
Scientists at an international conference have been warned that the next casualty of the credit crunch could be new drugs. The warning says the current global financial crisis could well threaten and seriously delay the discovery and production of many new life-saving medicines. The warning has come from Professor David Wield, the Director of the
Full Post: New drugs the next casualty of the credit crunch

A British teenager who is terminally ill has won the right to refuse treatment and forced a hospital to drop its High Court case.
Thirteen year old Hannah Jones of Marden, near Hereford, has a hole in her heart and needs a heart transplant to survive - doctors say without one she has only six months to live.
Hannah previously suffered from leukaemia and her heart has been weakened by the drugs she was required to take from the age of five - but Hannah is adamant she does not want surgery and has expressed the desire to die with dignity at home.
There was apparently no guarantee the operation would be successful and even if it was it would mean a life of constant medication.
Hannah has apparently spent much of the past eight years in hospital undergoing treatment for leukaemia and the crippling heart condition cardiomyopathy - her heart is only able to pump at 10% of its capacity and Hannah has already had three operations to fit pacemakers.
Herefordshire Primary Care Trust’s bid to force her to have a heart transplant was dropped after a child protection officer visited Hannah and interviewed her.
Hannah apparently managed to convince the officer that this was a decision she had made on her own and she had thought about it over a long period of time, and eventually the court proceeding was dropped after treatment options were discussed and Hannah ably expressed quite clearly that she did not wish to go back into hospital for cardiac treatment.
Hannah says she wants to stop treatment and spend the rest of her life at home - a request her parents fully support which has made them proud of her.
Hannah’s father Andrew, aged 43, has reportedly said his daughter has been through enough and the hospital’s behaviour is outrageous.
Hannah’s mother Kirsty, 42, is a former intensive care nurse, and she says if Hannah did have a transplant it was likely she would need another within five years.
Her father says the hospital presumed her parents did not have Hannah’s best interests at heart and the added stress of a possible court hearing or being forcibly taken into hospital was disgraceful.
Last week her father was forced to cancel holiday plans to take Hannah to Disneyland because he could not get insurance for her - the family had been given the holiday to the U.S. by a charity.
The British Medical Association’s ethics committee, says a child of Hannah’s age is able to make an informed decision to refuse treatment which is backed by a House of Lords 1980s ruling that a child who understands the issues and consequences could be considered legally competent.
A locum GP is suspected of raising concerns regarding Hannah with the child protection team.
The BMA says while it may be understandable why a doctor might have taken this action, in this particular case it is clear that the parents and the child had made a perfectly reasonable decision and the doctor obviously came to a different view and was trying to use the law to support his view.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Related Posts:
A couples’ neglect of their child’s health which resulted in “dire and tragic consequences” has earned them prison sentences. The pair were convicted of causing their daughter grievous bodily harm for not seeking medical help and allowing the 11-year-old to become so ill she suffered brain and heart damage. The couple from Crows Nest,
Full Post: Prison for couple who neglected child’s health
The best chance of “reeling-in” an unmarried father and building the foundations for a stable family life are the critical months of pregnancy, says new research from the University of Maryland. “Unmarried dads are less likely to drift away if they are involved with their partner during this vital period when a family can begin
Full Post: Unmarried dads’ involvement with child secured during pregnancy
The death of a British man waiting to be seen in a public hospital accident and emergency department has sparked an inquiry into the way he was treated. The man, 37 year old Stewart Fleming from Rainham in Kent, was forced to wait 2 hours before anyone saw him even though he had been
Full Post: Man dies after waiting hours to be treated in hospital
Sun Pharmaceutical Industries Ltd. today announced its subsidiary, Alkaloida Chemical Company Exclusive Group Ltd. (Alkaloida), has extended the Expiration Date of the Tender Offer for the purchase of all outstanding Ordinary Shares of Taro Pharmaceutical Industries Ltd. (Taro). The Offer will now expire at 5:00 p.m., New York City time, on Friday, January 30, 2009,
Full Post: Sun Pharmaceutical extends tender offer for Taro
The number of children being adopted from care in Northern Ireland has increased, according to a study by Queen’s University. However, Health Boards and Trusts vary dramatically in their decisions on long-term placements for children in care. From Care to Where? A Care Pathways and Outcomes Report for Practitioners explores the placements of the 374
Full Post: Increase in adoption of children in care in Northern Ireland --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
