Shear-Thinning Biomaterial for Embolic Applications: Interview with Upma Sharma, President and CEO of Arsenal Medical
Shear-Thinning Biomaterial for Embolic Applications: Interview with Upma Sharma, President and CEO of Arsenal Medical
Refillable Device for Drug Delivery Past the Blood-Brain Barrier: Interview with Mike Maglin, CEO at CraniUS
Ins and Outs November 24th, 2009 Medgadget Editors News Medicare’s Rules Pinching Patients … [WSJ] U.N.: HIV Outbreak Peaked in 1996 … [WSJ] GOP Rep. on Mammograms: “This Is How Rationing Begins”… [CBS] A difference of opinions on mammograms… [WaPo] ‘Coma’ man conscious for 23 years… [BBC] FDA Announces New Warning on Plavix: Avoid Use with Prilosec/Prilosec OTC… [FDA] Moody’s on Pharma: Outlook Is Negative, But it Could Be Worse… [WSJ] Medtronic Chairman and CEO Bill Hawkins Comments on U.S. Senate’s Revised Medical Device Industry Fee Proposal… [Medtronic] Meta-Analysis Finds Early Signs of Rofecoxib CV Risk… [MedPageToday] Diagnosing the future of genomics: An interview with Eric Green… [Nature] WideMed, GE Healthcare begin Morpheus pilot… [Globes] Verizon piloting mobile phone video consults… [mobihealthnews] Ziprasidone Okayed for Bipolar Disorder… [MedPageToday] Norwegian scientists raise concerns about mutated form of swine flu… [WaPo] Embryonic stem cells to cure eye disease? [The Great Beyond] Scientists solve structure of NMDA receptor unit that could be drug target for neurological diseases… [Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory] ‘No Muss, No Fuss’ Miniaturized Analysis for Complex Samples Developed… [NIST] Tick Saliva: New Target for Lyme Disease Vaccine… [HHMI] When is a stem cell really a stem cell? [Children’s Hospital Boston] NFL Will Ask Neurologists to Rule on Concussions… [MedPageToday] Children should be allowed to play in the dirt, study finds… [Telegraph] Researcher’s labour of love leads to MS breakthrough… [The Globe and Mail] Children’s Hospital Boston investigates: Uninsured more likely to die after trauma… [Children’s Hospital Boston] Johns Hopkins Investigates: Burned Out, Depressed Surgeons More Likely to Commit More Major Medical Errors… [Johns Hopkins]