Personal trainers sweat as Washington, D.C., readies new rules

A battle is brewing in Washington as the capital city prepares to regulate personal fitness trainers in a move that could ripple through the country’s booming $24 billion gym industry and its fight against flab. The District of Columbia, whose residents are generally fitter than the rest of the country, is set to adopt the United States’ first regulations on trainers, following a law passed by the city council last year. It named an obscure city regulatory panel, the Board of Physical Therapy, to develop rules for trainers who help guide exercise aficionados through their stretching, weightlifting and crunches.
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Amgen seeks FDA approval for monthly dosing option for Repatha

An Amgen sign is seen at the company's office in South San Francisco(Reuters) – Amgen Inc said it had asked the U.S. Food and Drug Administration to approve a monthly single-dosing option for its recently approved cholesterol drug, Repatha. The FDA approved Repatha, one of two approved treatments in a new class of injectable "bad" cholesterol-lowering drugs called PCSK9 inhibitors, on Aug. 27. The drug is approved for patients with hereditary forms of high cholesterol – heterozygous familial hypercholesterolemia (HeFH) and a rarer homozygous (HoFH) form of the condition, in addition to those with cardiovascular disease.

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One million Africans a year catch malaria from dam mosquitoes: study

CDC photo of two "Anopheles gambiae" mosquitoes the principal vector of malaria in AfricaBy Katy Migiro NAIROBI (Thomson Reuters Foundation) – One million Africans will catch malaria this year because they live near a large dam and, at a time of booming dam construction on the continent, greater efforts must be made to protect people from the killer disease, a study said on Friday. Almost 80 major new dams are due to be built in sub-Saharan Africa over the next few years, leading to an additional 56,000 malaria cases a year, the study in Malaria Journal predicted. "While dams clearly bring many benefits — contributing to economic growth, poverty alleviation and food security — adverse malaria impacts need to be addressed or they will undermine the sustainability of Africa’s drive for development," the paper&;s lead author, Solomon Kibret of Australia&039;s University of New England, said in a statement.

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