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Murdered Abortion Provider Tiller Held Strong In Face Of Constant Threats, Ms. Editor Says
While most people who commit violent acts against abortion providers are "characterized as lone nuts," they actually are often associated with "extremist" antiabortion-rights groups, Ms. editor Michele Kort writes in the magazine"s Summer 2009 issue. These groups "track the whereabouts" of providers and "deliver white-hot rhetoric that paints someone like" murdered abortion provider George Tiller "as a murderer rather than a healer," Kort says. Extremists within the antiabortion-rights movement have "even promoted the assassinations of abortion providers as "justifiable homicides,"" leaving the ""lone nuts" ... as good as licensed to kill," she adds. According to Kort, one in five abortion clinics is the target of repeat violence annually. Since the early 1990s, nine doctors and clinic workers have died as a result of violent attacks, Kort states.Tiller, who was shot to death on May 31 in the foyer of his Wichita, Kan., church, "also faced a concerted attack" in Kansas courts, Kort continues. The legal efforts against Tiller included two grand jury investigations resulting from citizen petition drives led by Operation Rescue and other antiabortion-rights groups. Kort notes that neither jury found any basis for indictment against Tiller. In addition, former Kansas Attorney General Phill Kline in 2004 subpoenaed Tiller"s patient records, which Kort writes was "supposedly to determine if he hadn"t reported statutory rapes of pregnant girls under 16." The court dismissed the criminal charges Kline filed in the case. Paul Morrison, the current Kansas attorney general, in 2006 "surprisingly" charged Tiller with 19 misdemeanors for failing to get a second opinion on some abortion procedures, Kort states. She also comments, "After nearly two years of legal proceedings, the jurors in the case delivered a resounding "not guilty" in just 25 minutes."The legal issues were "exhaustive and expensive" for Tiller, according to Kort. She adds that Dan Monnat, Tiller"s attorney in Wichita, said that Tiller ""held up like a soldier"" during the legal battles. Kort reports that Tiller"s friends "worried about him" nonetheless. Susan Hill -- who operates several abortion clinics and referred patients needing the procedure later in pregnancy to Tiller -- said he once told her that he would not retire because "I can"t leave these women. There"s no one else for them."Kort also profiled Miriam Kleiman, a woman who had an abortion at Tiller"s clinic after her fetus was diagnosed with a severe brain malformation at 28 weeks" gestation (Kort, Ms., Summer 2009).
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Experts To Assess Impacts And Policy Barriers To Improving Proper Medication Adherence
Health reform may succeed in creating better coverage and access for Americans, but until we reduce the barriers to proper medication adherence, many patients will not experience improved health, according to experts meeting today to discuss the challenges of adherence.
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Infant Inhalation Of Ultrafine Air Pollution Linked To Adult Lung Disease: Shown For The First Time By LSUHSC
Stephania Cormier, PhD, Associate Professor of Pharmacology at LSU Health Sciences Center New Orleans, has shown for the first time that early exposure to environmentally persistent free radicals (present in airborne ultrafine particulate matter) affects long-term lung function. She recently presented her latest research data at the 11th International Congress on Combustion By-Products and Their Health Effects at the Environmental Protection Agency Conference Center in Research Triangle Park, N.C.
Sexual Health

Technology Discovered At University of Virginia Now Helps Men To Monitor Their Fertility After Vasectomy

A new home test kit called SpermCheck Vasectomy, based on a protein discovered at the University of Virginia (UVA) Health System, marks the launch of a product line that could revolutionize the way men monitor their reproductive status. Based on antibodies that bind to SP-10, a protein discovered in the laboratory of John C. Herr, PhD, SpermCheck Vasectomy is the only FDA-approved immunodiagnostic test for monitoring sperm after vasectomy. The device looks and functions much like a home pregnancy test. By measuring SP-10, which is present at constant levels in each sperm head, it enables men to quickly and accurately monitor sterility after a vasectomy. Monitoring is important because sperm can remain in the male reproductive tract for weeks or months after the procedure. To avoid unexpected pregnancies, vasectomized men must practice birth control until their sperm count falls below fertility levels. Currently, 1.5 million men worldwide have vasectomies each year, but many skip one or both of the recommended follow-up tests that determine if the operation was successful. The at-home privacy, convenience, and affordability of SpermCheck Vasectomy will boost post-operative monitoring and allow couples to accurately determine when contraception methods are no longer needed, Herr says. A second product, SpermCheck Fertility, has concluded clinical trials and is awaiting FDA approval, with a tentative launch date later this year. A third product, SpermCheck Contraception, is being used in a multi-center, NIH-funded study that is evaluating the effectiveness of a new contraceptive drug for men. The kit will be marketed as a companion product whenever the first FDA-approved male contraceptive drug or device becomes available. The product line is a model of translational research. In the early 1980s, Herr and colleagues were looking for a sperm-specific biomarker when they discovered the gene ACRV1. From there, they identified a new protein, SP-10, that was encoded by ACRV-1 and proved useful in sperm detection and quantification. Between 1984 and 2008, group members published 22 articles about their research in medical and scientific journals. As work progressed in the laboratory, Herr met with the UVA Patent Foundation, which helped him to apply for and obtain four U.S. patents related to SP-10 and SpermCheck technology. The Patent Foundation later licensed the exclusive rights to SpermCheck-related antigens, antibody reagents, and methods of use to ContraVac, a Charlottesville-based biotechnology firm founded by Herr in 1998. ContraVac worked with Princeton BioMeditech Corporation (PBM) to develop prototypes, followed by clinical and consumer trials. "SpermCheck is a great example of how long-term, interconnected collaborations can move an idea out from the research bench and into the hands of physicians and consumers," Herr says. Conceive Online


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