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Flawed Patient Survey Will See Millions In Funding Lost To General Practice, Says BMA, UK
Despite results which show patients are very happy with access to their GP, this year"s patient survey will result in millions of pounds being lost to general practice, potentially damaging attempts to improve GP access, the BMA said yesterday (Tuesday 30 June 2009). This year"s patient access survey results published today found nine in ten (91%) of patients were satisfied with the care they received at their surgery, nearly 17 out of 20 (84%) could get an appointment within 48 hours, and three quarters (76%) were able to book an advanced appointment. It is not possible to compare this year"s results with previous years" because the wording of the questions has changed.
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Skin from a factory - this has long been the dream of pharmacologists, chemists and doctors. Research has an urgent need for large quantities of "skin models", which can be used to determine if products such as creams and soaps, cleaning agents, medicines and adhesive bandages are compatible with skin, or if they instead will lead to irritation or allergic reactions for the consumer. Such test results are seen as more meaningful than those from animal experiments, and can even make such experiments largely superfluous.
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UQ Scientist's Outstanding Pain Management Research Recognised

A UQ Science researcher has received a prestigious honorary fellowship for her long-time work into understanding the underlying mechanisms of pain. Professor Maree Smith has been awarded the Honorary Fellowship by the Australian and New Zealand College of Anaesthetists" Faculty of Pain Medicine. The Faculty of Pain Medicine admits distinguished persons who have made a notable contribution to the advancement of the science and practice of pain medicine, but are not practising pain medicine in Australia or New Zealand. Executive Director of UQ"s Centre for Integrated Preclinical Drug Development and its commercial arm, TetraQ, Professor Smith said she was very surprised to be honoured. "When I got the letter and opened it, I just thought "wow", I didn"t even know they did this," she said. "I feel really flattered and honoured, my research team and I have been working away in the field for about two decades now because that"s what you need to do in order to make a difference, I never expected to get recognised for it." Pain medicine is a multidisciplinary field of specialist medical practice that has matured relatively recently. The field recognises the management of severe pain problems requires the skills of more than one medical discipline. Professor Smith has specialist expertise in pre-clinical drug development as well as the mechanistic basis of pain and its pharmacological management. As TetraQ CEO, a leading Australian preclinical drug development contract research organisation based at UQ, Professor Smith is in a unique position to further pain medicine. "At TetraQ we sit in the translational research space," she said. "We assist universities and small biotech and pharmaceutical companies in getting potential drugs from the laboratory bench to the pharmacy. "We perform the preclinical drug trials, showing these drugs are efficacious - they do what the company says they do - and that they are safe to go on to human trials." This isn"t the first award Professor Smith has received for her contributions to science, in 2008 she received the Women in Technology Biotech Outstanding Achievement Award. And in 2003, Professor Smith was awarded a "Trailblazer Challenge" award by UniQuest, for developing new treatments for the pain caused by sciatica and other forms of nerve damage. The FPM is the body responsible for training, education and standards for Pain Medicine in Australia and New Zealand. The University of Queensland


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