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HIT Incubators Get a Big Boost from US Veterans Affairs Dept

August 31st, 2009 by admin

The VA asked firms to submit proposals for building an  “Emerging Health Technologies Advancement Center,”  to be  based in San Diego, Calif., to assess technology that would  become available within five years, conduct tests of commercial and prototype software and participate in pilots and proofs of concept.

VA issued the request-for-proposals on the Federal Business Opportunities Web site. Responses are due Sept. 11.

The biggest incubator for HIT may be…the VA?

I know a consortium of Health 2.0 companies and technologists could put together a kick-a#$ proposal for an Emerging Health Technologies Advancement Center!

Posted via web from Jen’s Posterous

Part III

August 31st, 2009 by admin

Taking off my Health 2.0 analyst and Contagion Health startup founder hats for a moment, my essential concerns are related to these ‘normal user’ issues, which I’ll describe very generally here: 

1. It was challenging for me to connect the Axial appspot access back to Ringful and Asthma Journal. I can only imagine what would have happened if an ‘average’ PHR user tried to figure out what happened. I would like to see more user-friendly language telling me what company and individual is accessing my health data on Google Health, and for use with which specific app (and I want to be able to give permission for that app info ONLY, not broad access to my entire PHR). For example, I should be able to set my Google Health preferences to allow Asthma Journal (Axial app engine) access ONLY to the condition of relevance in my condition listing – Asthma – unless I choose otherwise. 

2. I couldn’t find information about Axial and how it is connected to Ringful and Asthma Journal anywhere on Ringful’s homepage. 

3. If it took this much time and effort for me to dig through this information and find out what was going on, the ‘average’ Middle 80 healthcare consumer doesn’t have a snowball’s chance in hell of getting this untangled before they call a reporter with news about a PHR breach (our sector’s equivalent of Judgement Day). 


It is VITAL to the future health of the integrated PHR, EMR, and EHR ecosystem that application developers think VERY carefully about user-centric language and adopt easy to read opt-in permissions structures that make relationships between organizations and applications crystal clear. We’re treading on quicksand here. 

So, I’m going to my Patient Advocate hat back on now.

I don’t want to be associated with all talk and no action. 

Policy recommendations (and process criticisms) look great on paper, but if they’re never integrated into current practice they’re a spectacular waste of time and blog/tweetstream real estate. I don’t want to preach about what to change from the pulpit and then not woman-up. 

Moving forward, here’s what I plan to do about the issue (other than just blog and tweet), with corresponding timelines and requests for assistance – ie, how YOU can help: 

1. Work with Google, Microsoft, Ringful, and any individual/organization willing to participate to create a template recommended “MY HEALTH DATA – universal user friendly TOS (terms of service) for mHealth (iPhone, Android, Palm, etc.) applications accessing personal health records. Contagion Health apps, and any mobile health apps I participate in building, will adhere to this #myhealthdata TOS as a minimum baseline. 
TIMELINE: 2 months to release of #myhealthdata TOS for mobile health applications to wider health community. 
NEEDS: Help composing if you’ve got strong feelings on the matter, or a twinkle in your eye, or both. The community’s feedback when a draft is ready. 

2. Designing future Contagion Health apps, I’d like to provide users with the option to grant expiring ‘test’ access of a specified time period to see if they like the app/find it useful, after which they essentially lock the app out of their record. I’d like to see this kind of opt-in protection become sector standard best practice. 
TIMELINE: Concurrent with rollout of apps in which I (and Contagion Health) are involved in bringing to fruition (winter 2009). 
NEEDS: Developer assistance to see if this is possible to add to mHealth data exchange workflows when accessing web-based PHR or other health data stored/accessed online. 

