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White House Pharmacy a Mess; Doctor Dies in Avalanche; Gene Therapy for Deafness

Byindianadmin

Jan 24, 2024
White House Pharmacy a Mess; Doctor Dies in Avalanche; Gene Therapy for Deafness

— Health news and commentary from around the Web collected by MedPage Today personnel

by Judy George, Deputy Managing Editor, MedPage Today

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The White House Medical Unit drug store had extreme systemic issues consisting of inappropriate recordkeeping, according to an examination by the Department of Defense Office of the Inspector General. (STAT

A North Dakota judge will not obstruct part of a state law that doctors declare puts them at threat of prosecution if they carry out an abortion to conserve a client’s life or health. (AP

The CDC stated there’s no proof that JN.1, the most common SARS-CoV-2 variation in the U.S., triggers more serious illness.

New research study takes a look at why COVID makes individuals sneeze. (Science

Nursing continued to be the most relied on occupation, with 78% of U.S. grownups stating nurses have high sincerity and ethical requirements, according to a brand-new Gallup survey.

Federal legislators from Massachusetts asked the for-profit Steward Health Care System about its financial resources and the fate of the 9 medical facilities it runs in their state. (WBUR

Colorado family doctor Peter Harrelson, MD, passed away from what seemed terrible injuries brought on by an avalanche. (CBS News Colorado

Almost 80% of clinicians in a brand-new Commonwealth Fund study stated it was necessary for their medical facility to resolve environment modification.

“Pharma Bro” Martin Shkreli can not go back to the drug market after a federal appeals court maintained his life time restriction. (Reuters

Energy beverages were related to unfavorable sleep results amongst university student in cross-sectional information. (BMJ Open

Here’s why diphtheria is back. (NPR

An 11-year-old young boy was the very first individual in the U.S. to get an investigational gene treatment called AK-OTOF for hereditary deafness. The treatment was a success, according to Eli Lilly subsidiary Akou

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