Today's
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November 2, 2009
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Here's recent news featuring Allina Hospitals & Clinics, a not-for-profit family of hospitals, clinics and other care services dedicated to meeting the health care needs of communities throughout Minnesota and western Wisconsin.
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Twin Cities Hospitals Put Limits on Visitors to Fight Flu

[Star Tribune; Fox 9 News; WCCO 4 News; Minnesota Public Radio; Owatonna People's Press; River Falls Journal, November 2, 2009] In an unprecedented joint announcement, 25 Twin Cities hospital said they're limiting visitors in an effort to slow down the spread of H1N1.

Steve Bergeson, MD, medical director of quality for Allina Hospitals & Clinics, explains why these limitations go into effect at all 11 Allina hospitals on Monday, November 2:

  • no kids younger than 5, no non-relatives under age 16 and only three visitors at a time per patient
  • new visiting hours: 9 a.m. to 8 p.m. for most units and 11 a.m. to 8 p.m. for maternity and children's units.

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On Monday, Kids Can Give Up Halloween Candy for Cash, and Good Causes

[Shakopee Valley News, November 1, 2009] St. Francis Regional Medical Center is co-sponsoring a Halloween candy buy-back on Monday from 4 to 7 p.m. in the hospital's main entrance lobby. Children will be paid $1 per pound of candy. The candy must be unopened as it will be sent to troops overseas. Read the full story on shakopeenews.com...

Stories from Our Readers: The Rest of the Story

[Brainerd Dispatch, October 31, 2009] In response to a request for stories about organ donations and transplants, a woman shares how on the day after Easter Sunday 2007 her family traveled to Abbott Northwestern Hospital, where her daughter donated a kidney to her father. Read the full story on brainerddispatch.com...

Editorial: Help Prevent the Spread of Flu

[Owatonna People's Press, October 31, 2009] After reminding readers of ways to prevent the spread of flu-like illnesses, including H1N1 influenza, editorial board thanks Allina's Owatonna Hospital for being "proactive in addressing the threat faced by the flu." Read the full story on owatonna.com...

Donor Sperm Safety 'in Question'

[BBC News; Telegraph; ABC News, October 30, 2009] Experts are questioning how rigorously sperm donors must be screened after nine children have inherited a heart condition from their biological father.

U.S. doctors are saying in the Journal of the American Medical Association that hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) should be added to the list routinely checked for in donors. Barry Maron, MD, of the Minneapolis Heart Institute Foundation at Abbott Northwestern Hospital, says potential sperm donors could routinely have a heart trace to rule out the genetic heart condition that can lead to heart failure and sudden death.
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Lack of Fever in Some H1N1 Cases Complicates Prevention Effort

[Minnesota Public Radio, October 28, 2009] Fever and flu go hand-in-hand - at least that's the case most of the time with seasonal flu. But some doctors say the H1N1 virus doesn't trigger a fever in many patients.

In Minnesota, the no-fever issue has been a hot topic among some health care providers. Cindy Larson, an infection control practitioner for Allina Hospitals & Clinics, said fever symptoms are absent in many of Allina's H1N1 cases, though it's hard to determine the extent of the trend because hospitals and clinics have never seen this many flu patients at one time before. Read the full story on minnesota.publicradio.org...

Editorial: Reporting on H1N1

[Owatonna People's Press, October 28, 2009] Managing editor discusses how he and his staff followed up on a rumor about H1N1 influenza (swine flu) in Owatonna, Minnesota. The process included calls to Allina's Owatonna Hospital. Read the full story on owatonna.com...

Property Value Too High? Challenge It

[Woodbury Bulletin, October 28, 2009] Allina Medical Clinic is among a growing number of Minnesota commercial property owners challenging property assessments in Woodbury and across the Twin Cities. Read the full story on woodburybulletin.com...

Healthday logo NATIONAL & INTERNATIONAL HEALTH NEWS

Read more headlines and news stories on Allina.com.

Here are some of the latest health and medical news developments, compiled by editors of HealthDay:

Second Successful Trial for Lupus Drug

An experimental lupus drug called Benlysta (belimumab) was effective in its second large clinical trial, and drug makers Human Genome Sciences and GlaxoSmithKline will seek European and U.S. approval of the drug in the first half of 2010.

If approved, Benlysta would be the first new treatment for lupus in more than 40 years, The New York Times reported.

Benlysta succeeded in its first clinical trial in July. But the U.S. Food and Drug Administration said a second successful trial was needed in order to win approval for the drug. While the second trial was successful, the results weren't as good as in the first trial.

"The lupus community has waited for decades for one positive phase three trial of an investigative drug developed for lupus. Now we have two," Dr. Joan T. Merrill, a lupus expert at the Oklahoma Medical Research Foundation and investigator in the trial, said in a news release issued by Human Genome Sciences and GlaxoSmithKline, The Times reported.

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UN Targets Pneumonia Deaths

About $39 billion is needed over the next six years in order to greatly reduce pneumonia deaths among children, United Nations officials said Monday, the first World Pneumonia Day.

Pneumonia kills more children than AIDS, malaria and measles combined. UNICEF and the World Health Organization released a plan to save more than 5 million children from dying of pneumonia by 2015, the Associated Press reported.

Pneumonia accounts for about 20 percent of all child deaths worldwide every year, while AIDS causes about 2 percent of child deaths.

The new program features strategies ranging from vaccination to economic development efforts. There's a strong link between malnutrition and poverty and pneumonia deaths.

"This is very simply the biggest killer people never hear about," Orin Levine, a public health expert at Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Health, who has advised WHO and UNICEF, told the AP. But Levine added that "this is a big problem that can be solved."

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Domestic Pig's Genome Decoded

Scientists who decoded the DNA of the domestic pig say their achievement may help efforts to develop a new swine flu vaccine for pigs and also may prove useful in developing a variety of treatments for pigs and humans.

People and pigs are similar in size and makeup, and pigs are used in many kinds of human research, ranging from skin disorders and obesity to heart disease, the Associated Press reported.

"The pig is the ideal animal to look at lifestyle and health issues in the United States," said team leader Larry Schook, a professor of biomedical science at the University of Illinois in Champaign.

The research was presented Monday at a meeting at the Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute in England, which was one of the groups involved in the international effort to document the genome of a red-haired Duroc pig, one of five major breeds used in pork production worldwide, the AP reported.

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Obama Ends Ban on People With HIV/AIDS Entering U.S.

President Barack Obama on Friday ended a 22-year-old policy barring people with HIV/AIDS from entering the United States.

Calling the original decision one "rooted in fear rather than fact," Obama said the ban's removal is "a step that will encourage people to get tested and get treatment, it's a step that will keep families together, it's a step that will save lives," the Associated Press reported.

The United States was the first country to initiate such a measure, and today only 12 nations have such laws in place. "If we want to be a global leader in combating HIV/AIDS, we need to act like it," the president said.

The announcement came as Obama signed the Ryan White HIV/AIDS Treatment Extension Act of 2009, providing assistance to more than 500,000 Americans, the AP said. Ryan White, of Kokomo, Ind., contracted HIV in 1984 via a blood transfusion at age 13 and died in 1990. His mother Jeanne attended the White House signing ceremony.

Copyright © 2009 ScoutNews LLC. All rights reserved.

Published on: 11/02/2009

TODAY'S HEALTH NEWS, a compilation of local, national and international health news, comes courtesy of Allina.com.

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