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Cancer; Not Simply A Question Of Life Or Death, Macmillan Cancer Support
Health and social care services are overlooking the long-term physical and emotional effects of cancer survivors, leaving many of the two million people living with or beyond the disease in the UK suffering alone and in silence. According to Macmillan Cancer Support, cancer survivors are suffering needlessly and in silence: overlooked by health and social care services that frequently miss the long-term physical and emotional effects of the disease.
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President Obama Reverses Bush Policy Preventing Consumers From Suing Product Makers In State Courts
President Obama on Wednesday ordered federal agencies to rescind regulations enacted by former President George W. Bush"s administration that protect manufacturers of such products as medical devices from product-liability lawsuits in state court, the Wall Street Journal reports. The decision could affect a wide range of manufacturers and products because the Bush administration "aggressively" encouraged federal agencies to make rules that pre-empt and override state laws, which often meant protecting manufacturers of medical equipment from lawsuits, according to the Journal. Obama in a two-page memo wrote that federal agencies and departments could claim state law is pre-empted by federal law only when there is a well-defined legal basis. The memo stated that state laws are important because they supplement federal regulations. "State and local governments have frequently protected health, safety and environment more aggressively than has the national government," Obama wrote (Mundy/Kendall, Wall Street Journal, 5/21). Obama ordered agencies to review regulations from the past decade and look for possible occasions in which the government improperly declared federal pre-emption (Yost, AP/Kansas City Star, 5/20). According to the Journal, business groups oppose the decision (Wall Street Journal, 5/21).
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New Small And Medium Sized Enterprises Join TI Pharma By Signing Two New Projects
Three new small and medium sized enterprises (SMEs) - Syncom, Synvolux Therapeutics and InteRNA Technologies - have joined public-private partnership TI Pharma by participating in two new projects. These projects, focusing on cancer and inflammatory diseases, have a total budget of nearly 6 million euros.
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Parents Fear Errors During Children's Hospitalization

Nearly two-thirds of parents reported they felt the need to watch over their child"s care to ensure that medical errors are not made during their hospital stay, according to a study led by Beth A. Tarini, M.D., M.S., assistant professor of pediatrics at the University of Michigan Medical School. In particular, parents whose first language is not English were more likely to report the need to be vigilant about their child"s care. This is the first study to document parental concerns about medical errors during a child"s hospitalization. Researchers also found that parents who were more confident in communicating with physicians were less likely to be concerned about medical mistakes. "We need to address parents" concerns about errors and find ways to make them feel comfortable talking to us about their child"s care," Tarini says. "Parents are an underutilized re in our efforts to prevent medical errors." This study, which appears July 30 in the Journal of Hospital Medicine, surveyed 278 parents of children who were hospitalized at the Children"s Hospital & Regional Medical Center in Seattle, Wash., in 2005. Medical errors are linked to between 48,000 and 98,000 deaths a year, according to the Institute of Medicine, and are linked to increases in length of stay, health care costs and death. Doctors and hospitals have focused on processes and hospital systems as a way to prevent medical errors, but little work has been done in investigating the experiences of patients and their potential role in preventing errors. The Joint Commission and the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality currently recommend that parents help prevent errors by becoming actively involved and informed members of their health care team and taking part in every decision about their child"s health care. This study is an important step toward characterizing the scope of parental concern about medical errors during pediatric hospitalizations and understanding its relationship toward communication between parents and physicians, Tarini says. Devising a quality initiative program to improve parents" confidence interacting with doctors may help to temper parents" concerns about medical errors while also encouraging their involvement in their child"s medical care, the researchers suggest. Funding: Grant from the Quality Improvement Committee at Children"s Hospital & Regional Medical Center in Seattle, Wash. Reference: Journal of Hospital Medicine, Vol. 4, issue no. 9. Anne Rueter University of Michigan Health System


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