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Burdock Root

Editorials, Opinion Pieces Respond To Recent Action On Health Reform
The following summarizes recent editorials and opinion pieces responding to health reform action over the last week.
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New Data Shows Requip-Modutab Improves Nocturnal Symptoms In Patients With Advanced Parkinson's Disease
New data presented at the 13th International Congress of Parkinson"s Disease and Movement Disorders show that Requip-Modutab* (ropinirole prolonged release tablets) improves nocturnal symptoms experienced by patients with advanced Parkinson"s disease (PD).[i] The data showed that patients with more significant nocturnal symptoms had a greater improvement with Requip-Modutab, when used as an adjunct to levodopa (L-dopa), versus placebo. These data indicate that once-daily Requip-Modutab remains effective in treating PD symptoms over the night as well as during the day and provides benefit to those in most need. Sleep disturbances, a key element of nocturnal symptoms, are one of the most common non-motor complications of PD and can affect up to 98% of patients.[ii]
News of the day
Congress Returns To Work, Senators To Meet With Obama
A group of Senate Democrats will meet with President Obama today to discuss overhauling health care, The New York Times reports.
Diagnostics

Adolescent Women's Contraceptive Use Is Less Consistent Than That Of Adult Women, With A Much Higher Failure Rate

A new study of women"s contraceptive use around the world finds that sexually active 15-19-year-olds are more likely than their 20-49-year-old counterparts to use contraceptives inconsistently and, on average, experience a 25% higher rate of contraceptive failure. The study"s authors, Ann K. Blanc of EngenderHealth et al., believe that compared with adult women, adolescent women face more obstacles to consistent contraceptive use-including feeling embarrassed about seeking out contraceptives, not being able to afford them and not knowing how to use them correctly-and may be more likely to abandon a method and try another if they experience side effects, which often leads to gaps in contraceptive use. The authors also note that, in comparison with adult women, adolescents tend to use methods with higher failure rates, to use methods less effectively and to be more fertile-all factors that increase the risk of unintended pregnancy. Despite the barriers they may face in using contraceptives consistently, roughly 25% of sexually active young women had used a method by age 19, with many countries experiencing substantial increases over the last few decades. Blanc and colleagues observe that the rising proportion of young women practicing contraception, coupled with global trends toward staying in school longer and delaying childbearing, have created a greater demand for comprehensive contraceptive services. The authors believe that meeting the contraceptive needs of young people will only become harder as the global population of adolescents increases. They conclude that meeting this expanded need will require greater investments in improving the quality of health systems, as well as in instituting targeted programs and policies aimed at increasing young people"s knowledge of and access to contraceptive services. The study, "Patterns and Trends in Adolescents" Contraceptive Use and Discontinuation in Developing Countries and Comparisons with Adult Women," analyzed nationally representative surveys conducted between 1986 and 2006 for more than 40 developing countries. It appears in the June 2009 issue of International Perspectives on Sexual and Reproductive Health. International Perspectives on Sexual and Reproductive Health


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