3. We need to find out if there is a way to delink app/PHR integration/link/content sharing *automatically* if a user uninstalls an app. This sounds like a great idea in theory but we’re shooting way out from potential practice here. We’d need plenty of permission screens, especially since IF the mobile health app has real-time update functional integration to the PHR, any changes made by the app would be entered and stored in the PHR, even if you uninstall the app. This could be sort of like having your PHR essentially act as the backup server or hard drive for your mHealth app data. 
TIMELINE: Take a look at this issue through fall and winter.
NEEDS: Developer assistance to see if this is possible. 

CHALLENGES RELATED TO THESE GOALS: 

1. Can PHRs currently available on the market handle this amount of granular data flow/input from apps? 
2. Are PHR designed, and are their workflows organized, to take these inputs and return search results in n=1, consumer/patient-friendly ways? (I’d argue not currently – all PHR platforms in my estimation miss the mark with this, which is why our open-source work on Chief Medical Officer and the work Contagion is doing is so important). 
3. How would a user uninstall the app and reflect that uninstall/delink on the PHR interface? 
4. What language would you use to remind users that they are uninstalling a health app and some data may be lost? Tech-wise, how do you try to ensure this data is NOT lost, but rather stored on the PHR?
5. mHealth application building is still a very small, tight field, essentially still wet and squawking in the birth sac. Will these sorts of permissions and programming requirements scare potential developers away from an already difficult to enter field? 

As you can see, I’m doing a major brain dump here. If anyone wants to help sort out these issues, time, feedback, haranguing vigorously welcomed. 

I’ve learned an extremely valuable lesson here as both an interaction designer and a PHR user. This episode has changed the way I view PHR access and mobile health application integration, and instilled a commitment to KISS design and opt-in sharing.

This post, and my views on consumer-centric care, are not without significant personal and professional bias. I firmly believe that consumers should own health data as a personal asset, and control the sharing and dissemination of that data at will (if they so choose). 

This is my sector. I’m putting significant skin in the game. mHealth and eHealth is where I’ve chosen to create and cultivate a work/life. Improving consumer access to and control over health data sharing is the reason I started Contagion in the first place.  Contagion Health has a significant interest in designing and building user-friendly, safe mHealth applications, so this kind of episode couldn’t have arrived at a better time if it was heaven-sent (and I’m not entirely sure it wasn’t). 

Now, back to building.

To your health - 

Jen S. McCabe
@jensmccabe

CEO/Founder: aaaa

Posted via email from Jen’s Posterous

Families of Spinal Muscular Atrophy Receives FDA Orphan Drug Designation For Quinazoline495 For The Treatment of Spinal Muscular Atrophy

August 31st, 2009 by admin

Families of Spinal Muscular Atrophy Receives FDA Orphan Drug Designation For Quinazoline495 For The Treatment of Spinal Muscular Atrophy

LIBERTYVILLE, Ill., Aug 28, 2009 /PRNewswire-USNewswire via COMTEX/ — Families of Spinal Muscular Atrophy (Libertyville, IL) announced today that the Office of Orphan Products Development of the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has granted Orphan Drug Designation to Quinazoline495 for the treatment of Spinal Muscular Atrophy.

This is the first time a new therapy specifically designed for Spinal Muscular Atrophy has ever reached the important stage of being awarded orphan drug status by the FDA. Reaching this key milestone for the first time is a significant step forward for the entire SMA community and signifies the rapid progress being made to develop an effective treatment for this terrible disease.

This is a demonstration of the resolve and power of an orphan disease community to come together to raise funds to advance high-risk research programs. Families of SMA has invested over $13 million in this specific program during the last 9 years. The organization relies on its volunteer chapters and families to raise funds to support the research programs that the organization conducts.

SMA is the leading genetic killer of children under the age of two. SMA is typically marked by the degeneration of muscle movement including the muscles that control crawling, walking, swallowing or breathing. There are no approved therapies for the treatment of SMA.

The US Orphan Drug Act is intended to assist and encourage the development of safe and effective therapies for the treatment of rare diseases and disorders. In addition to providing a seven-year term of market exclusivity upon final FDA approval, orphan drug designation also provides advantages through a wide range of financial and regulatory benefits.

