| Journals Medical Newsletter for Wednesday April 29, 2026 ( 19 items ) |
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Brain health shaped by lifetime mental, physical, environmental and lifestyle factors
DALLAS, Texas, April 28 [Category: Health Care] -- The American Heart Association posted the following news release:
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Brain health shaped by lifetime mental, physical, environmental and lifestyle factors
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Statement Highlights:
* An individual's brain health is influenced by their psychological health, environment, sleep quality, social conditions and chronic health conditions over a lifetime. Life events and experiences even in early life also affect long-term brain development and
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Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives Issues Commentary: Alberta's New Health Legislation Brings U.S. Style Insurance to Canada
OTTAWA, Ontario, April 29 -- The Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives issued the following commentary on April 28, 2026, by senior researcher and political economist Andrew Longhurst:
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Alberta's new health legislation brings U.S. style insurance to Canada
Making a private health insurance market: the risks of the Canadian and U.S. industry to public medicare
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The Alberta government appears to be swayed by the private insurance industry--and this powerful lobby has a large financial
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Case Western Reserve: First-ever Freeze-dried Artificial Platelets are Shelf-stable and Portable--a Major Advance for Field Medicine
CLEVELAND, Ohio, April 29 -- Case Western Reserve University issued the following news:
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First-ever freeze-dried artificial platelets are shelf-stable and portable--a major advance for field medicine
Patients in danger of bleeding out from trauma could be treated on site
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Platelets, which allow blood to clot, can save patients in danger of bleeding to death from traumatic injuries. But donated platelets can only be given to patients in a hospital and last only a few days at room tempe
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Duke-NUS Graduate Medical School: Hidden Enzyme Linked to Cancer-related Muscle Loss May Offer Treatment Target
SINGAPORE, April 28 (TNSjou) -- Duke-NUS Graduate Medical School issued the following news:
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Hidden enzyme linked to cancer-related muscle loss may offer new treatment target
A newly identified enzyme may help explain why patients with cancer experience severe muscle loss--and could point to a new therapeutic strategy.
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Muscle wasting, a hallmark of cancer cachexia, is a common and debilitating condition affecting up to half of patients with advanced cancer. It is associated with weak
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Faculty and Staff Notables | May 2026
ATLANTA, Georgia, April 28 -- Mercer University posted the following news:
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Faculty and Staff Notables | May 2026
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College of Education
Dr. Karyn Allee, associate professor of elementary education, with Dr. Brittany Adams of the University of Alabama and Dr. Nance Wilson of SUNY Cortland, co-authored the paper " The Climb Model of Reading: A strategic framework for comprehension, metacognition, and classroom practice," published in the Early Childhood Education Journal.
Dr. Robert
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House Appropriations Committee Ranking Member DeLauro Statement at Markup of FY 2027 State, Foreign Operations & Related Programs Funding Bill
WASHINGTON, April 29 -- Rep. Rosa DeLauro, D-Connecticut, ranking member of the House Appropriations Committee, issued the following remarks on April 28, 2026, at the markup of the fiscal 2027 State, Foreign Operations and Related Programs bill:
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Thank you Chairman Cole, Chairman Diaz-Balart, and Ranking Member Frankel for their good work and for their friendship.
I also want to thank the subcommittee staff, Erin Kolodjeski, Ed Etzkorn, and Laurie Mignone on the minority, and their count
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Institute of Cancer Research: Excess Weight is the Strongest Clue to the Rise in Cancer Rates in Under 50s
LONDON, England, April 29 -- The Institute of Cancer Research issued the following news:
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Excess weight is the strongest clue to the rise in cancer rates in under 50s
Being overweight or obese is an important cause of rising cancer rates among younger adults in England, according to a major new study.
Researchers at The Institute of Cancer Research, London, and Imperial College London, found that while rates of several cancers have been increasing in younger adults over the past two dec
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Integrating pharmacists into kidney disease care team can provide better outcomes for patients
BUFFALO, New York, April 28 -- The University at Buffalo (State University of New York) posted the following news release:
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Integrating pharmacists into kidney disease care team can provide better outcomes for patients
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Calvin Meaney, who specializes in nephrology, recognizes the role pharmacists can serve in the care of patients with chronic kidney disease. Photo: Meredith Forrest Kulwicki
UB's Calvin Meaney co-authors commentary highlighting benefits of relying on pharmacists, espe
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Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health Associate Professor Socal Testifies Before House Education & Workforce Subcommittee
WASHINGTON, April 29 -- The House Education and Workforce Subcommittee on Health, Employment, Labor and Pensions released the following testimony by Mariana P. Socal, associate professor of health policy and management at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, from an April 22, 2026, hearing entitled "Profits Over Patients: The PBM Business Model Under Scrutiny." PBM stands for pharmacy benefit manager.
