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Acceleron To Present ACE-031 Preclinical Study Results As Treatment For Loss Of Muscle Mass And Function
Acceleron Pharma, Inc., a biopharmaceutical company developing novel therapeutics that modulate the growth of cells and tissues including red blood cells, bone, and muscle, today announced it will provide three oral presentations on data from its ACE-031 program at the Endocrine Society"s 91st Annual Meeting to be held in Washington, DC from June 10-13, 2009. The presentations will provide results from preclinical studies highlighting the effects of its lead investigational product for treating diseases involving the loss of muscle mass and function.
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Former President Clinton, U.N. Advisor Douste-Blazy Announce Voluntary Airline Ticket Donation
Former President Clinton has joined efforts to raise money for HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis and malaria from travelers purchasing electronic airline tickets, the New York Times reports. At a press conference in Paris with United Nations special advisor Philippe Douste-Blazy, Clinton said, "If you provide a user-friendly, efficient way of giving, the contributors will use this system."The U.N. is behind the effort, which will enable travelers to voluntarily add a $2 donation for projects to fight malaria, tuberculosis and AIDS when buying an airline ticket, the Times reports. Both Clinton and Douste-Blazy are working with a newly formed group - Leading Innovative Financing for Equity, or LIFE. LIFE is comprised of eight different groups working to raising money for health aid. According to Douste-Blazy, efforts targeting small donors will begin in January 2010. He added that "the idea is that the citizens of the world are connected by the Internet and credit cards and can show their solidarity."The groups also hope to reach people renting cars, booking hotels or buying train tickets, the Times reports (Carvajal, New York Times, 5/21). Clinton said U.S. air passengers will be able to voluntarily participate in the program, adding, "There is no question that huge numbers of people will participate in this. They understand that it doesn"t cost much and that 100% will go to save lives." (AFP/Google.com, 5/20).
Mental Health

Baucus Takes Center Stage As Health Reform Deal Maker

"As President Obama"s effort to overhaul the health care system seems to hit one roadblock after another in Congress, he is counting on Senator Max Baucus [D-Mont.], a political shape-shifter and crafty deal maker who is not fully trusted by either party, to help him clinch his top domestic priority," the New York Times reports in a profile of the Senate Finance Committee leader. Sen. Chris Dodd, D-Conn., has been unable to garner GOP support. Obama"s preferred health leader, Tom Daschle, dropped out of the Obama team because of tax problems and highly partisan House Democrats have failed to work with Republicans, leaving the task of ushering a bill through the legislative process largely to Baucus. Baucus is known for seeking bipartisan support for bills, a behavior that has earned him some distrust among his Democratic colleagues after he supported two major Bush administration proposals. However, he used the strategy last week to draw Republicans back into the debate even as they objected to a proposal by the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions (HELP) Committee. "Mr. Baucus takes great pride in working with Republicans, especially Mr. Grassley. Last week, as Republicans pummeled Mr. Dodd over the cost of his bill, Mr. Baucus huddled with some of those critics, including [Sen. Charles] Grassley, to develop a bill that Republicans could support. Mr. Baucus also delayed his first public drafting session until after the Fourth of July to work on lowering the bill"s cost. Soft-spoken but tenacious, Mr. Baucus in recent weeks successfully strong-armed several lobbying groups into muting their criticism of his legislation, part of a concerted strategy of assuring interest groups that they had his ear as long as they did not chew on it" (Herszenhorn, 6/23). Meanwhile, Sen. Dodd, who is leading the HELP Committee in the absence of ailing chairman Sen. Ted Kennedy, D-Mass., said Tuesday his committee could still surge to the finish line this week on their own reform proposal, Politico reports. "Dodd vowed today that the overhaul effort was moving forward, and he reaffirmed his support for a government-run public option, the most controversial aspect of the overhaul" (Isenstadt, 6/23). The government-run plan "has emerged as the crux of the unfolding debate over health-care reform on Capitol Hill, an ideological flash point that has become perhaps the greatest challenge for the Senate negotiators attempting to reach a compromise that could actually become law," the Washington Post reports. Liberal groups are blasting conservative Democrats who oppose the plan as Republicans pledged caucus-wide opposition (Murray, 6/24). Weighing in on that debate, The Commonwealth Fund, a major health policy group, published its finding Wednesday that "A nationwide health insurance exchange that includes a Medicare-like government option could save $1.8 trillion more than if only private plans are offered, a prominent private U.S. health policy group said on Wednesday," Reuters reports, but adds: "Opponents say a cheaper, government plan will make it impossible for private plans to compete and may drive some out of business" (Heavey,6/24). Meanwhile, "As Senate Democratic leaders voiced increasing skepticism about reaching a bipartisan health care compromise, White House Chief of Staff Rahm Emanuel and a high-powered delegation of administration officials huddled with key Democratic senators on Capitol Hill Tuesday," Politico reports. The meeting was an opportunity for the Administration and Senators to "compare notes" on health reform, according to one participant. "Emanuel came to the Capitol at the request of Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.), and was joined by Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius and White House health reform director Nancy-Ann DeParle. The 75-minute strategy meeting involved members of the Senate leadership and the two committees negotiating the bill, Finance and Health, Education, Labor and Pensions." After the meeting, Chairman of the Finance Committee Sen. Max Baucus, D-Mont., said "Rahm said he wants a bipartisan bill" (Brown, 6/24). This information was reprinted from kaiserhealthnews.org with kind permission from the Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation. You can view the entire Kaiser Daily Health Policy Report, search the archives and sign up for email delivery at kaiserhealthnews.org. © Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation. All rights reserved.


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