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Google Alerts - DNA+MEDICALSun May 19 05:51:49 EDT 2013

DNA sequencing set to become routine medicine - ABC News ...
A Queensland researcher says actress Angelina Jolie is a great example of the potential benefits of genetic testing.
www.abc.net.au/news/2013-05-16/dna...set-to.../4694368

Wishing you wellness
A new integrative medicine and wellness centre in the Capital that combines leading-edge and scientific-based Western medicine with Eastern alternative modalities has the potential to turn the emirate into a health and wellness destination. The DNA ...
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Khaleej Times

DNA sequencing set to become routine medicine
Professor Matthew Brown from the University of Queensland has been awarded a Premier's Science Fellowship to research genetic testing for rheumatoid arthritis and tuberculosis. He says DNA sequencing will be a routine part of medical care within four ...
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Embryonic stem cells: Advance in medical human cloning
Skin cells were taken from an adult and the genetic information was placed inside a donor egg which had been stripped of its own DNA. Electricity was used to encourage the egg to develop into an embryo. However, researchers have struggled to reproduce ...
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DNA analysis unearths origins of Minoans, the first major European civilization
Dr. George Stamatoyannopoulos, University of Washington professor of medicine and genome sciences, is the paper's senior author. He believes that the data highlight the importance of DNA analysis as a tool for understanding human history. “About 9,000 ...
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UW Today

Gene clues for testicular cancer, heart defect
Genomics is one of the fastest-moving areas of medical research. Identifying genetic signatures associated with disease opens up the prospect of DNA tests to identify people most at risk. They also throw open avenues of research to block or reverse the ...
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AFP

Penn State-Hershey: embrace, don't fear personalized medicine
Penn State Milton S. Hershey Medical Center is among the first U.S. medical institutions to begin collecting and decoding DNA of patients. It hopes to eventually do so for hundreds of thousands of people in central Pennsylvania. But first it must sell ...
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First DNA Clinic On Saadiyat To Boost Abu Dhabi Health & Wellness Tourism
The DNA Center for Integrative Medicine & Wellness, which will be inaugurated by HH Sheikh Nahyan Bin Mubarak Al Nahyan, UAE Minister of Culture, Youth & Community on 14 May, will showcase its capabilities during a press conference at the Arabian ...
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DNA Housekeeping Proteins May Also Prevent Cancer - Medical News Today
But then they discovered these complexes do more than help package and maintain DNA in cells: it seems they also suppress tumor development in many types of tissue. Now a new study from Stanford University School of Medicine in the US finds BAF ...
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Studies Find Genetic Links to Leukemia and Endometrial Cancer
Studies Find Genetic Links to Leukemia and Endometrial Cancer. Two new studies released on Wednesday reported genetic links deep within the DNA cells of Leaukemia and Endometrial Cancer. By Anthony Rivas | May 03, 2013 12:11 AM EDT. email; print ...
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Medical Daily

Atacama Humanoid is Human, Researchers Say
The mismatches in the other 9 percent could be accounted for in various ways, including DNA degradation in the skeleton. "It's an interesting medical mystery of an unfortunate human with a series of birth defects that currently the genetics of which ...
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Medical Daily

Tiny 'alien' skeleton debunked by DNA: Modern medicine proves 'alien' humanoid
Modern medicine, DNA testing, and other research techniques have allowed scientists to state that the 6 inch skeleton - once thought to be alien in origin, is actually the remains of a 6-8 year old humanoid. Yes that is right, this teeny, tiny skeleton ...
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Mount Sinai links EMR with DNA
Mount Sinai Medical Center announced this week that 25,000 people have signed on to participate in its biobank program, BioMe, with each patient consenting to DNA sequencing and longitudinal studies related to data embedded in their electronic medical ...
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Tiny 'alien' skeleton contains human DNA
"It's an interesting medical mystery of an unfortunate human with a series of birth defects that currently the genetics of which are not obvious," Nolan wrote. The research was featured in the film "Sirius," a crowd-funded UFO documentary that ...
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Woman's DNA Found on Boston Marathon Bomb
The Wall Street Journal reports that U.S. officials had found evidence of a female's DNA, but were still in the process of determining whether there was woman involved in the deadly attacks. Officials said that there are multiple possible sources ...
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Medical Daily

Alien-Looking Skeleton Poses Medical Mystery
Nolan and his colleagues analyzed the specimen in the fall of 2012 with high-resolution photography, X-rays and computed tomography scans, as well as DNA sequencing. The researchers wanted to find out whether some rare disorder could explain the ...
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dna+medical - Yahoo! News Search ResultsTue May 21 17:53:20 EDT 2013

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News from healthcareitnews.comTue May 21 17:53:21 EDT 2013

EHRA critiques GOP's MU 'reboot' plan
One month after six Republican Senators published a white paper calling for a new approach to the federal meaningful use incentive program, the HIMSS Electronic Health Record Association has drafted a point-by-point response. read more

All Maine hospitals commit to HIE
Maine’s HealthInfoNet, a  nonprofit that operates the statewide health information exchange, has announced that all acute care hospitals are now under contract to connect to the query-based HIE. HealthInfoNet has 34 of the 38 hospitals connected already and expects the remaining four hospitals to connect by the end of the year. read more

$1M grant to support California HIE
The California Health eQuality program is offering $1 million in grants for physicians, clinics and hospitals in rural California to add health information exchange technologies and meet federal meaningful use standards. read more

Better care not always better business
Transparency is a touchy subject in healthcare. It’s one of the last market strongholds desperately clutching to its principles of price secrecy, and it won’t go down without a fight.  read more

VHA gets bullish on population health
VHA, a nationwide healthcare network of 1,400 not-for-profit healthcare organizations that work to boost clinical performance while reducing costs, has cut a deal with Phytel to help its members tackle population management. read more

Health IT market in growth mode
The healthcare IT applications market continues to grow, according to a new Research and Markets report, which projects that by 2017 the global market will expand at a compound annual growth rate of 7.0 percent . read more

9 'Cs' lead to accountable care
There are buzz phrases, and then there are buzz phrases.  And if there’s one phrase that has permeated the healthcare sector more thoroughly than all the others, it’s probably “accountable care.” But what exactly does it mean?  Or, more to the point for healthcare providers, how do you know when you’re actually providing it? read more

New HIPAA rule not meant to block clinical trial progress, expert says
Ever since the updated HIPAA rule took effect last March, some hospital IT departments see themselves as “the HIPAA police,” clamping down in ways that the rule doesn't require, says one industry expert.  “Suddenly everybody is a judge, and that’s very dangerous. It’s a huge obstacle, and it slows down progress,” says Abraham Gutman, founder of AG Mednet, the provider of software used by more than 17,000 customers in 60 countries to automate the process of quality control, including pixel de-identification and DICOM de-identification. read more

LSU database gaffe leads to HIPAA breach
This story has been updated.  Siemens Healthcare and Louisiana State University at Shreveport are notifying 8,330 patients of a HIPAA breach following a database mishap that resulted in billing and treatment information being mailed to the wrong patients.  read more

Providers look to revenue cycle management to weather sequester and ICD-10
Healthcare organizations will need to be more effective, cost efficient and productive in the future to not only survive, but also to maintain positive cash flows, according to Brian Fugere, COO of RemitDATA.  read more

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