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Antiabortion-Rights Groups Push For State-Level Restrictions On Access
The Washington Post on Monday examined how antiabortion-rights advocates are pressing state legislatures to approve measures designed to restrict access to abortion and compel women seeking the procedure to reconsider. The Post reports that the election of President Obama, who supports abortion rights, and the Democratic majority in Congress have made it less likely that there will be new federal restrictions on abortion or an overturning of Roe v. Wade. In response, antiabortion-rights groups have pushed to enact more state-level restrictions, such as parental consent for minors and waiting periods. According to the Post, state legislatures in 2008 considered around 400 measures to restrict abortion. Gretchen Borchelt, senior counsel at the National Women"s Law Center, said, "The states are the battlegrounds and certainly the testing grounds of new kinds of restrictions." She added, "State legislatures can be more creative in what they"re trying to push and see what works."The restrictions -- known as Targeted Regulation of Abortion Providers, or TRAP laws -- include measures such as requiring a woman to visit a clinic twice at least 24 hours apart before obtaining an abortion, severely limiting public funding for abortion, mandating consent from both parents or a judge"s signature before minors can obtain abortions and requiring that women view ultrasounds before abortion procedures. The ultrasound laws are aimed at making women reconsider the decision to have an abortion, while the waiting period laws "have the added effect of raising the obstacles and the costs," particularly for low-income and working-class women, who are most likely to have unintended pregnancies, the Post reports.Terri Herring, head of Mississippi"s Pro-Life America Network, said, "We tried every which way, and we were successful in the state way." She added, "All-or-nothing means nothing. Incremental means something." Herring"s next goal is enacting a law in Mississippi requiring clinic staffers to report the identities of the sexual partners of minors. The Post reports that Mississippi, which has some of the most restrictive abortion laws in the country, has become a model for antiabortion-rights groups in other states. According to Herring, the "greater goal, even in legislation, is to influence the culture." Felicia Brown-Williams, a Planned Parenthood staffer in Mississippi, said, "We"ve got a glut of bills we fight every year. We spend the first two months in sheer and utter panic that one of these bills is going to get past us" (Slevin, Washington Post, 6/8).
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Allergan Receives FDA Approval For ACUVAIL(TM) Ophthalmic Solution For The Treatment Of Pain And Inflammation Following Cataract Surgery
Allergan, Inc. (NYSE: AGN) announced that the United States Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has approved ACUVAIL(TM) (ketorolac tromethamine ophthalmic solution) 0.45%, an advanced, preservative-free formulation of ketorolac, a nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug (NSAID) indicated for the treatment of pain and inflammation following cataract surgery. Cataracts are a leading cause of blindness among older adults and cataract surgery is the most frequently performed surgical procedure in the United States, with more than 3 million procedures performed each year.1
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Queensland Researchers Help Unlock Genetic Keys To MS

New genes discovered by Australian and New Zealand researchers may hold the key to new treatments for people with multiple sclerosis (MS). Queensland scientists are part of a consortium that has discovered two genetic variants which increase the risk of MS and reveal links to other autoimmune disease. The study was published today in the prestigious scientific journal Nature Genetics. Professor Matthew Brown , from The University of Queensland"s Diamantina Institute for Cancer, Immunology and Metabolic Medicine, said a gene identified by the research consortium could lead to simple preventative treatments for MS. "One of the two genes is most likely a gene which control metabolism of vitamin D," Professor Brown said. "Previous research has already shown that levels of vitamin D influence the risk of people contracting MS. "For example, people have a higher risk the further they live from the Equator. "This instantly suggests that a possible preventative treatment for MS is vitamin D. "This may lead to new types of therapeutics down the track." Associate Professor Simon Broadley, senior staff specialist in neurology at the Gold Coast Hospital and Acting Head of Medicine at Griffith University, said the gradual physical deterioration associated with MS severely limits social and employment opportunities for those affected. "The frustration of watching young people lose their independence because of this disease, is a compelling enough reason for my involvement in research that offers new hope," Dr Broadley said. "I am very optimistic that this advance in our understanding of the genes involved in MS will eventually lead to more effective treatments. The next step in the research is to pinpoint the exact genetic mutations and the functional differences they are responsible for." Together with over 40 investigators from 11 institutions within the Australian and New Zealand Multiple Sclerosis Genetics (ANZgene) consortium, the team investigated genes that increase a person"s risk of developing MS. MS affects some 2.5 million people worldwide and almost 20,000 in Australia. It is a devastating autoimmune disease as it occurs at the prime of life and mostly in young Caucasian women. The three-year study involved scanning the DNA of 1,618 people with MS and 3,413 people without MS. Professor Brown"s group was instrumental in performing the genome-wide screening process which allows the entire human genome to be scanned in broad brushstrokes. Researchers were looking at genetic landmarks in the genome called SNPs and then progressively narrowing down their search to individual genes. After comparing over 300,000 SNPs, two genetic regions on chromosome 12 and 20 showed significant differences. Changes in the region on chromosome 12 were discovered to coincide with an increased susceptibility to type I diabetes and rheumatoid arthritis, whereas the region identified on chromosome 20 also coincides with susceptibility to rheumatoid arthritis and Graves" disease. In addition, chromosome 12 encodes the enzyme that converts vitamin D, which we obtain mainly through sunlight, but also our diet, into an active form that our body can use. "It is the first such large scale human genetics project done completely in Australasia and so is a real milestone for the Australian scientific community," Professor Brown said. He said it also highlighted the potential of genetics research to make really major breakthroughs in understanding what causes common diseases like MS. The research was coordinated by Professor Trevor Kilpatrick, Director of the Centre for Neuroscience at the University of Melbourne, and Dr Justin Rubio, Senior Research Fellow of the Florey Neuroscience Institutes based in Melbourne. The research has been funded in part by MS Research Australia, The National Health & Medical Research Council and the Australian Research Council. University of Queensland


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