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Industry Groups Increase Lobbying As Details Of Health Plan Emerge
Insurers, business owners, and doctors -- three principal interest groups in health reform -- are stepping up their opposition and lobbying efforts as details of the health plans emerge.
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Washington Post Examines Future Of USAID, Foreign Policy Reports Farmer No Longer Under Consideration For Agency Top Spot
USAID, "the main U.S. foreign aid agency is in limbo, entering its seventh month without a permanent director despite pledges by the Obama administration to expand development assistance and improve its effectiveness in poor countries," the Washington Post reports in an article examining the agency"s prospects and concerns that changes could reduce its clout. "While [Secretary of State Hillary Rodham] Clinton has championed additional personnel for USAID, aid groups worry that the once-autonomous agency could be swallowed up in the State Department, with long-term development goals losing out to short-term political aims," the Washington Post writes. The article includes comments from development experts and administration officials on USAID"s future.
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New York Times Examines Trend Of Posting Childbirth Videos On YouTube
The New York Times on Thursday examined how thousands of women have posted videos on YouTube showing themselves giving birth. According to the Times, the women believe the videos help "demystify" childbirth by candidly presenting the process in a manner that pregnant women and their partners otherwise might not see. Along with YouTube, Web sites like Internet chat rooms and pregnancy blogs are helping to shift dynamics between pregnant women and their care providers, the Times reports. Eileen Ehudin Beard, an adviser for the American College of Nurse-Midwives, said, "The more information you have, the more s you have, the more informed you are, the better questions you ask." However, she added that the videos could have negative effects, particularly if they make women more fearful of childbirth. The childbirth videos are relatively controversial because of their graphic nature, which has challenged some of YouTube"s rules and raised issues of propriety. Victoria Grand, the head of policy for YouTube, said that nudity generally is banned from YouTube but that the site "make[s] exceptions for videos that are educational, documentary or scientific." Most childbirth videos on YouTube are age restricted to ages 18 and older. A majority of them show home births because most U.S. hospitals prohibit patients from recording births due to liability concerns, the Times reports. Although childbirth education classes have shown edited videos of births since the 1970s, the Internet and YouTube could change the way such classes are taught, according to Jeanette Schwartz, president of the International Childbirth Education Association. She noted that most videos currently used in childbirth classes are heavily edited and out of date, adding that the YouTube videos "create a wonderful opportunity to show free, real life, candid videos in a classroom setting." Eugene Declercq, a professor at the Boston University School of Public Health, said, "A hundred and fifty years ago, women viewed birth on a pretty regular basis -- they saw their sisters of neighbors give birth." He said that changed with a trend toward hospital births beginning in the late 19th century. "But now, with YouTube, we"ve come back around and women have this opportunity to view births again," Declercq said (Wollan, New York Times, 6/11).
Cardiovascular

Stanford Scientists Discover Bladder Cancer Stem Cell

Researchers at Stanford"s School of Medicine have identified the first human bladder cancer stem cell and revealed how it works to escape the body"s natural defenses. "This is first time we"ve found this "don"t eat me signal" in a stem cell of a solid cancer," said Irving Weissman, MD, the Virginia & D.K. Ludwig Professor for Clinical Investigation in Cancer Research at the medical school. "We"re now moving as fast as we can to look at other tumors to see if this is a universal strategy of all or most cancer stem cells." If so, the signal may be a valuable therapeutic target for many types of cancers. Weissman, who directs Stanford"s Stem Cell Biology and Regenerative Medicine Institute, is also a member of Stanford"s Cancer Center. He is the senior author of the work, which will be published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences on Aug. 3. His laboratory recently published two studies in the journal Cell showing that human leukemia stem cells use the same protective molecular signature on their surface to evade cells called macrophages that engulf and destroy sick or cancerous cells. Like queen bees, cancer stem cells are constantly replenishing their "hive" of tumor cells. Therapies that kill off the workers might reduce the size of the tumor and the symptoms of the disease, but will ultimately be unsuccessful unless they also eliminate the stem cells working behind the scenes. Support for the current research came from a gift from Jim and Carolyn Pride. In 2002, the couple attended a talk by Weissman in which he discussed the then-emerging idea of cancer stem cells. Jim Pride, who had been diagnosed with bladder cancer, approached Weissman after the talk and offered to sponsor a post-doctoral fellow - Keith Syson Chan, PhD - to investigate whether there was a bladder cancer stem cell. "The whole concept of cancer stem cells is that they are often resistant to current therapies," said Chan, who is the first author of the work, "and, at least in the case of bladder cancer, they drive the progression of the disease." Identifying and following these cells may be one way to monitor tumor status, the researchers feel, and targeting the cells for destruction may be a good way to eradicate the cancer. Although Pride lost his life to the disease in 2004, his gift launched the experiments necessary to obtain NIH funding for the project. There are two main types of bladder cancer: one that invades the muscle around the bladder and metastasizes to other organs, and another that remains confined to the bladder lining. Unlike the more-treatable non-invasive cancer - which comprises about 70 percent of bladder cancers - the invasive form is largely incurable. Although about 15 percent of non-invasive cancers eventually become invasive, there is no current diagnostic method that can predict which will progress. Chan used breast cancer stem cell markers to identify a subpopulation of human bladder cancer cells with stem cell qualities: The cells formed tumors when transplanted into mice with compromised immune systems. He then looked to see which genes were more highly expressed in these cells than in other bladder cancer cells from the same tumor. He found that most, but not all, non-invasive bladder cancers expressed lower levels of these genes than did invasive cancers. Further research showed that the anomalous non-invasive cancers with higher levels of gene expression behaved more aggressively: About 80 percent recurred within 25 months of initial diagnosis, whereas only about 20 percent of the low-expressing tumors did so. "The fact that we were able to pull out the subpopulation of these cancers that will become invasive is an important step in identifying those that will be more dangerous," said Chan. "It may be possible to follow the progress of the tumor by analyzing the expression levels of these genes." Chan found particularly interesting one gene, which encodes a cell-surface molecule called CD47. He knew from previous research in Weissman"s lab that CD47 works to prevent leukemia cells from being engulfed by macrophages by binding to a molecule on the surface of the macrophage. Blocking this interaction with an antibody specific for CD47 allows the macrophages to swallow the leukemia cells. When he tried a similar experiment with the bladder cancer stem cells in a test tube, the same thing happened - human macrophages began to destroy the cancer cells. "Leukemia is totally different from the kind of epithelial cancer we see in the bladder," said Chan, "so it was very exciting to see that these two kinds of cancer stem cells use a similar mechanism to escape the macrophages. It"s also very interesting to find that macrophages seem to be playing such a major role in cancer progression." The researchers are now investigating whether CD47 is expressed at high levels on other cancer stem cells and pondering ways to help circulating macrophages better infiltrate solid tumors - always with an eye towards therapy. "Jim knew our research results would be too late for him," said Weissman, who visited Pride in the hospital before he died, "but he hoped that they would help others." In addition to Weissman and Chan, other Stanford collaborators on the paper include post-doctoral fellow Inigo Espinosa, MD; graduate student Mark Chao; post-doctoral fellow David Wong, PhD; senior research associate Laurie Ailles, PhD; post-doctoral fellow Max Diehn, MD, PhD; professor of urology Joseph Presti, MD; associate professor of dermatology Howard Chang, MD, PhD; professor of pathology Matt van de Rijn, MD, PhD; and professor of urology Linda Shortliffe, MD. The research was supported by the Pride Family Fund, the Smith Family Fund, the National Institutes of Health and the National Cancer Institute. Krista Conger Stanford University Medical Center


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