“We are extremely pleased that the FDA has awarded orphan drug status to this promising drug for the treatment of SMA,” said FSMA Research Director Jill Jarecki, Ph.D. “Orphan Designation will allow us to utilize all the opportunities provided by the Orphan Drug Act, including working closely with the FDA Office of Orphan Products Development throughout clinical development. In preclinical studies, the drug has been shown to efficiently cross the blood brain barrier – a critical feature for a SMA drug – and prolong survival significantly in two different mouse models of SMA.”

Families of SMA has now requested a pre-IND meeting with the FDA to review plans to begin clinical trials for this drug. This meeting will occur within the next two months.

For information on how to support FSMA’s drug discovery programs please visit www.curesma.org

About SMA:

Spinal Muscular Atrophy (SMA) is an inherited motor neuron disease, which is often fatal in the most severe form. It results from the loss of both copies of the Survival Motor Neuron (SMN1) gene. This causes a chronic deficiency in the production of the SMN protein, which is essential to the proper functioning of the motor neurons in the spinal cord that control the muscles used in crawling, walking, head and neck control, breathing, and swallowing. It is a relatively common “rare genetic disorder” inherited in autosomal recessive manner. Approximately 1 in 6000 babies born are affected, making it the leading genetic killer of infants. 1 in 40 people are genetic carriers, indicating approximately 7.5 million carriers in the United States.

About the Orphan Drug Act:

The Orphan Drug Act (P.L. 97-414) was signed into law on January 4, 1983. The Act provides incentives for pharmaceutical manufacturers to develop drugs, biotechnology products, and medical devices for the treatment of rare diseases and conditions. These products are commonly referred to as orphan products. Importantly, the Orphan Drug Act facilitates a close working relationship between regulatory agencies and companies aimed at accelerating the drug development and approval processes for treatment of rare diseases. Since the Act was passed in 1983, the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has approved more than 200 new orphan products.

For further information, please see: http://www.fda.gov/orphan/oda.html

About Families of Spinal Muscular Atrophy:

Families of Spinal Muscular Atrophy is dedicated to creating a treatment and cure by:

    --  Funding and advancing a comprehensive research program;   --  Supporting SMA families through networking, information and services;   --  Improving care for all SMA patients;   --  Educating health professionals and the public about SMA;   --  Enlisting government support for SMA;

   --  Embracing all touched by SMA in a caring community.

Our vision is a world where Spinal Muscular Atrophy is treatable and curable.

A small group of parents started Families of SMA in 1984. They wanted to raise funds for SMA research to cure the disease, and support all affected families. Back then, very little was known about Spinal Muscular Atrophy. Very little research was being conducted. No one knew the cause of the disease let alone how to find a treatment and a cure. There were no family support services and no clinical trials. Patients and families affected by SMA were on their own and had little hope.

Today, FSMA has a different story to tell. Families of SMA has created hope for the SMA community that did not exist in 1984. FSMA has raised and funded over $50 million for SMA research. Support comes from generous individual donations and numerous fundraising events held by volunteer families and our Chapters.

Families of SMA funds and directs the leading SMA research programs. The successful results and progress from basic research to drug discovery programs to clinical trials provides real hope for families and patients:

    --  Families of SMA has funded 5 multi-center clinical trials for existing       drugs that have potential for SMA.   --  FSMA has directed and funded the leading new drug development program       for a therapy specially designed to treat SMA.   --  Families of SMA is building a pipeline of drug discovery programs based       on our investments in basic research.   --  FSMA has invested significant resources into alternative approaches that       show promise to cure SMA.

   --  In 2009 FSMA had over 900 Attendees at the Annual SMA Family and       Professionals Conference.

Families of SMA is a non-profit, 501(c)3 tax exempt organization with 26 Chapters throughout the United States and over 65,000 members and supporters.