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Chairman Allen, Ranking Member DeSaulnier, and members of the Subcommit
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Krishnamoorthi Urges Trump Administration to Restore LGBTQ+ 988 Crisis Line as New Study Confirms Lifesaving Impact
WASHINGTON, April 28 -- Rep. Raja Krishnamoorthi, D-Illinois, issued the following news release:
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Krishnamoorthi Urges Trump Administration to Restore LGBTQ+ 988 Crisis Line as New Study Confirms Lifesaving Impact
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WASHINGTON -Congressman Raja Krishnamoorthi is calling on the Trump Administration to immediately restore the LGBTQ+ youth "Press 3" option on the 988 Lifeline after a new study published in the Journal of the American Medical Association and led by Harvard Medical School re
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Lung Scans Can Reveal Important Differences in Sarcoidosis Severity According to New Study
DENVER, Colorado, April 28 [Category: Health Care] -- National Jewish Health, a respiratory hospital, issued the following news release:
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Lung Scans Can Reveal Important Differences in Sarcoidosis Severity According to New Study
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A new study from researchers at National Jewish Health and collaborating institutions has found that different patterns seen on lung scans can signal how severe sarcoidosis may be, and how it affects breathing. The research was online published in the journal
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Overdoses spike for visitors to California addiction treatment centers hub
UNIVERSITY PARK, Pennsylvania, April 28 -- Pennsylvania State University posted the following news:
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Overdoses spike for visitors to California addiction treatment centers hub
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UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. -Visitors to a 10-city region in Orange County, California, with a large concentration of substance use disorder treatment centers experience disproportionately high levels of overdose, according to a new study led by a researcher at Penn State.
Out-of-state visitors to this region had the
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Support for AI in heart care
BEDFORD PARK, Australia, April 28 -- Flinders University posted the following news:
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Support for AI in heart care
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Digital transformation and artificial intelligence (AI) in healthcare requires a range of safeguards and standards to work well, but new research from Flinders University provides support for effective AI systems to improve cardiovascular care.
The study examines how Clinical Decision Support Systems (CDSS) can transform cardiovascular disease management - a leading caus
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UCLA Health: Half of Older Patients With Dementia Remain on Psychotropic Drugs a Year After Starting on Them
LOS ANGELES, California, April 29 (TNSjou) -- The UCLA Health issued the following news release:
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Half of older patients with dementia remain on psychotropic drugs a year after starting on them
Prescriptions for medications affecting cognition, such as antipsychotics, disproportionately likelier to be initiated from emergency rooms and hospitals, not doctors' offices
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Initial prescriptions for medications affecting cognition, such as antipsychotics, are disproportionately likelier to
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UH Professor Urges Better Prevention and Care of Liver Disease to Reduce Burden
HOUSTON, Texas, April 29 (TNSjou) -- The University of Houston issued the following news:
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UH Professor Urges Better Prevention and Care of Liver Disease to Reduce Burden
Research Reveals Financial, Human Cost and Need for Adherence
By Laurie Fickman, 713/743-8454, lafickma@Central.UH.EDU
A University of Houston College of Pharmacy professor has published two studies offering a comprehensive look at chronic liver disease in the era of modern antiviral therapies. One study is the first
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University of Michigan Health-Sparrow Merger Boosts Local Care Quality, Job Satisfaction, Financial Performance
ANN ARBOR, Michigan, April 29 -- Michigan Medicine, the academic medical center of the University of Michigan, issued the following news release:
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University of Michigan Health-Sparrow merger boosts local care quality, job satisfaction, financial performance
Leaders point to distinct factors behind the integration's success in an era when similar consolidation efforts fall short
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Just three years after a six-hospital group merged with University of Michigan Health, leaders are reporti
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University of Southern California Keck School of Medicine: Study Finds Three Distinct Patterns of Cognitive Decline in Alzheimer's Disease
LOS ANGELES, California, April 29 (TNSjou) -- The University of Southern California Keck School of Medicine issued the following news release:
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Study finds three distinct patterns of cognitive decline in Alzheimer's disease
New research on preclinical Alzheimer's disease, before symptoms begin, shows that people decline at different rates and that those patterns are linked to key biomarkers.
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Cognitive decline in Alzheimer's disease differs substantially from one person to the next an
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University of Windsor: Publication Highlights Windsor Law Role in Global AI and Robotics Policy Work
WINDSOR, Ontario, April 28 (TNSjou) -- University of Windsor issued the following news:
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New publication highlights Windsor Law role in global AI and Robotics policy work
By Sara Meikle
From autonomous systems to algorithmic decision-making, artificial intelligence (AI) is raising questions that extend beyond the scope of law alone.
Interdisciplinary collaboration at the University of Windsor is helping address these questions by bringing multiple fields into the same conversation.
L
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WTAS: FDA Approves First-Ever Gene Therapy for Treatment of Genetic Hearing Loss Under National Priority Voucher Program
WASHINGTON, April 28 -- The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services issued the following news release:
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WTAS: FDA Approves First-Ever Gene Therapy for Treatment of Genetic Hearing Loss Under National Priority Voucher Program
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Groundbreaking AAV-based gene therapy offers potential treatment for patients with OTOF gene-associated severe-to-profound and profound hearing loss
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration on April 23, 2026, approved Otarmeni (lunsotogene parvec-cwha), the fi
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