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Lobbyists Play Ball, Flex Muscles On Health Care Reform
The Associated Press reports on lobbying around biotechnology legislation. A letter urging the protection of biotech drug makers from generics from "the private National Health Council, sent to House leaders drafting health overhaul legislation, said the plea was on behalf of "the more than 133 million Americans living with chronic diseases and disabilities and their family caregivers." It urged lawmakers to protect the makers of high-technology biological medicines against early competition from lower-cost generic copycats. The letter did not mention that nearly $1.2 million of the council"s $2.3 million budget in 2007 came from the pharmaceutical industry"s chief trade group and 16 companies that sell or are developing the brand-name biotech drugs."
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Cardium Presents Gene Activated Matrix Technology And Update On Excellarate Clinical Development Program At ASGT Annual Meeting
Cardium Therapeutics (NYSE Amex: CXM) and its subsidiary Tissue Repair Company (TRC) announced a presentation entitled "Phase 2b Study of GAM501 (Ad5PDGF-B/Collagen) in the Treatment of Diabetic Ulcers" at the Late Stage Industry Clinical Trials Symposium at the American Society of Gene Therapy (ASGT) Annual meeting in San Diego, California, on May 27, 2009. Dr. Barbara K. Sosnowski, Cardium"s Vice President of Biologics Development and the Chief Operating Officer of Cardium"s Tissue Repair Company Operating Unit, provided an update on TRC"s Phase 2b MATRIX clinical trial and the new formulation of the Excellarate(TM) product candidate, as well as an overview of the prior clinical study of Excellarate.
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Vets Need To Improve Communications Skills To Meet Dog-Owners' Expectations
A small study published in this week"s Veterinary Record reports that veterinarians do not receive adequate training in order to deal with the growing "customer care" expectations of dog-owners.
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Financial Crisis Caused By Banking Chiefs Plagued With Hubris Syndrome

The current financial meltdown has in part been caused by bankers who display the attributes of Hubris Syndrome, a former leader of the Social Democratic Party (SDP) has claimed. Lord David Owen, a trained medical doctor, told delegates at the Royal College of Psychiatrists Annual Meeting in Liverpool that some banking chief executives -responsible for making the "rogue banking decisions" that led to the current financial crisis - displayed traits of the syndrome. Lord Owen warned delegates: "The origin of the financial situation we are in lies in rogue banking decisions. "The consequence of allowing these people to continue in power unchecked are pretty serious." According to Lord Owen, Hubris Syndrome is "acquired" and tends to occur once a person is in a position of power. Margaret Thatcher and Tony Blair have both had it, he claimed. Lord Owen said some of the characteristics of people with Hubris Syndrome include: - a narcissistic propensity to see the world as an arena in which they can exercise poor and seek glory. - a predisposition to take actions which seem likely to cast them in a good light/ enhance their image. - a disproportionate concern with image and presentation. - an identification of themselves with the nation, or organisation, to the extent that they regard their outlook and interests as identical. - restlessness, recklessness and impulsiveness. - a tendency to talk of themselves in the third person or under the royal "we". - excessive confidence in their own judgement and contempt for the advice or criticism of others. - exaggerated self belief, bordering on a sense of omnipotence, in what they personally can achieve. - loss of contact with reality, often associated with progressive isolation. - hubristic incompetence - where things go wrong because too much self confidence has led the leader not to worry about the nuts and bolts of policy. According to Lord Owen, who has written a paper for the medical journal Brain, the phenomenon is captured in phrases such as "power has gone to his head", "he"s taken leave of his senses", "he"s lost his marbles" or "she"s lost all touch with reality". Lord Owen also admits he was in danger of developing the syndrome when he was leader of the SDP. To counter the problem, he said UK firms should learn from the United States where chief executives are contained and constrained thanks to a "mentoring system". This involves bringing someone in from outside the firm, often in a high position, who people can look up to, and establishes a dialogue. Lord Own concluded: "This is something businesses could and should get a grip on." Royal College of Psychiatrists


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