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Biotech / Medical : Biotech Valuation -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Biomaven who wrote (2691)1/26/2001 9:32:47 AM
From: Ian@SI  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 52153
 
Peter,

I guess most pts are happy with an endpoint of "not" dying vs "being" dead. And isn't that the objective? keeping pts alive. In any case, I only have a core position which I haven't been trading. I should probably adopt a different philosophy in this sector.

On another note, WSJ had an article which reads almost like a commercial for the CRGN - Bayer alliance.

Best,
Ian.

interactive.wsj.com

January 26, 2001

Officials Say Diabetes and Obesity
Are Becoming Epidemic in the U.S.

Associated Press

ATLANTA -- Diabetes in the U.S. rose by about 6% in 1999 in what the
government called dramatic evidence of an unfolding epidemic.

Cases rose sharply across almost every demographic category, the
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said. The rise is blamed
largely on obesity, which was up a startling 57% from 1991.

"The message is out there -- lose weight by increasing your physical
activity and changing your diet," CDC epidemiologist Ali Mokdar said.
"But nobody is doing it."

The share of the adult population diagnosed with diabetes jumped from
about 6.5% in 1998 to 6.9% in 1999, the CDC said. The obesity rate
increased to nearly one in five Americans -- up from just 12% in 1991.

Last August, the CDC reported that diabetes
jumped 33% nationally, to 6.5 percent,
between 1990 and 1998. The rise crossed
races and age groups but was sharpest --
about 70% -- among people ages 30 to 39.

CDC director Jeffrey Koplan said the effect
on the nation's health care costs will be overwhelming if the trends
continue. "This dramatic new evidence signals the unfolding of an epidemic
in the United States," he said.

The statistics, released Friday by the CDC, appear in the February issue of
the journal Diabetes Care. The report is based on a telephone survey of
150,000 Americans.

At least 16 million Americans have diabetes, which prevents the body from
regulating blood sugar. The number is expected to rise to 22 million by
2025.

Diabetes is a leading cause of blindness, kidney failure and amputations
and dramatically raises the risk of heart attacks. It kills 180,000 Americans
each year.

Experts have blamed America's couch-potato culture for the obesity that
leads to diabetes. Computer-centered lifestyles, easy fast food and
disappearing space for outdoor exercise all have been cited.

In many cases, Mr. Mokdar said, Americans who do exercise don't do it
often enough, and many cut fat from their diets without paying attention to
crucial calories.

The CDC reported an especially large rise in the diabetes rate in 1999
among blacks -- more than 10% in just one year. Whites, Hispanics and
other racial groups also had higher rates in 1999.

The diabetes rate fell among only one age group from 1998 to 1999 --
people in their 30s. But that age group saw a huge rise from 1990 to 1998,
up about 70%.

"This used to be a disease that came late in life," Mr. Mokdar said. "Now
it's coming in kids as young as the early 20s. That's alarming."

Dr. Robert Sherwin, president of the American Diabetes Association, said
he expects the problem to get worse over the next several years.

"The American way of life tends to favor inactivity," he said. "We're going
to need a major education program in the schools to reverse this."



To: Biomaven who wrote (2691)1/26/2001 12:28:45 PM
From: tuck  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 52153
 
Don't think this link has been posted yet. SignalsMag's Jennifer Van Brunt overviews the H&Q and '01 outlook. Just a couple of days old:

signalsmag.com

Cheers, Tuck