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Pakistan Receives Grants To Fight TB, Infant, Maternal Mortality, Health Minister Says
Pakistan has obtained international support for its efforts to fight tuberculosis and lower infant and maternal mortality rates, Mir Aijaz Hussain Jakhrani, the health minister, said recently after returning from the 62nd World Health Assembly (WHA), the International News reports.
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National Marrow Donor Program Increasing Efforts To Attract Minority Donors
The National Marrow Donor Program, a not-for-profit group that manages a national registry for potential bone marrow donors, is using social networking sites to attract donors from minority communities, the Wall Street Journal reports. The process of finding a genetic match for a bone marrow transplant is often more difficult for minorities or people who identify themselves as multiracial because patients and donors must be genetically compatible. According to the Journal, a white patient has an 88% chance of finding a match, while the odds of most minorities finding a match can be as low as 60%. The odds of some minorities actually receiving a transplant can be as low as 20% because of other factors such as access to care in their communities, the Journal reports. About seven million U.S. residents already have signed up for the national registry -- recently renamed Be the Match -- and the program also has increased outreach to younger potential donors through social networking Web sites, such as Facebook and MySpace (Landro, Wall Street Journal, 5/27).
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Authorities Crackdown On Major Medicare Fraud In Detroit
Fifty-three people were indicted in a major Medicare fraud crackdown in Detroit yesterday, just one day after eight were charged in a similar case in Miami.
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Is Paperwork Suffocating British Clinical Research?

Concerns are being raised by a growing number of British academics that bureaucratic overload is stifling their ability to undertake clinical research, compromising the future of this activity in the UK, and ultimately doing patients a disservice. The issues are discussed in a Special Report in the August edition of The Lancet Oncology, written by freelance journalist Adrian Burton. The implantation of European Clinical Trials Directive (ECTD), in 2004, has left researchers complaining that UK interpretation of the ECTD has led to the requirement of a detailed protocol (which might reach 100 pages in length) and the answering of over 40 questions on a form spanning 28 pages. Michele Saunders (University College London, UK) complains that she has been trying for over 2 years to start a trial already well-established at another major hospital, but has been unsuccessful to date with no end in sight. "All was well before the European Directive came into action", she says. "The regulations are law in some cases and this has made those with responsibility nervous, there"s so much documentation for everything. The culture of blame in this society does not help." However, the chief executive of the UK Medicines and Healthcare Products Regulatory Agency (MHRA) Ken Woods says that the UK did not "add" to the ECTD in interpreting it; and adds that UK researchers faced an increasing administrative burden due to the NHS research governance framework launched in 2001. And the Director of the National Research Ethics Service, Janet Wisely, says that the use of one form which can be sent to all appropriate regulatory bodies has streamlined research administration. Such is the concern over delays that a group known as the Sensible Guidelines for Clinical Trials Working Group will hold its second meeting at St Anne"s College, Oxford, UK; Sept 5-6, 2009. Organised by the Clinical Trials Service Unit at Oxford University, in conjunction with Duke University (USA) and McMaster University (Canada)-showing that UK academics are not alone in their concerns-the meeting will discuss the main areas preventing the efficient initiation and conduct of randomised trials, and discuss ways of overcoming these problems. Burton concludes: "Clearly, approval authorities and researchers are only trying to do their jobs-some on a volunteer basis. But if clinical research is being delayed and there is a real danger of its future being compromised, then researchers, approval bodies, and policymakers need to foster better partnerships to develop more effective and efficient integrated solutions as soon as possible." Link to Special Report The Lancet Oncology


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