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California HIV/AIDS Advocates Continue To Protest Proposed Funding Cuts
On Monday, HIV/AIDS advocates staged a rally in Fresno, Calif., to protest a budget proposal by Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger (R) that would cut an estimated $80 million statewide in HIV/AIDS services, KMPH.com reports. The proposed cuts would eliminate or reduce funding for HIV testing services, financial assistance for people living with HIV and other programs, according to KMPH.com. A larger rally at the state capitol is planned for Wednesday (KMPH.com. 6/9).
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Blogs Comment On Women's Health Disparities, Sotomayor Nomination, Other Topics
The following summarizes selected women"s health-related blog entries. ~ "Report: Higher Rates of Unintended Pregnancy, Abortion Among Women of Color," Sharon Camp, RH Reality Check: A new report from the Kaiser Family Foundation on health disparities between white women and women of color "provides further stronger evidence debunking claims" from antiabortion-rights advocates who "have long argued that high abortion rates among minorities are the result of supposed aggressive marketing by abortion providers to minority communities," Camp, president and CEO of the Guttmacher Institute, writes. In addition to identifying disparities in conditions like heart disease and cancer, the report documents "widespread disparities in access to health insurance and health screenings" and explores growing evidence of the association between social factors and health behaviors, access and outcomes, according to Camp. She continues that research from Guttmacher has consistently demonstrated that "rates among racial and ethnic minorities -- especially blacks and Hispanics -- are directly linked to their higher rates of unintended pregnancy, which in turn reflect pervasive health disparities more generally." Camp writes that the "fundamental question policymakers should be asking is not why women of color have high abortion rates, but rather what can be done to help them have fewer unintended pregnancies and achieve better health outcomes more generally," such as improved access to affordable contraception. Women"s dissatisfaction with health care providers, quality of service and the contraceptive methods themselves also are factors in contraceptive use, as are "[u]nstable life situations," which can make consistent use a low priority for some women, according to Camp. She writes, "By continuing to label abortion providers as "racists" and refusing to support expanded access to contraceptive services, antiabortion-rights activists are by no means part of the solution -- to high rates of unintended pregnancy and abortion among racial and ethnic minorities or to persistent and tragic disparities in health care generally" (Camp, RH Reality Check, 6/15).~ "What"s Next for Women"s Legal Rights in the Supreme Court?" Amy Matsui, Womenstake: Matsui, senior counsel for the National Women"s Law Center, examines several women"s rights issues "that we see peeking around the corner" of the next Supreme Court session. Matsui writes that "increasingly draconian abortion restrictions have begun to work their way through state legislatures." These restrictions include giving personhood rights to fetuses, mandates on the information women are given prior to abortion procedures and "outright abortion bans," she writes. Challenges to laws that expand protections for providers who deny health care services also "are likely to come before the courts," Matsui writes. Challenges to health care reform proposals also are likely, "specifically, the interaction of the federal statute that governs employee health care and pension plans ... and any new requirements for employers to provide health care coverage," according to Matsui. The Supreme Court has "obviously considered the underlying legal doctrines in these cases (the constitutional right to privacy, federal anti-discrimination statutes, Equal Protection guarantees and federal benefits statutes) in the past; some might say that there is a clear roadmap of where the Court should go in some of these cases," Matsui writes, concluding, "But when every vote counts on the Supreme Court, women should be watching what cases come next" (Matsui, Womenstake, 6/12).~ "Antiabortion Groups" Case Against Sotomayor," Dan Gilgoff, U.S. News & World Report"s "God and Country": "With no clear evidence for a pro-abortion-rights position in her judicial decisions, antiabortion groups" case against Supreme Court nominee Sonia Sotomayor can be summed up in eight words: the Puerto Rican Legal Defense and Education Fund," Gilgoff writes. From 1980 to 1992, Sotomayor sat on the l
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Chlamydia Infection - The Most Commonly Reported Sexually Transmitted Infection In Europe - ECDC Issues Chlamydia Control Guidance
In the coming summer months it is estimated that 200,000 young people in Europe will become infected with Chlamydia and most of them won"t know that they are infected. Chlamydia trachomatis, the most common bacterial sexually transmitted infection in Europe, continues to increase in many countries. It affects mostly young adults under 25. The true occurrence of Chlamydia is most likely much higher than the official figures because the majority of the infected do not have clinical symptoms. Surveys in European countries have shown an estimated population prevalence of 5 to 10 % in young people.
