| For
    Women, Ill Health, Abuse Tied, Study Finds.  [World] Women who are physically
    abused by a partner face a similar legacy of health problems whether they live in a modern
    city in the industrialized world or a traditional village in a developing country, the
    first global study on domestic violence has found.  In interviews with 24,000 women
    in 10 countries, researchers found that while there are wide variations in the rate of
    women experiencing sexual or other physical abuse at the hands of their partners, victims
    are about twice as likely as other women to suffer ill health -- and the effect seems to
    persist long after the violence has stopped.  The study -- conducted by the World
    Health Organization in collaboration with the London School of Hygiene and Tropical
    Medicine, and PATH, a global health organization -- is a landmark, said former UN
    Commissioner for Human Rights Mary Robinson.  ''It tells a story that unfortunately
    is universal," said Robinson, who was not connected with the research.
     ''Violence by intimate partners is one of the most serious challenges to women's
    health."  Countries included in the study, released Thursday, 
were: Brazil, 
Ethiopia,
    Japan, 
Namibia, 
Peru, 
Samoa, Serbia 
and Montenegro,
 Thailand, 
Bangladesh, 
and Tanzania.
      North America and Western 
Europe were not included because earlier studies
had
    already examined the situation there.  In the WHO study, rates varied between 15
    percent of women having been a victim of domestic violence during their 
lifetimes in Japan
    to 71 percent in Ethiopia.  
Previous research has found rates of about 20 percent in
    the United States 
and Sweden 
and 23 percent in Canada and 
Britain, said one of the
    researchers, Lori Heise of PATH.  Even though the lifetime risk of violence was
    similar in many nations, women in developed countries were less likely to be currently
    suffering abuse than were women in developing countries.  The percentage of women who
    had been attacked by their partners in the preceding year was 4 percent 
in Japan 
and in Serbia
    and Montenegro, compared with 
between 30 percent and 54 percent
in Bangladesh, 
Ethiopia, 
Peru,
    and Tanzania. | 
  
    | Trapped in Reflection.
      [World] When it comes to differences between men and women, some are, as the French
    have always known, highly worthy of celebration.  Others, however, are more often a
    source of confusion and downright misunderstanding between the sexes.  Among the
    latter, one of the most distinctive is invisible to the eye.  Men and women differ
    dramatically in their approach to negative emotions such as sadness.  Specifically,
    men avoid them, and women don't.  And therein lies a problem, says psychologist Susan
    Nolen-Hoeksema, Ph.D.  Unfortunately, women can get stuck in negative emotions,
    caught in a downward spiral of hopelessness and immobility.  And that, she finds, is
    a major reason women are twice as likely to develop depression as men are. | 
  
    | Record
    New HIV Cases in '05.  [World] Almost 5 million people were infected by HIV
    globally in 2005, the highest jump since the first reported case in 1981 and taking the
    number living with the virus to a record 40.3 million, the United Nations said on
    Monday.  The 4.9 million new infections were fueled by the epidemic's continuing
    rampage in sub-Saharan Africa and a spike in the former Soviet Union and Eastern Europe,
    the UNAIDS body said in its annual report.  "Despite progress made in a small
    but growing number of countries, the AIDS epidemic continues to outstrip global efforts to
    contain it," the report said.  More than 3.1 million people have died this year
    from AIDS, including 570,000 children -- far more than the toll from all natural disasters
    since last December's tsunami.  Southern Africa, including South Africa -- which has
    the world's most cases at more than 5.1 million -- continues to be worst-hit. | 
  
    | 
African-Americans,
    Women in Europe Hit Worst By AIDS.  [World] Young African Americans led the
    number of new HIV/AIDS cases in the United 
States while the number of women infected via
    sex in Western Europe showed a sharp spike.  New cases rose 
43,000 in the United
    States to top one million as prevention efforts 
lagged despite extensive programs to treat
    HIV, the virus that leads to fatal AIDS, according to the AIDS Epidemic Update 2005
    published on Monday.  "African Americans accounted for 48 percent of new HIV
    cases in the (United States) in 
2003. African American women are
 more than a dozen times
    as likely to be infected with HIV than their white counterparts.  "AIDS has
    become one of the top three causes of death for African American men aged 25-54 and for
    African American women aged 25-34," said the report released in 
New Delhi ahead
 of
    World AIDS day on December 1. | 
  
    | Good Response from Pregnant
    Women in Delhi for Free Therapy.  [India] 
The number of children affected by
    AIDS/HIV in India has considerably 
increased over the previous years.  More than 340
    infant deaths in New Delhi can 
be attributed to the deadly disease every year, raising
    concerns regarding the prevalence of the disease among pregnant women.  Nearly 22,837
    new born children are infected with the disease and about 11,434 die due to it at the
    present.  Currently, an estimated 2, 02,000 children suffer from 
HIV/AIDS in India.
      In response to the above situation, a silent campaign has been launched in the
    capital to ensure protection of a child from the disease.  It is also targeted at
    institution of Anti-Retroviral Therapy (ART) to the pregnant mother to improve her health
    and reduce the risk of mother-child transmission of HIV.  A pregnant mother with HIV
    has a 30% chance of transmitting the infection to her child.  The risk of
    transmission during vaginal delivery.  The only way to reduce this type of
    transmission is encouraging women to come forward to get tested for the virus. | 
  
