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Antiabortion-Rights Group Operation Rescue Considering Purchase Of Tiller's Clinic
Operation Rescue President Troy Newman on Wednesday said that his group is considering trying to purchase murdered abortion provider George Tiller"s Wichita, Kan., clinic, which Tiller"s family permanently closed on Tuesday, the New York Times reports. The clinic is owned by Tiller"s family. The family"s lawyer, Dan Monnat, called Operation Rescue"s proposal "just another irreverent, extremist publicity stunt." He declined to comment further on the situation. The family has not announced its plans for the building and land, which are worth $734,100, according to Sedgwick County, Kan., property records. The clinic has long been a focal point for the antiabortion-rights movement because it was one of the few in the U.S. that offered abortion later in pregnancy. Newman said that he has discussed the possible purchase with only a few members of Operation Rescue"s board but is certain that the funds could be raised if they decide to attempt to buy the clinic. Newman also said that one possibility for the location would be to turn it into a memorial museum to serve as "a tribute to the babies." He denied the claim that his comments are a publicity stunt.According to the Times, the closing of Tiller"s clinic has set off a "flurry of concerns" from abortion-rights advocates that it will be more difficult for women to access abortion services in situations when catastrophic health issues are identified late in pregnancy (Davey, New York Times, 6/11). LeRoy Carhart, a Nebraska abortion provider who worked with Tiller at the clinic, said that he will continue to perform third-trimester abortions in Kansas but did not provide information on where he will practice, the AP/Yahoo! News reports. Although he did not provide details, Carhart said that "there will be a place in Kansas for the later second- and the medically indicated third-trimester patients very soon." He said he has seen an increase in patients at his Nebraska clinic since Tiller"s murder. Carhart traveled to Tiller"s clinic to perform second- and third-trimester abortions because Kansas has less restrictive abortion laws than Nebraska. Carhart said he has not performed any procedures at his clinic after 22 weeks" gestation because his staff is not trained to do them. According to the AP/Yahoo! News, Nebraska law prohibits abortion when a fetus is considered viable. Kansas law, however, allows abortion after 21 weeks" gestation if continuing the pregnancy would endanger the woman"s life or cause "substantial and irreversible impairment" of a major bodily function, which courts have interpreted to include mental health (Gibbs, AP/Yahoo! News, 6/11).Broadcast CoverageThree media outlets on Wednesday reported on issues related to Tiller"s murder. Summaries appear below.~ MSNBC"s "The Rachel Maddow Show": The program included a discussion with Jennifer Boulanger, executive director for the Allentown Women"s Center, about threats to the center since Tiller"s murder (Maddow, "The Rachel Maddow Show," MSNBC, 6/10).~ NPR"s "All Things Considered": The program included a discussion with NPR health policy correspondent Julie Rovner about the correct terminology for referring to abortion later in pregnancy and why the phrase "late-term abortion" is inaccurate (Block, "All Things Considered," NPR, 6/10).~ WBUR"s "On Point": The program included a discussion with the Rev. Katherine Ragsdale -- a board member of NARAL Pro-Choice America and the incoming dean and president of Episcopal Divinity School -- and Jim Wallis -- founder and editor of the progressive evangelical group Sojourners -- about abortion-rights supporters" reaction to violence in the antiabortion-rights movement (Ashbrook, "On Point," WBUR, 6/10).
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Fate Of Tiller's Clinic Expected To Be Decided This Week
The family of murdered Kansas abortion provider George Tiller is expected to decide this week whether his Wichita clinic will reopen, NPR"s "Morning Edition" reports. Tiller"s clinic is one of the few in the U.S. that performs abortions later in pregnancy, and many abortion-rights advocates are concerned whether women in need of abortions in the second and third trimester would be able to obtain care if it were not reopened. LeRoy Carhart, a Nebraska abortion provider who worked with Tiller at his clinic for four years, said that although it is a difficult time for abortion providers, he hopes that the family will reopen the clinic. "This is a job that we took, and we were well-aware of the risks when we started, as was Dr. Tiller," he said. Providing abortion services in the second and third trimester is "a service that"s so needed that it"s worth the risks," he added (Lohr, "Morning Edition," NPR, 6/9). Carhart also said that although no decision on Tiller"s clinic has been made, he "want[s] to assure the press and the women of America ... that we will somehow, somewhere continue to provide abortions later in gestation" (Duin, Washington Times, 6/9).According to Carhart, there are only about 10 providers in the U.S. who perform abortions in the second and third trimesters, including a few hospitals that do not advertise the services. "Morning Edition" reports that most women"s health care providers either are not trained or do not want to receive training to perform the procedure later in pregnancy. Providers who do tend to be older and face extreme pressure from antiabortion-rights advocates. Data from the Guttmacher Institute show that about 1% of all abortions performed in the U.S. occur after 21 weeks" gestation. Elizabeth Nash of Guttmacher said that 37 states have laws that limit access to abortion after a certain point in pregnancy, "usually around 24 weeks, which is at the end of the second trimester." She added that most of those states only allow abortions to save the life of the woman or if her physical health is in jeopardy. Pratima Gupta, an ob-gyn in California, said that she is concerned about what will happen to Tiller"s patients. Gupta said Tiller "had patients that were scheduled for Monday morning. What happened to those patients for the rest of the week, the rest of the month? Those patients are the ones who need us" ("Morning Edition," NPR, 6/9).
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Massachusetts' Individual Mandates, Insurance Exchanges Are Examples For National Plan
"Three years into its experiment with near-universal health care, Massachusetts has some "dos and don"ts" for the nation as it grapples with the best way to cover tens of millions of uninsured Americans," the Associated Press reports. "Do require that virtually everyone have health insurance, the overriding goal in Massachusetts. Don"t ignore rising costs, the single greatest threat to the law"s long-term affordability."
Mental Health

