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Opinion Pieces Comment On 'Common Ground' Approach To Abortion-Rights Issues
Long Island Newsday on Sunday featured two opinion pieces on how to best meet President Obama"s call for a "common-ground" approach to the abortion-rights debate, which he reiterated in his address at the University of Notre Dame"s commencement last week. Summaries appear below.~ Candace Straight: "The American people are exhausted" with the long-standing "[g]ridlock and extremism" in the abortion-rights debate, Straight, the national co-chair of the Republican Majority for Choice, writes in a Newsday opinion piece. Voters from both parties are "ready for a more constructive dialogue -- one that focuses on solutions rather than power plays," she continues. According to Straight, there is "more than enough work to be done in that space called "common ground,"" and the need to reduce the number of unintended pregnancies is "immediate, and the results achievable." Straight writes, "Ensuring access to contraception is an obvious place for enthusiastic bipartisan action." Comprehensive sex education in schools "is another good place to find common ground," she says. Both political parties "must have a frank discussion with the all-or-nothing wings of their movements," according to Straight. Obama in his speech "offered three key messages on the subject of abortion: "Open hearts. Open minds. Fair-minded words,"" Straight writes, concluding, "On those, we should all be able to agree" (Straight, Long Island Newsday, 5/22).~ Kristen Day: Although many antiabortion-rights advocates have not supported Obama"s early decisions on issues related to abortion rights, "we consider the remarks at Notre Dame to have established a common ground from which to move forward in the abortion debate," Day, executive director of Democrats for Life, writes in a Newsday opinion piece. According to Day, Obama "put forth goals that align almost completely with the specifics" of the Pregnant Women Support Act, which "focuses on what a majority of Americans would like to see -- fewer abortions and more support for women to carry their pregnancies to term." Day writes that opponents" "biggest objection" to the bill is that it does not include pregnancy-prevention measures. In addition, a "minority" of Democrats who support abortion rights believe the PWSA "goes too far toward common ground," especially on the provision that would require abortion providers to offer voluntary pre-abortion counseling on risks of the procedure, according to Day. "Regardless of the ebb and flow of support to our ground-breaking legislation, we believe abortion reduction is an imminent legislative reality," Day writes, concluding, "More Americans are demanding workable, constructive and conciliatory solutions that will actually reduce the abortion rate" (Day, Long Island Newsday, 5/22).
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Lilly Advances Second Alzheimer's Disease Treatment Candidate Into Late-Stage Testing By Launching Two Global Trials
Eli Lilly and Company (NYSE: LLY) announced it will begin enrolling patients this month in two separate but identical Phase III clinical trials of solanezumab(i), previously referred to as LY2062430, an anti-amyloid beta monoclonal antibody being investigated as a potential treatment to delay the progression of mild to moderate Alzheimer"s disease. The trials, called EXPEDITION and EXPEDITION 2, will each include a treatment period that lasts 18 months and are expected to enroll a total of 2,000 patients age 55 and over from 16 countries.
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What Is Cystitis? What Causes Cystitis?
Cystitis refers to inflammation of the lining of the bladder. It usually occurs when the normally sterile urethra and bladder (lower urinary tract) are infected by bacteria and become irritated and inflamed. Cystitis is fairly common and can affect both men and women and people of all ages. However, it is more common in women.
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Risk Factors Of Disordered Eating In Overweight Youth Identified By U Of M Study

University of Minnesota Project Eating Among Teens (EAT) researchers have identified factors that may increase overweight adolescents" risk of engaging in extreme weight control behaviors such as self-induced vomiting, the use of diet pills, laxatives, and diuretics, as well as binge eating. Overweight youth with certain socio-environmental, psychological, and behavioral tendencies, such as reading magazine articles about dieting, reporting a lack of family connectedness, placing a high importance on weight, and reporting having participated in unhealthy weight control behaviors, are more likely to suffer from eating disorders. Dianne Neumark-Sztainer, Ph.D., M.P.H., R.D., School of Public Health, and colleagues used data from Project EAT, an ongoing study that assessed eating and weight-related behaviors in 4,746 adolescents from 31 urban Minneapolis-St. Paul schools during the 1998-99 academic year. Youth were surveyed at two time points; the first occurring when participants were in middle school and high school, and the second occurring five years later. Researchers found that disordered eating habits among overweight youth are linked to specific tendencies for both males and females, but a number of specific differences between genders were noticed. For example, increased hours of moderate to extreme physical activity and lower self-esteem predicted higher risk for disordered eating among females. For males, depressive symptoms, poor eating patterns, including high fast food and sweetened beverage intake, increased their risk of disordered eating. These findings link different patterns of behaviors and different potential motivators for overweight male and female adolescents to developing eating disorders. "Further exploration of these gender differences may be important in understanding who is at highest risk for developing disordered eating behaviors and whether different intervention strategies may be needed to prevent disordered eating among males and females," said Nancy Sherwood, Ph.D., assistant professor at the University of Minnesota School of Public Health and a co-author of the study. Findings from this study also suggest the importance of strong family relationships for overweight adolescents. These youth face pressures above and beyond those faced by their non-overweight peers due to strong social pressures to be thin. Lack of family connectedness, including not eating family meals together, was found to increase the risk of disordered eating behaviors in both young males and females. While an important public health priority is to prevent obesity, it is also important to prevent the use of disordered eating behaviors among overweight adolescents. Findings from this study indicate the importance of working with overweight youth to prevent an unhealthy preoccupation with weight, promote a positive psychological well-being, avoid unhealthy weight control behaviors, and encourage family connectedness. This study was supported by the Maternal and Child Health Bureau, Health Res and Service Administration, and the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. Jen Faris University of Minnesota


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