    | Debating Exercise's Role
    in Fighting Breast Cancer.  [United 
States] Medical researchers agree that, at
    the very least, regular exercise can make people feel better about themselves.  There
    is less agreement on whether it can also prevent cancer.  If it does, researchers
    say, there are just two cancers that seem likely prospects: breast cancer and colon
    cancer.  Even for breast and colon cancer, proof is hard to come by.
     Researchers who are enthusiastic about a cancer-exercise connection also caution
    against too much enthusiasm.  Exercise is like a seat belt, says Dr. Anne McTiernan
    of the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center in Seattle, a co-author of "Breast
    Fitness: An Optimal Exercise and Health Plan for Reducing Your Risk of Breast
    Cancer."  "It's not a guarantee, but it can reduce your risk," she
    said.  "The negative side is when a person says, 'The reason I got cancer is
    that I didn't exercise.'  That's the problem."  Dr. Brian Henderson, dean
    of the University of 
Southern California's
Keck School of Medicine, knows where the idea
    that exercise might prevent breast cancer came from.  It was an extrapolation from an
    observation, and from the start it was filled with untested assumptions.  He knows
    this because it included work that originated with his research group.  He began with
    the observation that exercise could affect when girls started to menstruate.  For
    menstruation to begin, girls must be eating more calories than 
they burn, Henderson said.
     Adolescent girls who exercise strenuously may start menstruating later than more
    sedentary girls.  Researchers also knew that the older a girl was when she started to
    menstruate, the lower her risk of eventually developing breast 
cancer, Henderson said, and
    "that's where the idea came from that exercise might affect risk for breast
    cancer." | 
  
    | Sauerkraut
    Consumption May Fight off Breast Cancer.  [United 
States] Eating sauerkraut and
    raw cabbage may protect women from breast cancer, said a team of US and Polish researchers
    last week.  They believe that high levels of glucosinolates, compounds already
    demonstrated to have anti-cancer activity in the lab, are responsible for the association
    between cabbage and sauerkraut consumption, and a lower risk of breast cancer observed in
    Polish immigrants living in the US. | 
  
    | Study Shows
    Mammography Tests, Sonograms Both Needed to Detect Breast 
Cancer.  [Japan]
    Mammography tests failed to detect breast cancer in about 30 percent of women in their 50s
    with the disease and nearly 20 percent in their 40s.  But exams using sonograms
    caught the disease, the Tochigi Public Health Service Association has found.  Doctors
    at the association emphasized the need for women to undergo both tests to prevent
    cancerous tissues from being overlooked.  Under the policy of the Ministry of Health,
    Labor and Welfare, women aged 40 and older have been entitled to public-funded mammography
    tests since April 2004.  The association in fiscal 2000 introduced both mammography
    and sonogram tests in breast cancer exams. | 
  
    | Get the Facts
    About Women and Heart Attacks.  [United 
States] A recent study in the
    "Journal of Advanced Nursing" shows what some researchers have suspected for a
    long time: women who suffer heart attacks wait longer to be assessed, admitted to the
    hospital and treated, than their male counterparts.  The really sad part is that this
    is true despite that fact that heart disease is the number one killer of women.  On
    average, women were medically assessed approximately of 30 minutes after arriving at an
    emergency department, compared to the 20-minute wait for the average male.  Men were
    likely to receive aspirin therapy about 33 minutes after assessment; women, 55 minutes
    later. | 
  
    | Florida
    Disputes Audit of Medicaid.  [United 
States] Florida is disputing an audit that
    claims the state owes the federal government $14.5-million it should have collected from
    Medicaid providers who were overpaid.  The Department of Health and Human Services
    released an audit Thursday saying the state didn't do enough to get money back from
    providers who were overpaid.  Some of that money would have been 
owed to Washington
    because the federal government splits the cost of Medicaid with the state.  The state
    Agency for Health Care Administration disputed the findings.  The state spent about
    $12.5-billion last year on Medicaid, which pays some health care costs for 2-million
    Floridians, mostly women and children who can't afford health insurance.  The federal
    department said that in some cases the state agency didn't adequately pursue collection
    when a provider was overpaid.  In others, the state offered settlements and didn't
    submit to the federal government what was due, auditors said. | 
  
    | GAO:
    FDA Ruling On 'Morning After Pill' Was Unusual.  [United 
States] Former Food and
    Drug Administration commissioner Mark McClellan voiced strong doubts about a proposal to
    make the ''morning after pill" more easily accessible months before the agency
    overrode the advice of its staff and an expert panel and rejected the application,
    government investigators reported.  The Government Accountability Office report said
    the apparent involvement of McClellan and other top officials was one of four unusual
    aspects of FDA's handling of the politically sensitive decision.  The investigators
    reported that several key FDA officials told colleagues that the application to allow
    over-the-counter sales of the emergency contraceptive would be rejected months before the
    decision was announced.  The proposal for nonprescription sales of the ''Plan B"
    contraceptive was actively supported by FDA staff and by a joint advisory panel of
    experts, and the decision caused considerable internal dissent. | 
  
