Results List
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Alzheimer test could transform diagnosis
A Belfast doctor has received a US research award for his work on the development of a blood test for Alzheimer’s, something that could transform diagnosis of the disease by Marina Murphy STEPHEN TODD of the department of geriatric medicine at Queen’s University Belfast hopes…
Author: Irish Times
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£228,000 award to assist research
A QUEEN’S University academic has been awarded £228,000 to further his research into how Alzheimer’s disease progresses. Dr Stephen Todd, who works in the Department of Geriatric Medicine at Queen’s, has been announced as the only Beeson Ireland 2008 scholar after a transatlantic panel of…
Author: Belfast Telegraph
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Trickle-down financial crisis hits neediest
by ROBIN SHULMAN For Citymeals-on-Wheels, a nonprofit group that delivers food to homebound New Yorkers, the Wall Street crisis already means 100,000 fewer meals will be delivered to people who need them. One day this spring, the group lost about $500,000 it expected from employees…
Author: The Washington Post
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Health chief says HIV figures were not manipulated
CAPE TOWN – The health department has denied suggestions that officials manipulated the 2007 antenatal HIV survey to paint a rosier picture of SA’s epidemic. On Monday, the South African Medical Journal published a letter from two of SA’s leading demographers, saying the department introduced…
Author: Business Day
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Nursing homes report worrying
MOST elderly people, given the choice, would prefer to live independently in their own homes, with appropriate support for the inevitable frailties and infirmities associated with old age. However, in many cases there comes a time when staying at home is no longer the best…
Author: Irish News
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The Summer Gap
Poor children should not return to school already behind. A NEW SCHOOL YEAR is beginning, and students are returning to classrooms with stories of how they spent the summer. Many will talk of taking trips to historic places, having fun at summer camps or learning…
Author: The Washington Post
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Clean Bills of health?
by Anso Thom TWO Bills recently tabled in parliament are set to shake up the private hospital industry and centralise decision-making over hospital tariffs as well as the regulation of new medicines and scientific trials within the health minister’s office. The National Health Amendment Bill…
Author: Sunday Tribune (South Africa)
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A Big Foundation Uses New Technology to Open Windows on Disasters-and Resilience
By Marty Michaels. The Open Society Institute, in New York, has emerged as a leader among grant makers for its extensive use of multimedia communications-including online audio and video-to educate the public about the issues at the top of its agenda. Read the full article…
Author: The Chronicle of Philanthropy
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Families 'locked in poverty cycle'
Better education levels and more economic resources mean we have an awesome responsibility to ensure that children of all backgrounds benefit from “the rising tide”, President Mary McAleese said yesterday. She paid tribute to the work of staff at a Galway-based family research centre established…
Author: Irish Times
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Atlantic Philanthropies Names Human-Rights Advocate as CEO
The Atlantic Philanthropies named Gara LaMarche, a veteran human-rights advocate, its new chief executive officer. He faces one of the more unusual challenges in philanthropy: The foundation plans to spend its entire $4 billion endowment within 10 years and go out of business. Mr. LaMarche,…
Author: Wall Street Journal