medicine, evaluating patients and appreciating and recognizing physiological changes that take place. When not at work at the Center for Family Health, he enjoys the sun, the sand and the water. He is a true Floridian at heart. He has found Arcadia to be a community of positive individuals with values and strength. He already considers Arcadia to be his home and is looking for a house in the area — somewhere where he can let his dog (he used to raise Dalmatians) run.
US efforts will not slow flu pandemic much if it hits, computer model…
Free with registration - America's Intelligence Wire - AccessMyLibrary.com - Apr 26, 2006
(From AP Worldstream) Byline: SETH BORENSTEIN If a pandemic influenza hits in the next year or so, the few weapons the United States has to keep it from spreading will do little, a new computer model shows. A pandemic flu is likely to strike one in three people if nothing is done, according to the results of computer simulation published in Thursday’s journal Nature. If the government acts fast enough and has enough antiviral medicine to use as preventive dosings _ which the United States does not _.
Point Therapeutics Presents Talabostat’s Novel Dual Mechanism of…
Free with registration - Business Wire - AccessMyLibrary.com - Apr 26, 2006
| Business Wire (April, 2006). (NASDAQ:POTP) presented preclinical data further elucidating talabostat’s novel dual mechanism of action during a Company Research and Development Day on April 25.
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