Bill Gillette is a freelance writer based in Richmond Heights, Ohio.
CMS buys time on Medicare reimbursement cut
April 6th 2010Washington - Though Congress adjourned for recess without taking action to forestall the 21 percent cut in Medicare reimbursement that took effect April 1, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) has acted to buy doctors more time, MedPage Today reports.
FDA mulls tanning bed ban for teens
April 6th 2010Gaithersburg, Md. - A panel of advisers to the Food and Drug Administration has recommended that the agency place tighter controls on artificial tanning, the Associated Press reports. Those controls could range from requiring parental consent forms to banning the practice in teens under age 18.
New Jersey pharma firm sees stocks fall
December 1st 2009Berkeley Heights, N.J. - Pharmaceutical company Genta Inc., based here, announced recently that a phase 3 drug trial for the melanoma drug Genasense showed no statistically significant benefit compared with a placebo, reports news source Foxbusiness.com.
NIH awards grant for cicatricial alopecia study
December 1st 2009Cleveland - The National Institutes of Health has awarded Pratima Karnik, Ph.D., assistant professor of dermatology at Cleveland’s Case Western Reserve University, a grant of $1.77 million to fund a five-year study titled “PPAR-gamma Signaling in Normal Pilosebaceous Units and in Scarring Alopecia,” reports the Cicatricial Alopecia Research Foundation (CARF).
Study: PDT reduces recurrence of SCCs
December 1st 2009Minneapolis - Results of a recently completed study appear to establish the efficacy of Levulan Photodynamic Therapy (PDT) in reducing the recurrence of squamous cell carcinomas (SCCs) in solid organ transplant recipients (SOTRs), reports PRNewswire.
Sinusitis connection: Chronic UAI, AD improve with surgery
February 1st 2009Results of a recent study suggest that while upper airway infections, such as rhinosinusitis and adenotonsillitis, may exacerbate atopic dermatitis in children, surgical treatment for those infections may improve the severity of AD.