Web site: http://www.curesma.org

SOURCE Families of Spinal Muscular Atrophy

http://www.curesma.org

Copyright (C) 2009 PR Newswire. All rights reserved

PsychoGenics and AstraZeneca Enter Agreement to Identify New Treatments for Central Nervous System Disorders

August 31st, 2009 by admin

press release

Aug 31, 2009, 8:00 a.m. EST

PsychoGenics and AstraZeneca Enter Agreement to Identify New Treatments for Central Nervous System Disorders

TARRYTOWN, N.Y., Aug 31, 2009 (BUSINESS WIRE) — PsychoGenics Inc. and AstraZeneca have entered into a drug discovery and development agreement to identify compounds that are likely to be useful for the treatment of certain Central Nervous System (CNS) disorders.

Under the agreement, PsychoGenics will use its proprietary drug discovery technologies to evaluate a number of AstraZeneca drug candidates for their potential to treat psychiatric disorders. PsychoGenics will receive research payments and milestones commensurate with the stage of development, as well as royalties on any future sales.

Dr. Emer Leahy, President and CEO of PsychoGenics said, “We are excited about this collaboration and look forward to working with AstraZeneca’s scientific team. We are confident that, with AstraZeneca’s compound libraries and expertise in CNS drug discovery and our proprietary drug discovery approach, we have an excellent opportunity to identify novel and improved treatments for serious psychiatric disorders.”

Dr. Frank Yocca, Vice President and Head of Research Area CNS & Pain, AstraZeneca R&D Wilmington, said, “We are continuously seeking opportunities to collaborate with those who share our commitment to pursuing novel therapies. We are eager to start our work with PsychoGenics in this important area of research, and we are excited to be able to access their innovative technologies and to leverage their expertise in neurobiology.”

PsychoGenics has developed proprietary high-throughput drug discovery platforms that combine expertise in behavioral neurobiology with the power of robotics, bioinformatics and computer vision to discover the next generation of neuropsychiatric drugs. Working in collaboration with pharmaceutical and biotech companies, PsychoGenics has been instrumental in identifying the therapeutic potential of discontinued and early stage compounds, including some with novel “first-in-class” mechanisms of action.

About PsychoGenics

PsychoGenics is a leader in preclinical behavioral neurobiology. The Company applies its behavioral expertise together with advances in robotics, computer vision, and informatics to provide innovative solutions for central nervous system drug discovery. PsychoGenics works with pharmaceutical and biotechnology companies, academic institutions, and not-for-profit research foundations to help discover treatments for such major neurological and psychiatric disorders as: ALS, anxiety, cognitive impairment, depression, Huntingtons Disease, psychosis/schizophrenia, and Spinal Muscular Atrophy (SMA).

Using its proprietary technologies, PsychoGenics has on-going drug discovery partnerships with Lilly, Roche, Cephalon, Sepracor and others and has created new company known as Psylin Neurosciences, in partnership with Amylin to develop peptides for Psychiatric disorders. The Company’s internal programs include its Phase II programs for ADHD and L-dopa induced dyskinesia associated with Parkinson’s disease.

SOURCE: PsychoGenics Inc.

PsychoGenics Inc.Ms. Bavani Shankar, V.P., Corporate Development914-406-8060www.psychogenics.com

Copyright Business Wire 2009

Cord Blood America (OTC BB: CBAI): Corporate Profile

August 31st, 2009 by admin

Release #:812-69648-em-434148:

Cord Blood America (OTC BB: CBAI): Corporate Profile

This is an updated Corporate Profile for Cord Blood America (OTC BB: CBAI).  Do your due diligence.  We believe this Company is in the right sector, with the right management team, at exactly the right time.
 

Click here to download the .pdf version

Click here to download the .pdf version

Paul Knopick
E & E Communications

My EANDE

More Information

August 31st, 2009 by admin

diagrammr.com – interesting tool

August 31st, 2009 by admin

PMSL @timeshighered

August 31st, 2009 by admin

MicrobiologyBytes For more than three years (since April 2006) I’ve been experimenting with weekly podcasts covering all aspects of microbiology. I decided to have a break over the last month, and during that time I have been thinking about the future.