    | Deaths
    After Abortion Pill to Be Studied by Officials.  [United 
States] Federal drug
    regulators have discovered that all four women in this country who died after taking an
    abortion pill suffered from a rare and highly lethal bacterial infection, a finding that
    is leading to new scrutiny of the drug's safety.  Since all 
four deaths occurred in California,
    an unusual clustering, the Food and Drug Administration quietly tested to see if abortion
    pills distributed in California were 
somehow contaminated.  They were not.
     Stumped, officials from the F.D.A. and the federal Centers for Disease Control and
    Prevention have decided to convene a scientific meeting early next year to discuss this
    medical mystery, according to two drug agency officials who spoke on the condition of
    anonymity because of the sensitivity of the topic.  Among other issues, the experts
    hope to explore whether the abortion pill, called Mifeprex or RU-486, somehow makes
    patients vulnerable to an infection with Clostridium sordellii, the lethal bacteria.
     If so, they will explore how such an infection "could be more easily diagnosed
    and even prevented," one official said. | 
  
    | When
    the Body Clock Gets It Wrong.  [England] For women who experience it prematurely,
    the menopause can be devastating.  It's a female rite of passage, but not one most
    women think about until it begins.  As a 16-year-old studying for her GCSEs, Liz
    Fraser had given little thought to the menopause, let alone the idea that she might be in
    the midst of hers.  Nor did her GP when she told him that she hadn't had a period for
    four months.  He just put it down to exam stress and told me to come back in
    six months' time if they hadn't come back," says Fraser.  When the six months
    were up and there was still no sign of a period, her GP carried out some blood tests.
     As they revealed that Fraser's hormone levels were out of sync, he referred her to a
    gynecologist.  "It was the same story.  He spent five minutes with me, said
    my hormones were fine, and told me to come back in six months if nothing had
    changed," says Fraser.  While it's rare in someone so young, premature
    menopause, or ovarian failure - when a woman experiences the menopause before the age of
    45 - is relatively common.  The average age of women undergoing the menopause in
    Britain is 50, but it's estimated that about one woman in 100 experiences it before the
    age of 40, one in 1,000 when they're under 30 and one in 10,000 at under 20.  There
    are a number of reasons for premature menopause - an abnormal chromosome can be to blame
    or it can be the result of an auto-immune condition in which antibodies mistakenly attack
    one of the ovaries.  Surgery, chemotherapy or radiotherapy can also damage ovaries,
    and a hysterectomy will obviously bring on the menopause, as the entire uterus - ovaries
    included - is removed.  But sometimes, doctors are unable to identify what causes the
    ovaries to stop producing estrogen and progesterone, depleting their supply of eggs. | 
  
    | C-Sections in U.S. Are at
    All-Time High.  [United 
States] The rate of Caesarean sections in the 
U.S. has
    climbed to an all-time high, despite efforts by public health authorities to bring down
    the number of such deliveries, the government said Tuesday.  Nearly 1.2 million
    C-sections were performed in 2004, accounting for 29.1 percent of all births that year,
    the National Center 
for Health Statistics reported.  That is up from 27.5 percent in
    2003 and 20.7 in 1996.  The increase is attributed to fears of malpractice lawsuits
    if a vaginal delivery goes wrong, the preferences of mothers and physicians, and the risks
    of attempting vaginal births after Caesareans.  The C-section rate increased for all
    births, even those that involved healthy, first-time pregnancies with a full-term, single
    child.  In the government announced a national public health goal of reducing the
    C-section rate for such births to 15 percent by 2010, but the actual rate now is about 24
    percent and rising. | 
  
    | Gynecologist
    Convicted of Sexual Abuse.  [United 
States] A jury Wednesday convicted a
    gynecologist of raping and fondling women who came to his clinics for treatment. 
    Charles Momah pleaded not guilty last year to two counts of rape and two counts of
    indecent liberties with patients.  Prosecutors alleged that Momah performed
    gynecological exams without wearing gloves, flirted with and touched patients
    inappropriately, and probed them unnecessarily with a vaginal ultrasound wand. | 
  
    | Spending
    Weeks in Bed in the Name of Science.  
[France] 
The French nurse
    has spent 50 straight days confined to bed for space research.  She is not allowed to stand or sit up, ever; a
    24-hour surveillance camera makes sure of that.  She
    showers lying down and even jogs in bed, strapped into a vertical treadmill that makes her
    feel she's running up a wall.  ''Running while
    you're on your back takes some getting used to,'' says 36-year-old Theil, one of 24
    Europeans who volunteered to boldly go where few women have gone before -- to bed for 60
    days.  The joint study by the European Space
    Agency, the French space agency CNES, the Canadian Space Agency and NASA will fill in
    unknowns about protecting female astronauts from the side effects of weightlessness. |