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Gathering Of Swine Flu Experts At New York Academy Of Sciences May 28
The very latest information on the 2009 swine influenza (H1N1) outbreak is the subject of a landmark afternoon symposium hosted by the New York Academy of Sciences today, Thursday, May 28. Speakers will discuss the new recombinant virus, epidemiology, treatment, vaccine development and the public health implications of a worldwide pandemic.
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Technology Discovered At University of Virginia Now Helps Men To Monitor Their Fertility After Vasectomy
A new home test kit called SpermCheck Vasectomy, based on a protein discovered at the University of Virginia (UVA) Health System, marks the launch of a product line that could revolutionize the way men monitor their reproductive status. Based on antibodies that bind to SP-10, a protein discovered in the laboratory of John C. Herr, PhD, SpermCheck Vasectomy is the only FDA-approved immunodiagnostic test for monitoring sperm after vasectomy.
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New Online Curriculum Educates Physicians About Kidney Disease In Older Patients
The fastest-growing group of patients initiating dialysis is patients 75 years old and older; providing the best care for this group of patients presents significant challenges. The American Society of Nephrology (ASN) introduces the first-ever online curriculum to address aging and the kidney. The curriculum, based on the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education (ACGME)"s six core competences of patient care, medical knowledge, practice-based learning and improvement, interpersonal and communication skills, professionalism, and systems-based practice, answers questions about the management of elderly patients.
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Volunteers Needed For QUT Eye Study, Australia

A Queensland University of Technology researcher is calling for volunteers to take part in a project examining the role of childhood visual experience on eye growth. Stephen Vincent, a practising optometrist, is conducting the research as part of his PhD and will spend the next 12 months examining volunteers with specific eye conditions such as amblyopia (lazy eye) and strabismus (turned eye). "We are particularly interested in people who have a significant visual problem in one eye only," Mr Vincent said. "Approximately one in 10 people have a substantial difference in optical power between their eyes. Directly comparing the good eye and the weak eye of one person is a useful experimental set up because it eliminates variables that may be present when examining different people. This allows a more efficient comparison between eyes which have developed quite differently." Mr Vincent said he would be looking at what stimulates eye growth and leads to the development of refractive problems in the eye and the need for glasses. "We hope to improve our understanding of how visual input regulates eye growth. This research may influence treatment options for refractive conditions in the future. There is definitely a knowledge gap in the literature, and this is something I became particularly interested in through clinical practice." He said volunteers undergo a standard eye examination, and then additional tests to measure the length of the eye, the optical quality of the eye and the pressure within the eye. "All tests are non contact, and simply require subjects to stare at a target inside each instrument," said Mr Vincent. Queensland University of Technology


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