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Guardian Examines U.K. Offer To Help Provide Free Healthcare In 'World's Poorest Countries'
The Guardian examines British Prime Minister Gordon Brown"s offer "to help some of the world"s poorest countries to make healthcare free - starting with pregnant women and children - in a push to widen access to doctors across Africa and Asia." According to the newspaper, the "Department for International Development (DfID) is among the largest donors to many developing countries, and has pledged to spend 6 billion pounds [about $10.2 billion] on health by 2015. Brown hopes to use an expanding aid budget to influence the way public services are delivered on the ground."
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Academy Makes Recommendations To Build Clinical Academic Capacity
UK clinical research is currently benefiting from significant additional investment from Government and other research funders. A challenge for funders and institutions is to allocate res across the range of clinical academic specialties, to most effectively pursue research and its translation into improved healthcare.
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First Patient Enrolled In Regeneron And Bayer HealthCare VEGF Trap-Eye Phase 3 Program In Central Retinal Vein Occlusion
Regeneron Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (NASDAQ:REGN) announced that the first patient has been enrolled in the Phase 3 program of VEGF Trap-Eye for the treatment of central retinal vein occlusion (CRVO), a leading cause of blindness in adults. Regeneron received a $20 million milestone payment from Bayer Healthcare that was triggered by the dosing of the first patient in the CRVO program. Regeneron also announced that enrollment in the Phase 2 DA VINCI study of VEGF Trap-Eye in diabetic macular edema (DME) has been completed and data are expected during the first half of 2010.
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Hosting Olympics Boosts Host Country's Medal Haul Before And Afterwards

[Why Great Britain"s success in Beijing could have been anticipated and why it should continue beyond 2012 Online First Br J Sports Med 2009; doi 10.1136/bjsm.2008.057174] Hosting the Olympic games boosts the host country"s medal haul, not only during the event, but also before and afterwards as well, reveals research published ahead of print in the British Journal of Sports Medicine. Great Britain will be no exception, when the Olympics come to London in 2012, confidently assert the study authors, who analysed each host country"s medals haul since 1948. In a bid to assess how the medal tally is affected, the authors looked at the performance of 16 countries, before, during, and after hosting the games. The overall tally of medals awarded rose consistently each year, from 411 in 1948 to 958 in 2008. Every single country increased the number of medals it won while hosting an Olympics compared with the years when it did not host the games, the figures showed. Averaging out the pattern of wins for all 16 countries showed that the haul was 28 when not hosting the games. This rose to 40 in the run-up to the Olympics, 60 while hosting, and 47 in the aftermath. Great Britain won 47 medals in Beijing, compared with the 28 it brought back from Sydney in 2000 and the 30 it won in Athens in 2004. Using a mathematical formula to predict Great Britain"s performance in 2012, the authors calculate that the haul should be in the region of 63 medals, assuming there are 1000 to win. China, which won 100 medals in 2008 when it hosted the games, stands to win 78 in 2012, the authors predict. Home advantage is well known for sports that have a subjective element of judging in them, such as boxing, gymnastics and team games, say the authors. But this advantage disappears for sports relying on objective judging, such as weightlifting and athletics. Investment is clearly a factor in a rising tally of medals, say the authors. The British government has significantly increased funding for sports since it came to power in 1997. The total investment up to 2012 now amounts to ÷£914 million. "There can be little doubt that such financial support has been influential in increasing the medals won by Great Britain even before hosting the Olympics," say the authors. Other countries investing heavily in sports have also done well. The legacy of hosting the Commonwealth Games in Manchester in 2002 also counted as a "post hosting" benefit, particularly for cycling. Amid the interminable debates about the benefits of hosting the Olympics, especially during a global financial crisis, Team GB is likely to enjoy ongoing sporting success as a direct result, say the authors. British Journal of Sports Medicine


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