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Study Led By Stanford Scientists Links Schizophrenia To Chromosome Region For The First Time
Stanford University School of Medicine scientists have played a major role in an international effort that has shown, for the first time, that modern genetic technologies can solve the riddle of how gene variations lead to schizophrenia.
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Novel Epigenetic Markers Of Melanoma May Herald New Treatments For Patients
Melanoma is the most serious form of skin cancer, diagnosed in more than 50,000 new patients in the United States annually. While the rate of incidences continues to rise, survival rate has not improved and the race is on to find the genetic and cellular changes driving melanoma and to devise new means of detection and treatment. In a study published online in Genome Research, scientists have mapped chemical modifications of DNA in the melanoma genome, finding new markers that will help develop more effective treatment strategies to fight this disease.
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Senate Finance Committee To Discuss Public Plan Options; House Energy And Commerce Committee Discusses State, Regional Plans
The Senate Finance Committee on Thursday will meet to discuss the inclusion of a public insurance plan in its health care reform legislation, the Des Moines Register reports (Beaumont, Des Moines Register, 5/14). Supporters of the public plan say it would allow middle-income workers a choice between their employer coverage and coverage offered by the government. The insurance industry and Republican lawmakers oppose such a plan.The Finance Committee will consider a plan similar to Medicare but that would feature slightly higher reimbursement rates for providers. The plan would either be operated by the government or government-contracted private firms. Another option would allow each state to develop and oversee its own public coverage plan. The committee also will consider a proposal from Sen. Charles Schumer (D-N.Y.) that would allow a new public plan to compete with private insurers by requiring that the public plan be financed by premiums rather than tax dollars, that it follow the same solvency rules that apply to private firms and that it keep a reserve fund to cover liabilities. Schumer"s plan also would allow doctors and hospitals the choice of participating. The public plan also would be required to follow the same consumer protection rules as private firms (Alonso-Zaldivar/Werner, AP/Contra Costa Times, 5/14). The panel also is expected to discuss employer or individual mandates (Edney, CongressDaily, 5/14).Committee ranking member Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa), who has said he believes a public plan would eventually eliminate private insurance and force U.S. residents out of their employer-sponsored plans, said the committee meeting will reveal the likelihood of Republicans uniting against a public option. "We will have an idea how controversial it is and how strong people feel about it on both sides," Grassley said. He added, "I think before I would write it off completely, I would want to look at what those possible compromises are" (Des Moines Register, 5/14). House Energy and Commerce Committee
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Tennessee Nurse-Midwife Honored With Esteemed Award

Frances E. Likis, DrPH, NP, CNM, of Nashville, TN, received the 2009 Kitty Ernst Award, one of the most prestigious honors awarded by the American College of Nurse-Midwives (ACNM), during ACNM"s 54th Annual Meeting & Exposition in Seattle, WA. "Francie"s energy and enthusiasm are clearly evident in her day-to-day work. In just nine years, her contributions to midwifery have been noted and applauded by her peers, including her work on an awardò€winning text, Women"s Gynecologic Health, and authorship of several journal articles and book chapters. She personifies the spirit and drive of a midwife. In addition to her educational and research efforts, Francie is also noted as a dynamic speaker among women"s health care professionals," said ACNM President Melissa Avery, PhD, CNM, FACNM, FAAN. "She demonstrates the vision, leadership, and creativity of a Kitty award recipient." After graduating from the Frontier School of Midwifery and Family Nursing (FSMFN) in Hyden, KY in 2000, Likis practiced fullò€scope midwifery in a birth center and returned to FSMFN as a faculty member in women"s health. Within just two short years, she became the Women"s Health Course Coordinator for FSMFN, where she was later Coordinator of Graduate Education. Likis currently serves as the Editorò€inò€Chief of the Journal of Midwifery and Women"s Health (JMWH), and the Associate Director of Graduate Studies for the Institute for Medicine and Public Health at Vanderbilt University Medicl Center. She has been recognized and honored many times throughout her career, including Top 100 Leader award from Vanderbilt University School of Nursing, Student Choice Award for Teaching Excellence from FSMFN, and the Royster Fellowship at the University of North Carolina. In addition to her work as a member of the JMWH Editorial Board since 2002, her service to ACNM includes the past roles of Chair of the Subcommittee on Structure for the Work Group on Bylaws Revision, Viceò€Chair of the Tennessee Chapter, and member of the 50th Anniversary Ad Hoc Committee. Likis received her bachelor"s and master"s degrees from Vanderbilt University, and her doctorate in public health from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. She is a certified nurseò€midwife, family nurse practitioner, and women"s health nurse practitioner. The Kitty Ernst Award, more affectionately known as the "Young Whippersnapper Award," is named after ACNM"s fourth and youngest President, who is also one of its most dynamic living legends. The Kitty Ernst award was established in 1998 to honor a midwife who has been certified for less than 10 years and has demonsrated innovative, creative endeavors in clinical practice, education, administration, or research relating to midwifery and women"s health. American College of Nurse-Midwives


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