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Sexual Crimes: Narrow Window For Detection Of Knock-Out Drugs
Drug-facilitated sexual crimes are increasing. The Bonn Institute for Forensic Medicine has recorded that the number of examinations on the use of intoxicants in sexual offences within their catchment area increased 10-fold between 1997 and 2006. In the current edition of Deutsches Arzteblatt International, Burkhard Madea and Frank Musshoff present the modes of action and the detection windows for the most frequent substances (Dtsch Arztebl Int 2009; 106 (20): 341-347).
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MorphoSys Reports Filing For Phase 1b/2a Trial For Its Lead Program MOR103 In Rheumatoid Arthritis
MorphoSys AG (FSE: MOR; Prime Standard Segment, TecDAX) today announced that the Company has submitted an application for the authorization of a phase 1b/2a clinical study in patients with active rheumatoid arthritis (RA) for its lead drug MOR103, a fully human HuCAL-derived monoclonal antibody directed against Granulocyte Macrophage-Colony Stimulating Factor. The trial, which will be conducted in multiple centers in several European countries, is expected to enroll 135 patients in total beginning in the second half of 2009. Additionally, the Company today reported positive results from the phase 1 clinical study for MOR103 in healthy volunteers. The results of this study indicate that MOR103 is generally safe and well tolerated at all doses administered.
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DoH Confirms First Cases Of NOVEL H1N1 Influenza A On The Island Of Kaua'i, Hawai'i
The Hawai"i State Department of Health (DOH) confirmed 83 additional cases of novel H1N1 Influenza A of swine origin this week. Two of the individuals live on the island of Kaua"i, one individual lives on the island of Maui, two individuals live on the island of Hawai"i, and 78 are O"ahu residents. It is important to note that all of the individuals have recovered or are recovering at home with no complications. The next weekly update will be posted at http://www.hawaii.gov/health on Wednesday, June 17 at 11:00 a.m.
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Divisions Plague Dems As Obama Recruits New Allies, Governors

"Four divisive issues could dash President Barack Obama"s hopes of overhauling health care: cost, creating a government-run plan, taxing workers" benefits and penalizing employers that don"t offer coverage," the Associated Press/Boston Globe reports. - The Senate Finance Committee says its bill will cost less than $1 trillion, but that"s only for the first ten years. Costs could explode in later years, the AP reports. - The government-run plan "would mark the first time government gets into the business of providing medical insurance for middle-class workers and their families," an idea that Republicans "adamently oppose." - Some top senators say taxing health workers" health benefits is essential to pay for the overhaul, but labor unions - traditional Democratic allies - oppose the plan. In his campaign last year, Obama opposed it, too. - House Democrats plan to penalize employers who don"t offer coverage to their workers. Businesses helped defeat President Clinton"s health reform plan through their opposition to a similar measure (Alonso-Zaldivar, 6/30). Democrats in Congress remain divided on the controversial provisions of the reform plan, so "President Obama trying to enlist the nation"s governors and his own army of grass-roots supporters in a bid to increase pressure on lawmakers without getting himself mired in the messy battle playing out on Capitol Hill," the New York Times reports. Obama has turned to a group of five governors, including Republicans, who may be "more sympathetic" to health reform because their budgets are strained by the rising costs of the Medicaid program, which insures the poor. Obama urged the governors to discuss their experiences managing and reforming their state"s health care programs with lawmakers, hoping to bolster support. Meanwhile, lawmakers have asked Obama to intervene more specifically in shaping the legislation, a request he has so far resisted (Stolberg, 6/29). At an event honoring Democratic stalwarts Monday, however, Obama "pointedly went after critics of his health care plan, many of whom assert that the system needs change but object to his proposal for public health insurance as an option to private insurance," the Associated Press/Arizona Republic reports (Kuhnhenn, 6/29). This information was reprinted from kaiserhealthnews.org with kind permission from the Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation. You can view the entire Kaiser Daily Health Policy Report, search the archives and sign up for email delivery at kaiserhealthnews.org. © Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation. All rights reserved.


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