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Cancer May Be Stopped In Its Tracks By MicroRNA Replacement Therapy

A new study suggests that delivering small RNAs, known as microRNAs, to cancer cells could help to stop the disease in its tracks. microRNAs control gene expression and are commonly lost in cancerous tumors. Researchers have shown that replacement of a single microRNA in mice with an extremely aggressive form of liver cancer can be enough to halt their disease, according to a report in the June 12 issue of the journal Cell, a Cell Press publication. They delivered the microRNA to the mice using a virus that has been applied in other forms of gene therapy. That so-called adeno-associated virus (AAV) is particularly good at targeting new genetic material to the liver. "Mice given the control virus showed no change in the growth rate of their tumors and within three weeks, the cancer had taken over," said Joshua Mendell of Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine. "When we gave them the microRNA-carrying virus, some animals showed essentially complete regression of their tumors." In other cases, he said, the tumors were much smaller and far fewer. Mendell said his team, which included his father Jerry Mendell at The Research Institute at Nationwide Children"s Hospital, was hopeful the strategy would work based on previous evidence. Nonetheless, he added, "it is always surprising to see results this striking." They were also amazed by how specifically the microRNA affected cancer cells, while leaving normal cells unscathed. "We found that the tumor cells are exquisitely sensitive [to microRNA replacement]--they not only stopped proliferating, but they actually died," he said. Meanwhile, the mice showed no evidence of any damage to their normal liver tissue. MicroRNAs are important regulators of gene activity, the researchers explained, and a single microRNA can have far-reaching effects. That"s because an individual microRNA can influence hundreds of gene transcripts to coordinate complex programs of gene expression and affect global changes in the physiology of a cell. A growing body of evidence shows that microRNAs are essential for normal development and to keep cells in balance. By the same token, when microRNAs get out of whack, they can lead to disease. In the last five years, researchers have discovered a particularly important role for microRNAs in cancer. "Virtually all examined tumor types are characterized by globally abnormal microRNA expression patterns," Mendell said. Some microRNAs lead to cancer when they reach levels that are higher than normal. But in most instances, microRNA levels are found to decline in cancerous tumors compared to normal tissue. Earlier studies have begun to suggest that methods to replace those lost microRNAs might hold particular promise for therapy. For one thing, reducing the level of microRNAs can actually drive the transformation of normal cells into cancerous ones. And, in the case of lymphoma, Mendell"s group showed that a single microRNA could suppress the growth of cancer cells. The new study is the first to show that the strategy might work in a living animal. First, they showed that primary liver cancers, known as hepatocellular carcinomas (HCC), have a dramatic reduction in a specific microRNA designated as miR-26a. miR-26a is found at high levels in many tissues throughout the body. When they introduced the microRNA back into cancer cells, those cells stopped progressing through the cell cycle. Likewise, mice with the liver cancer that were given the virus-delivered microRNA therapy were protected from the disease as their cancer cells stopped proliferating and underwent a programmed cell death. There is a dire need for new strategies to combat HCC, which the researchers said is the third leading cause of cancer deaths and the fifth most common malignancy worldwide. HCC is often diagnosed at an advanced and incurable stage. Even when it is caught earlier, other characteristics of the disease tend to make it a challenge to treat with currently available drugs. The promising strategy for HCC is also likely to work in other cancers as well. The researchers chose mice with liver cancer as a test bed in part because the liver is readily targeted by AAV, but they said that they don"t think there is anything special about liver cancer that makes it more sensitive to microRNA replacement therapy. The barrier to applying this strategy to other tissues will rather be getting the microRNA into cancer cells, Mendell said. However, he noted, there are ways to deliver microRNA to other tissues using AAV and scientists are working on other vehicles for delivery -- synthetic nanoparticles, for instance -- that may just fit the bill. The researchers include Janaiah Kota, The Research Institute at Nationwide Children"s Hospital, Columbus, OH; Raghu R. Chivukula, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD; Kathryn A. O"Donnell, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD; Erik A. Wentzel, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD; Chrystal L. Montgomery, The Research Institute at Nationwide Children"s Hospital, Columbus, OH; Hun-Way Hwang, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD; Tsung-Cheng Chang, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD; Perumal Vivekanandan, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD; Michael Torbenson, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD; K. Reed Clark, The Research Institute at Nationwide Children"s Hospital, Columbus, OH, The Ohio State University, Columbus, OH; Jerry R. Mendell, The Research Institute at Nationwide Children"s Hospital, Columbus, OH, The Ohio State University, Columbus, OH; and Joshua T. Mendell, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD. Cathleen Genova Cell Press


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