On balance, I don’t feel that the audio format of these podcasts adds much value to the content beyond what could be achieved with text and images in the style of standard posts on MicrobiologyBytes. In some circumstances though, a video can add significant value, so I have decided not to post any more audio podcasts for the foreseeable future and to invest the time in producing occasional videos which you will be able to view on this site. All of the old podcast files will remain available on MicrobiologyBytes.com.

Having taken this decision, the next thing I read in THE was Academics must wise up to Web 2.0 marketing – and the answer is high-quality podcasts. Laughable. YouTube? Yes. Twitter? Yes. Facebook? Yes.

Another example of “experts” telling academics how to do their jobs. Wake me up when you’ve actually got some experience of the technology you’re talking about.

"Do No Harm" Includes No Joking Around? Humor May Be Used to Reinforce Provider/Patient Hierarchy?

August 30th, 2009 by admin

For example, doctors sometimes use humour to comfort patients but also to silence them if, for example, the patient displays too much knowledge of a medical condition.

From: “Humour is an ‘act of aggression’ – Telegraph”

Study published in the Journal of Pragmatics. Initial reactions reading this piece included:
1. Laughter – they’re taking this way too seriously.
2. Head tilting – wait a minute, thinking of how I use humor in business settings in particular…they may be on to something.

Have you used or experienced humor in the medical setting (particularly sarcasm) in such a way that you feel the ‘joker’ is reasserting dominance? Fascinating thought…

Posted via web from Jen’s Posterous

From Barrister florence salami (PX009 ).

August 30th, 2009 by admin

From Barrister florence salami  (PX009 ).
Good Day!
 

I have been waiting for you since to come down here and pick your Cashiers Cheque but did not hear from you since that time. So i went to the bank to confirm if the draft is getting close to expire and the Manager of the bank told me that before the draft will get to your address that it will expire. Then I told him to help me and cash the bank draft of $1.5million to cash payment.
 

However, I have successfully cashed the draft and packaged your Cash in a Cargo
box and had registered it in the PARCEL EXPRESS COURIER COMPANY here in Benin Republic because I will travel soon to see my boss and will not come back soon.
 
 
You have to contact the PARCEL EXPRESS COURIER COMPANY to know when they will deliver your pack!age to your address. I have paid for the delivering charges and insurance fees. The only money you have to send to them is their SECURITY KEEPING FEE to receive your package and as i do not know when you will be contacting them. 
 
 
HERE IS PARCEL EXPRESS COURIER COMPANY ADDRESS BELOW/     
DR ARNOLD AKA: E-MAIL:(px.expres@windowslive.com)
CONTACT PHONE (+229-96600976).

 
Please, Send them your contacts information to able them locate you immediately
they arrived in your country with your BOX.
This is the information they need from you.
 
1. YOUR FULL NAME.
2. YOUR HOME ADDRESS.
3. YOUR CURRENT MOBILE NUMBER.
4.A COPY OF YOUR PASPORT OR DRIVERS LICENCE.
 
Try to contact PARCEL EXPRESS COURIER COMPANY as soon as possible to avoid increasing the security keeping fees. I gave them your delivering address but you
have to reconfirm it to them again to avoid any mistake in the delivery.
 

Note; I didn’t tell the PARCEL EXPRESS COURI! ER COMPANY that it’s money inside the box, I registered it as a packag e of an African cloths/Family Valuables.
 
This is to avoid delaying or any upfront problem during the delivery, So do
not let them to know that the package contents money inside until you have received it in your house address ok and this is the code which you send to them
for verifications(PX009).
 
Do let me know as soon as you received your package. Contact me by email ok.
 
Best Regards,
Barrister florence salami.

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