Morning Breakouts

Latest California Healthline Stories

Stem Cell Institute Moves Forward With Plans, First Grants Expected in May

The California Institute for Regenerative Medicine created under Proposition 71 will begin to issue research grants in May, Independent Citizens Oversight Committee Chair Robert Klein said at a committee meeting Thursday, the AP/San Jose Mercury News reports.

UC-Davis Medical Center To Limit Emergency Department Admissions

The University of California-Davis Medical Center plans to implement soon a policy under which people who do not need emergency medical services would be directed to community clinics rather than treated in the hospital’s emergency department, the Sacramento Bee reports.

Plans To Restructure Health Services at UC-San Diego Hospitals Raises Concerns

Some health officials and patient advocates criticized a restructuring proposal announced Wednesday by University of California-San Diego officials to move some health programs at the university’s Hillcrest campus to Thornton Hospital 12 miles away in La Jolla, the San Diego Union-Tribune reports.

Antidepressant Use Correlates to Reduced Suicide Rate Since 1980s

The U.S. suicide rate has fallen “steadily” since the late 1980s, when Prozac and other selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors were introduced, according to an analysis by researchers at the University of California-Los Angeles in the Wednesday issue of the journal Nature Reviews: Drug Discovery, the Los Angeles Times reports.

NIH Guidelines on Voluntary Public Access to Research Released

NIH Director Elias Zerhouni on Thursday released details of a new agency policy that requests scientists make agency-funded research publicly available online at no cost within 12 months of publication in a scientific journal, the Washington Post reports.

Democrats Send Letter to Bush Criticizing Employer Prescription Drug Coverage Subsidy Under Medicare Law

A group of 17 congressional Democrats sent a letter to President Bush saying that new Medicare rules to provide a subsidy to employers that provide prescription drug coverage to retirees could “contribut[e] to the steady erosion of retiree health benefits,” CongressDaily reports.