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Dallas - Acting quickly to help patients in need of advanced cardiaclife support is of the most importance, stressed Marc E. Boddicker, M.D.,during the annual joint meeting of the American Society for DermatologicSurgery and the American College of Mohs Micrographic Surgery and CutaneousOncology.

San Francisco - The Women's Dermatologic Society (WDS) is teaming up with Al Roker to educate and inform the public with a television program called "America’s Ethnic Skin: An Al Roker Special". The program airs on NBC May 24, PRNewswire reports.

San Francisco - Inexpensive earrings, those less than $50, are more likely to contain nickel, a common cause of dermatitis, according to a report published online in the Journal of the American Academy of Dermatology.

Las Vegas - Skinvisible, a research and development company focused on dermatology products, has signed a licensing agreement with Embil Pharmaceutical Co. for the right to develop and market two acne products, Earthtimes.org reports.

Dermatologists helped to launch and volunteer at Camp Wonder, an annual week-long camp for children with severe skin disease.

Baltimore - The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services has proposed the revocation of a rule that has allowed doctors sending Medicare prescriptions from their computers to use computer-generated faxes rather than digital data, news source Govhealthit.com reports.

Baltimore - The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services has proposed the revocation of a rule that has allowed doctors sending Medicare prescriptions from their computers to use computer-generated faxes rather than digital data, news source Govhealthit.com reports.

Victoria, Australia - Improperly administered polylactic acid injections to treat periorbital wrinkles may result in the formation of persistent nodules around the eyes, HealthDay News reports.

International report - Women who drink spearmint tea twice a day for five days can reduce levels of androgens that can cause hirsutism, a recent article in Phytotherapy Research states.

Chestnut Hill, Mass. - A new study shows that a series of low-energy treatments with a plasma skin-regeneration tool can be as effective in treating wrinkles as a single, high-energy blast - but that less healing time is required, HealthDay News reports.