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California Medicaid Providers Win Legal Challenge
Medicaid providers in California won a legal challenge over program cuts in the case "Maxwell-Jolly v. Independent Living Center of Southern California." McKnight"s Long Term Care News reports that "The U.S. Supreme Court has let stand a federal appeals court ruling that says California"s Medicaid providers have a right to challenge state cuts to Medi-Cal provider fees. Victor Norma Jean Vescovo, the executive director of the Independent Living Center of Southern California, says the ruling will make it easier to ensure state Medicaid (known in the state as Medi-Cal) cuts will be made for needs-based reasons, not just economic reasons, the Bureau of National Affairs reported.
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Fear Of Family Reaction Is Barrier To Treatment For Depressed Teens
Although teen depression poses a widespread problem for which proven treatments exist, few depressed teens receive any care.
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New Machel Report Calls For Urgent Action To Protect Children Affected By Armed Conflict
UNICEF and the Special Representative of the Secretary General on Children and Armed Conflict launched the Machel Study 10-Year Strategic Review today, calling on governments, UN agencies, and civil society to urgently step up efforts to protect all children affected by conflict.
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Human Cells Evolved To Reduce Cancer Risk

The cells of humans and other animals have likely evolved to reduce the chance of triggering cancers and other diseases, according to research published in the journal Science. Dr Rune Linding at The Institute of Cancer Research in the UK, working with scientists in the US and Canada, found that as animals moved up the evolutionary chain they progressively shed molecules that are linked to cancer development. Chris Tan, then a PhD student working under Dr Linding"s supervision, investigated whether complex organisms shed these molecules to compensate for acquiring new molecules that could increase the risk of disease, but are necessary for the animals to function. As animals have become more biologically complex they have acquired more variants of tyrosine kinases, a class of enzymes that control the behaviour of cells. Tyrosine kinases are necessary for survival as their effect on an amino acid called tyrosine alters proteins, sending instructions to cells about when to move, grow and die - but they can also become damaged and send the wrong signals, causing cancer and other diseases. The scientists found that, in an apparent effort to compensate for this increased risk, the cells of more complex animals have reduced the amount of tyrosine they allow in their proteins - leaving less opportunity for the kinases to malfunction. Tyrosine levels in animals - including a worm, sea squirt, fly, mosquito, two species of pufferfish, frog, chicken, dog, cow, mouse, rat, chimpanzee and humans - were evaluated relative to other amino acids. A "striking" progressive reduction in tyrosine concentrations was found to occur higher up the evolutionary chain. "Tyrosine loss has been strongly favoured in human protein evolution," Dr Linding says. "Reducing the number of potentially harmful tyrosine kinase interactions is important to avoid cancer, and losing these tyrosines seems to be a deliberate effort by the cells to reduce the risk of malfunction and disease. It looks like we"ve found an example of co-ordinated, adaptive evolution occurring at a cellular level." The cells are following a pattern of behaviour also recognised in humans on a population level, Dr Linding adds. "Adaptive evolution that can be seen in human society - such as when local populations adjust to the influx of immigrants contributing to societies" economic development - also appears to be operating at a cellular and molecular level," Dr Linding says. The research was a collaboration between researchers at The Institute of Cancer Research, United Kingdom, the Samuel Lunenfeld Research Institute of Mount Sinai Hospital, Toronto, Canada, the University of Toronto, Canada, and the University of California, San Francisco, US. The Institute of Cancer Research


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