Health News Roundup: U.S. FDA extends review of BioMarin's bleeding disorder therapy; France reports bird flu in foxes near Paris, WOAH says and more
The state refuses to do business with Walgreens or "any company that cowers to the extremists and puts women's lives at risk," said Newsom, a Democrat. Merck's drug boosts exercise capacity in pulmonary hypertension patients Merck & Co Inc said on Monday its experimental therapy helped increase exercise capacity in patients with a deadly disease that causes high pressure in blood vessels of the heart and lungs in a late-stage study, lifting its shares about 4%.
Following is a summary of current health news briefs.
U.S. FDA extends review of BioMarin's bleeding disorder therapy
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has extended the review of BioMarin Pharmaceutical Inc's experimental gene therapy for adults with a severe bleeding disorder, the latest delay in the company's quest to gain approval in the country. The FDA said late on Monday it needed more time to review a three-year analysis from the company's ongoing late-stage study, which BioMarin submitted earlier this year, and will make a decision by June 30. The regulator had earlier set March 31 as its decision date.
France reports bird flu in foxes near Paris, WOAH says
France has reported an outbreak of highly pathogenic H5N1 bird flu among red foxes northeast of Paris, the World Organisation for Animal Health (WOAH) said on Tuesday, as the spread of the virus to mammals raised global concerns. After three foxes were found dead in a nature reserve in Meaux near where gulls had died, one of the foxes was collected and tested, WOAH said in a report, citing French authorities.
Five women who say they were denied abortions sue Texas
Five women who said they were denied abortions despite grave risk to their lives or fetuses sued Texas on Monday, in the first apparent case of pregnant women suing over curbs imposed after the U.S. Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade in June. The lawsuit asks a state court in Austin, the state's capital, for a ruling clarifying that a doctor cannot be prosecuted for providing an abortion if, in the doctor's good faith judgment, the abortion is necessary to treat an emergency that threatens a pregnant patient's life or health.
California to not do business with Walgreens over abortion pills issue- Governor
California will not do business with Walgreens Boots Alliance Inc, state Governor Gavin Newsom said in a tweet on Monday, days after the pharmacy chain said it would not dispense abortion pills in some Republican-dominated states. The state refuses to do business with Walgreens or "any company that cowers to the extremists and puts women's lives at risk," said Newsom, a Democrat.
Merck's drug boosts exercise capacity in pulmonary hypertension patients
Merck & Co Inc said on Monday its experimental therapy helped increase exercise capacity in patients with a deadly disease that causes high pressure in blood vessels of the heart and lungs in a late-stage study, lifting its shares about 4%. Sotatercept, combined with a background therapy, helped patients with pulmonary arterial hypertension to walk about 40.8 meters more in six minutes.
U.S. FDA clears Abbott's blood test for concussions
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration has cleared Abbott Laboratories' blood test that would help doctors assess traumatic brain injury (TBI), commonly known as concussions, the company said on Tuesday. The clearance marks the first commercially available laboratory blood test for TBI, according to the company, helping the doctors to rule out need for a CT scan in patients with mild TBI.
Florida Republican lawmakers propose a six-week abortion ban
Republican lawmakers in Florida filed bills on Tuesday to outlaw most abortions after six weeks of pregnancy, a ban that would severely undercut access to the procedure in the U.S. South if passed by the state's Republican-controlled legislature. The bills, filed on the opening day of the legislature's 2023 regular session, make exceptions for rape and incest cases but not explicitly for the life or health of the pregnant person.
Thousands of people in Ukraine have complex war-related injuries, says WHO
Thousands of people in Ukraine have sustained complex injuries linked to the war and need rehabilitation services and equipment to help them, a senior World Health Organization (WHO) official said on Tuesday. They include fractures, amputations, spinal cord injuries, traumatic brain injuries and burns, Dr Satish Mishra from the WHO's regional office for Europe, told a media briefing.
Young Afghan women train as midwives for out-of-reach villages
In a small village circled by velvety white snow-topped mountains in Afghanistan's Bamiyan province, Aziza Rahimi mourns the baby son she lost last year after a harrowing birth with no medical care. "It was too hard for me when I lost my baby. As a mother, I nurtured the baby in my womb for nine months but then I lost him, it is too painful," said Rahimi, 35.
Britons aged over 75 to be offered COVID-19 booster shot in spring
Britons aged over 75 and those in care homes will be offered COVID-19 booster shots in spring, Britain's vaccine advisers said on Tuesday. The Joint Committee on Vaccination and Immunisation (JCVI)said in January that plans should be made to offer COVID-19 booster vaccination programmes in spring and autumn this year to those at higher risk of severe disease.
(With inputs from agencies.)