Here are some of the latest health and medical news
developments, compiled by editors of
HealthDay:
Katrina's Legacy Still Haunts, Studies Find
From alcohol abuse to the loss of a home, new research continues
to assess the devastating impact of Hurricane Katrina and the toll
it extracted from its victims.
In a study presented this week at the Population Association of
America's annual meeting in New Orleans, University of Michigan
researchers reported that Katrina survivors were more than three
times likelier to exhibit alcohol abuse after a stress experience.
And if the survivor experienced a trauma, they were five times more
likely to become alcohol dependent.
The difference between a stress and a trauma is one of degree,
said study co-author Sandro Galea, an associate professor at the
university's School of Public Health. An example of stress might be
dealing with insurance companies or contractors; a trauma is losing
a loved one, he said.
Another paper found that New Orleans residents who lost their
homes in the 2005 storm were more than five times more likely to
experience serious psychological distress a year after the disaster
than those who did not.
The study, by University of Michigan researcher Narayan Sastry
and Tulane University's Mark VanLandingham, examined the mental
health of pre-Katrina New Orleans residents in the fall of 2006 --
one year after the hurricane. In all, about 66 percent of the
respondents reported that their homes were badly damaged or
unlivable.
"Our findings suggest that severe damage to one's home is a
particularly important factor behind socioeconomic disparities in
psychological distress, and possibly behind the levels of
psychological distress," Sastry said. "These effects may be partly
economic, because, for most families who own their home, home
equity is the largest element of household wealth.
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When It Comes to Happiness, It Really Is a Shade of Gray
Oh to be young again? Not so fast, says a new study that found
that older Americans tend to be happier than younger ones.
The University of Chicago study also found that baby boomers
aren't as content as other generations, blacks are less happy than
whites, women are happier than men, and as people age, their
happiness increases.
"Understanding happiness is important to understanding quality
of life. The happiness measure is a guide to how well society is
meeting people's needs," study author Yang Yang, an assistant
professor of sociology, said in a prepared statement.
The study was based on data from the General Social Survey of
the National Opinion Research Center at the University of Chicago.
Yang charted happiness across age and racial groups and found that
among 18-year-olds, white men are the happiest, with a 33 percent
probability of being very happy, followed by white women (28
percent), black women (18 percent) and black men (15 percent).
But curiously, those differences vanish over time. Black men and
black women have slightly more than a 50 percent chance of being
very happy by their late 80s, while white men and white women are
close behind.
The increase in happiness with age is consistent with the "age
as maturity hypothesis," Yang said.
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Network Offers Experimental Treatments to Dying Cancer
Patients
Great Britain has opened a government-run network of cancer
clinics that will provide experimental treatments to dying cancer
patients and may also speed up the drug testing process, the
Associated Press reported.
There are clinics in France, Italy and the Netherlands that
offer experimental treatments to cancer patients, but Britain is
the only European country with a national network of clinics.
Currently, only a few hundred patients with late-stage cancer in
Britain have access to experimental drugs, but officials hope the
new network of clinics will soon benefit thousands of patients.
Expanding drug tests for terminal cancer patients preys on their
desperation, according to some critics of the program, the
AP reported. But the process is fair as long as patients are
told about potential side effects, counter some ethicists.
In the United States, cancer patients can sign up for
experimental drug treatment, but there's no official national
program to help them enroll. About 80 percent of American cancer
patients are treated in community hospitals, while most drug trials
are conducted at academic medical centers, the
AP reported.
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Chemical in Plastic Changes Breast Cell Gene Activity: Study
A new U.S. study says that trace amounts of bisphenol A -- a
chemical used to make polycarbonate plastic and epoxy resins lining
most tin cans -- can alter the activity of genes in normal breast
cells in ways similar to what's seen in deadly breast cancers.
This link "is highly supportive of the concept that overexposure
to BPA and/or similar compounds could be an underlying factor in
the aggressiveness, if not in the causality" of breast cancers,
study lead author Shanaz Dairkee, a senior scientist at the
California Pacific Medical Center Research Institute in San
Francisco, said in an e-mail, Toronto's
Globe and Mail newspaper reported.
For this study, Dairkee and colleagues took small samples of
normal, non-cancerous cells from the unaffected breasts of eight
women who already had breast cancer. The cells were placed in test
tubes and exposed to the BPA.
The findings were published in the journal
Cancer Reserach, which designated the study a "priority
report," the
Globe and Mail reported.
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Institute Seeks to Use Stem Cells to Heal Wounded Soldiers
A new U.S. research institute will try to develop methods to
help wounded soldiers use their own stem cells to regenerate skin,
muscle and even limbs,
Agence France-Presse reported.
The $250 million Armed Forces Institute of Regenerative Medicine
will fund and direct research by a number of universities and
hospitals. The Pentagon will provide $85 million over five years,
$80 million will come from participating universities and
hospitals, and $100 million will be provided by the U.S. National
Institutes of Health.
"The new institute will work to develop techniques that will
help to make our soldiers whole again," said Lieutenant General
Eric Schoomaker, the army surgeon general. "We'll use the soldiers'
own stem cells to repair nerve damage, to re-grow muscles and
tendons, to repair burn wounds, and to help them heal without
scarring."
The institute will also attempt to develop ways to salvage and
reconstruct damaged limbs, hands, fingers, ears and noses, and to
reconstruct damaged craniums,
AFP reported.
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New Food and Drug Safety Measures Proposed
New fees for drug and food companies and increased Food and Drug
Administration oversight of food and drug plants are among the
proposals included in draft legislation designed to improve food
and drug safety in the United States.
The first hearing on the draft legislation, created in response
to a number of recent food and drug scares, is scheduled for April
24,
USA Today reported.
Among the proposals:
- U.S. food production facilities and those exporting food to the
United States would have to pay $2,000 per facility per year to
register with the FDA. That would generate about $600 million a
year, more than doubling the agency's current food safety
budget.
- The FDA would be required to inspect food plants -- and the
plants' food safety plans -- every four years. Currently, food
plants are inspected about once every 10 years, according to
lawmakers.
- Drug and medical device makers, as well as companies that
import those products, would also have to pay registration fees to
the FDA.
- The FDA would have to inspect domestic and foreign drug
manufacturing facilities every two years.
- Food and drug makers would have to list on drug labels where
active ingredients are made.
- The FDA would have the power to order food and drug
recalls.