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Protecting The Food Crops Of The Future
Biologists are investigating how to control when plants flower - to help farmers reap a bumper harvest.
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Report Finds Racial Disparities In Prescription Drug Access, Use, Regimen Adherence
"Origins and Strategies for Addressing Ethnic and Racial Disparities in Pharmaceutical Therapy: The Health-Care System, the Provider, and the Patient," National Minority Quality Forum: The report -- by Richard Levy, a health care consultant and former vice president of the National Pharmaceutical Council; Robert Like, professor and director of the Center for Healthy Families and Cultural Diversity of the UMDNJ-Robert Wood Johnson Medical School; and Harry Shabsin, a private-practice psychologist -- looks at how appropriate medications for a variety of diseases often are under-prescribed, over-prescribed, or mis-prescribed among minorities. The report looks at disparities in treatment of minority patients with cardiovascular disease, asthma, psychiatric illness, pain and other conditions and finds disparities in access to medications through insurance programs, in the prescribing of medications and in adherence to medication regimens. The report offers ways to improve prescribing and use of medications among diverse communities (National Minority Quality Forum release, 5/12).
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Newsweek Magazine Reporters Win Second Annual Endocrine Society Award For Excellence In Science And Medical Journalism
Today, The Endocrine Society announced Newsweek Reporters Barbara Kantrowitz and Patrice Wingert recipients of the Society"s second annual Award for Excellence in Science and Medical Journalism. The co-authors of the winning article, "Uh, O!" (O for Oprah) were honored last night at the Society"s 91st Annual Meeting in Washington, DC.
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NMC Response To CHRE Report Re Advance Nurse Practice, UK

Following the publication of the Council for Healthcare Regulatory Excellence (CHRE) report on advanced practice, the NMC made the following statement. We still believe that the proliferation of nurses operating at an advanced level and the increasing number of titles used to describe these roles is confusing to the public. Our concerns about the public safeguarding implications have not changed. The NMC"s Professional Practice and Registrations Committee (PPRC) will receive a full briefing on the report at its next meeting in September. The NMC"s revalidation project The Government White Paper, Trust Assurance and Safety (2007) made revalidation an explicit requirement for the NMC and the other healthcare regulators. Since its publication the NMC has set up a project and is working to develop and implement a process for non-medical revalidation to ensure; - benefits to patient safety; - consideration of a risk assessment process which is sensitive to issues such as the effect of working environment and setting, and the contextual risks to patients; - accommodation of registrants working in and across different settings; - accommodation of emerging areas of practice, advanced practice and new ways of working; - that revalidation must contribute to the NMC"s understanding of the practitioner"s continuing fitness to practise; - identification of future needs for continuing professional development for registrants, such as links with advance nursing practice and nurse prescribing. The NMC"s revalidation project is a major piece of work for the organisation. We are currently undertaking research to build a knowledge base to develop a model of revalidation that is transparent, accountable, risk based, proportionate and targeted where action is required. The project will research elements of practice including advanced practice which will be added to the knowledge base. The findings from our revalidation research will be complete by April 2010 followed by a period of developing the revalidation model, piloting and consultation with a view to introducing the model by 2012. The PPRC will decide and make recommendations to Council if it believes that advanced practice warrants further regulatory action. Council will want to take account of the CHRE report and the findings from our revalidation research. However the decision to regulate advanced nurse practitioners ultimately rests with the Privy Council as it would require a change to the Nursing and Midwifery Council Order. The progression of any work around advanced nursing practice and regulation is co-dependent on the work to be undertaken in the revalidation project. More information - Information about the revalidation project: Revalidation - The Nursing and Midwifery Council Order and other statutory instruments: Legislation Nursing & Midwifery Council


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