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Vitamin D And Calcium Supplements Help Prevent Bone Fracture In The Elderly
We all know that vitamin D and calcium are good for bones, but research teams in Europe and USA have shown that both taken daily reduces the rate of hip fracture in older people by 20%.
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ProspectIP Has Agreed Licensing Deals For Two Inventors And Products, A Device That Aims To Prevent (DVT) And A Safety Opener For Glass Vials, UK
A University initiative to commercialise novel business ideas and inventions has secured its first two licensing agreements and attracted a further ÷£400,000 in funding.
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New Book About Women's Health Looks At The Good And Evil Of Hormones
The evidence is in. Estrogen does not halt aging or protect women from heart disease and dementia, nor is it the safest or best treatment for the hot flashes, night sweats and the insomnia that are associated with menopause and perimenopause. Quite simply - estrogen is not a good and magical hormone - as Susan Baxter, PhD., and Dr. Jerilynn C. Prior, painstakingly prove in their book, The Estrogen Errors; Why Progesterone is Better for Women"s Health.
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GlaxoSmithKline To Cut Some Drug Costs In Emerging Markets

GlaxoSmithKline (GSK) plans to decrease the prices of many of its leading medicines in emerging markets following the success of a pilot program in the Philippines, Andrew Witty, GSK"s chief executive, said, Financial Times reports. Witty said the price cuts are part of an effort to diversify and expand globally. The move comes at a time when "many multinational drug manufacturers are seeking to expand in emerging markets through such differential pricing between countries, as well as joint ventures, acquisitions, partnerships and internal investment in commercial operations, manufacturing and research," according to the Financial Times. The newspaper writes, "[w]hile anti-retroviral medicines for HIV have been offered at deep discounts in poorer countries for several years, GSK is extending reductions into many richer countries and for a far broader range of patented medicines for many different medical conditions. [Witty"s] policy marks a signal that he rejects the long-standing pharmaceutical industry claim that discounts would result in "leakage" of their medicines back into richer markets. He said historical efforts to enforce a single global price for medicines had made access to drugs difficult for poorer countries. But he warned that if rich countries demanded similar price reductions "that would be very challenging ... and destructive."" (Jack, Financial Times, 6/11). This information was reprinted from globalhealth.kff.org with kind permission from the Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation. You can view the entire Kaiser Daily Global Health Policy Report, search the archives and sign up for email delivery at globalhealth.kff.org. © Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation. All rights reserved.


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