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QIAGEN Launches Novel Product Enabling Non-Invasive Prenatal Diagnostics And Cancer Detection
QIAGEN announced the launch of a novel product for extraction of free circulating fragments of tumor- and fetal-derived nucleic acids as well as viral nucleic acids in human blood. Scientists consider these DNA and RNA fragments to have great potential for the highly sensitive and non-invasive diagnosis of a wide range of diseases, including congenital disorders, malignancies such as colon and lung cancer, and infections. The new QIAamp Circulating Nucleic Acid Kit is expected to significantly facilitate the corresponding biomarker research and the introduction of novel molecular tests in prenatal diagnostics which can replace risky, invasive procedures such as amniocentesis.
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Empowering The Female Athlete: UPMC Sports Medicine Seeking Girls Ages 12 To 18 To Attend 'Total Package' Performance Training Conference
To bring together serious female athletes and teach them the latest injury-prevention techniques and enhance their mental training, nutrition, leadership and team-building skills, UPMC Sports Medicine is hosting Empowering the Female Athlete: ACL Injury Prevention and Beyond, June 14 to 19 at the Petersen Events Center, 3719 Terrace St., Oakland. Female athletes between ages 12 and 18 are invited to attend the conference, led by a range of UPMC experts who care for all types of patients, including scholastic and professional athletes.
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Helping Youth Avoid Risky Behavior: Family-Based Program
Children"s behavior is determined, in part, by their genes and by the settings in which they develop. A new longitudinal study describes how a family-based prevention program helped rural African American teens avoid engaging in risky behaviors, even if some of them may have had a genetic risk to do so.
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Two Doctors Share Their Expectations For Health Reform

Two doctors with over 30 years of experience spoke with National Public Radio about how medicine has changed over their careers, and what they expect to see come out of the current health reform debate. Dr. Greg Darrow, a family physician from New Mexico who favors a single-payer system, said the demands of the business-side of his group practice often interfere with the quality of his care. "Leave me alone, I know what I do best, which is to take good care of people," Darrow said. Sometimes, patients interfere, too, by demanding care they may not need, a pattern he blames on direct marketing by pharmaceutical companies and newly available technologies. In one scenario, Darrow envisions himself recommending ice for a patient"s twisted knee, while the patient requests an MRI. Dr. George Knaysi, a cancer surgeon from Virginia, says he believes "most people feel health care is a right, not a privilege," but that the prospects of rationing in health reform make him uncomfortable with some reform proposals. He anticipates the creation of a government-run insurance plan, but adds, "I think there are too many people in this country who are middle class and upper-middle class who are not going to be willing to sit through long waiting lines." Rising costs - which Knaysi says haven"t kept pace with reimbursements - will eventually force the American health system to squeeze administrative costs and limit care options to remain sustainable. However, he anticipates a balancing act to accommodate patients who want to pay out of pocket for the most expensive treatments (Block, 6/30). This information was reprinted from kaiserhealthnews.org with kind permission from the Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation. You can view the entire Kaiser Daily Health Policy Report, search the archives and sign up for email delivery at kaiserhealthnews.org. © Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation. All rights reserved.


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