New Lasers Drive Powerful Applications

Telecoms, healthcare and display technology will be the major beneficiaries of a new generation of semiconductor lasers developed in a massive European research effort. Better cancer treatment, wider bandwidth and smaller, better displays could be on their way. The Brighter project, which is co-funded by the European Union, has set a series of world firsts in lab-based records for semiconductor lasers in the red, infrared and green spectra. These results will not languish on the testing bench. The Brighter project began its work with three, hugely important applications already in its sights. One of the most compelling is a new type of cancer treatment and imaging enabled by semiconductor lasers developed by Brighter. Photodynamic therapy is a very promising treatment for cancer patients that can maximise the benefits, while minimising the harm, from chemotherapy. Photodynamic therapy works by introducing an inactive chemotherapy drug into the patient. This drug then seeks out and attaches itself to cancer cells. The drug is then activated by laser. It is a very promising and potentially highly effective treatment that only releases drugs at cancer cell sites, reducing the side effects and enhancing the impact on tumours. Clinical studies In Brighter, the scientists developed a range of lasers for different elements of the treatment. Powerful and highly reliable red lasers one at 635nm another at 650nm were developed to activate different drugs. Meanwhile, a high-powered blue laser provides fluorescent spectroscopy, to show that the drug has reached the target site. Finally, a high-powered ultraviolet laser provides auto-fluorescent imaging of the cancer site. Both clinical and experimental animal studies are currently underway for different elements of the treatment, and any promising results are likely to be commercialised. "We have end users, medical doctors, working within the project to ensure that the technologies developed are best suited to their needs," explains Michel Krakowski, coordinator of the Brighter project. Telecommunications, too, is a compelling application and Brighter has developed a range of elements to respond to pressing needs in the sector. "We have developed a range of lasers and their associated technology to considerably boost bandwidth across optical fibres for data-intensive telecoms," explains Krakowski. The upshot is more bandwidth in the same pipe, an application that will go a long way to meeting the challenge of rising demand for bandwidth. This was a non-trivial problem. In addition to developing a semiconductor of the required quality and power, the Brighter project had to develop methods for coupling lasers together, to create an even more powerful light , and then coupling the light to optical fibres. New products In displays, Brighter hopes to usher in new products or better, smaller and more efficient versions of existing products. Current applications in sight are extremely small, powerful and efficient light projectors for film, presentations and other applications, such as heads-up-displays and mobile projectors. The technology could even be adapted for use with mobile phones, allowing them to project extremely high quality video for television applications, for example. In the coming months, the high-performance red and green laser modules developed in the Brighter project will be tested for feasibility for display applications. For all these applications, Brighter has developed and perfected a vast range of fabrication and design techniques for semiconductor lasers, including doping, deposition, and external cavities on the semiconductor material to "tune" the laser, stabilise it, or couple it with other lasers, depending on the required results. Beyond theory and applications Brighter"s work did not stop at theory or application, either. The team engaged in a surprisingly large-scale effort to disseminate new knowledge gained on laser production, characterisation, design and fabrication. These educational materials cover a vast range of the latest thinking on lasers and present them in a series of tutorials and presentations on the project and its work. The aim here is to make effective materials available for students and others, and to expand the pool of expertise in this field in Europe and around the world. Brighter"s online materials and CD-ROMs are freely available to anyone. There are 46 PhD students involved 21 directly funded through Brighter with a further 25 contributing to and/or benefiting from the project, notes Krakowski. "We made a special effort with dissemination because we wanted to spread the impact of our work and raise the profile of the field." The EU-funded project is now expected to end in January 2010, by which time it plans to have fully demonstrated Europe"s expertise in semiconductor laser technology, and its ability to create compelling new devices over the next two to five years. The Brighter integrated project has received funding from the ICT strand of the EU"s Sixth Framework Programme for research. ICT Results


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