Archive forSurveillance
November 10, 2009 @ 1:46 pm
· Filed under Epidemiology, Infectious Diseases, Surveillance
The World Health Organization has discovered that the “AIDS virus is the leading cause of death and disease among women between the ages of 15 and 44.” Indeed, “women enjoy a biological advantage because they tend to live six to eight years longer than men,” WHO chief Dr. Margaret Chan pointed out. “But in many parts of the world they suffer serious disadvantages because of poverty [and] poorer access to healthcare:. The 91-page report by the organization “lays out the hurdles women face in getting the healthcare they need at various stages of life.” The report said that “accidental injuries take a toll on girls and younger women,” while “chronic diseases account for almost half of the deaths among older women.” Dr. Chan noted, however, that the “obstacles that stand in the way of better health for women are not primarily technical or medical in nature.” Rather, “they are social and political, and the two go together.” Thus, the world “will not see significant progress as long as women are regarded as second-class citizens,” Dr. Chan argued.
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October 27, 2009 @ 4:47 pm
· Filed under Epidemiology, Surveillance
This so-called research gets the fickle finger of fate award Published in Archives of Internal Medicine. This needed research to validate it? And there are those who say we need to spend more on researc!!
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October 27, 2009 @ 4:46 pm
· Filed under Epidemiology, Surveillance, chronic disease, prevention
Drawing on years of experience in cancer research and patient care, The University of Texas M. D. Anderson Cancer Center released today the most comprehensive, risk-based screening guidelines publicly available to date for breast, cervical and colorectal cancers (also see the MDAC Screening Guides). The new recommendations represent the first wave of an effort by M. D. Anderson to improve the effectiveness of efforts to prevent and detect cancer at its earliest, most treatable stage by reconstructing and expanding its screening, risk reduction and diagnostic guidelines across eight disease sites. According to the American Cancer Society
- New cases of breast cancer will be diagnosed in 192,370 women and 40,170 will die from breast cancer
- 11,270 new cases of cervical cancer will be diagnosed in women and 4,070 women will die from cervical cancer
- New cases of colorectal cancer will be diagnosed in 106,100 men and women and 49,920 men and women will die from colorectal cancer
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October 23, 2009 @ 10:35 am
· Filed under Epidemiology, Surveillance, prevention
A study released today in Pediatrics by The Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia offers updated evidence that children ages 4 to 8 who are restrained in the rear seat of a car in a belt-positioning booster seat are 45 percent less likely to be injured in a crash compared with children using a seat belt alone. Furthermore, the study showed there was no difference in the level of protection offered by backless versus high back booster seats. Of those riding in booster seats, children involved in side-impact crashes saw the greatest reduction in injury risk. Comment: Both stories suggest that far more education on proper use of children’s car seats is needed, both for infants and children.
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October 23, 2009 @ 10:33 am
· Filed under Epidemiology, Surveillance, environment, prevention
More than 8,700 infants end up in the emergency room each year because their car seats are used improperly outside the car, according to study presented Monday at the American Academy of Pediatrics’ annual meeting in Washington. Babies are spending more time in car seats, which have saved nearly 9,000 lives in the past three decades, both in and out of the car, says author Shital Parikh, a pediatric orthopedist at Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center.
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October 19, 2009 @ 12:17 pm
· Filed under Behavioral Medicine, Epidemiology, Surveillance, chronic disease, prevention
In a report issued by the Institute of Medicine “It’s clear that smoking bans work,” said Lynn Goldman, professor of environmental health sciences, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, and chair of the committee of experts that wrote the report. “Bans reduce the risks of heart attack in nonsmokers as well as smokers. Further research could explain in greater detail how great the effect is for each of these groups and how secondhand smoke produces its toxic effects. However, there is no question that smoking bans have a positive health effect.” The full report is available on line and clearly supports the new legislative ban in smoking in restaurants in Virginia. .
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October 16, 2009 @ 3:22 pm
· Filed under Surveillance, chronic disease, environment, prevention
The Los Angeles Times (10/14, Stein) “Booster Shots” blog reported that as bicycles ride a wave of popularity, “cyclists may be suffering more injuries,” according to University of Colorado researchers. After looking at “accident rates and severity from 1996 to 2006,” they noted that “among 329 bicycle accident cases admitted to the Rocky Mountain Regional Trauma Center at Denver Health Medical Center, the length of stay increased substantially over those years.” What’s more, “an increase was seen in chest injuries (up 15 percent), and abdominal injuries tripled over the last five years of the study. About one-third of 118 patients had head injuries.” Comment: Cycling is certainly more dangerous in the US than Europe where most roads have dedicated bicycle lanes, There are very few such lanes on US roads, particularly in housing areas. This absence in planning oversight contributes to obesity by limiting opportunities for exercise, the same neighborhoods usually lack sidewalks for walking safely, as well.
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September 27, 2009 @ 11:05 am
· Filed under Surveillance, chronic disease, prevention
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September 16, 2009 @ 3:02 pm
· Filed under Epidemiology, Surveillance, chronic disease, economics, environment, prevention
In this week’s BMJ we find that despite all the medical, public health, social, economic, and political changes over the 20th century, patterns of poverty and mortality and the relations between them remain firmly entrenched. There is a strong relation between the mortality levels of a century ago and those of today. This goes beyond what would have been expected from the continuing relation between deprivation and mortality and holds true for most major modern causes of death. Comment. Most of these deaths are related to chronic diseases and individual behaviors, which have always had an adverse impact on low income groups that have had poorer education
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September 16, 2009 @ 3:00 pm
· Filed under Surveillance, economics
Premiums for employer-sponsored health insurance rose to $13,375 annually for family coverage this year — with employees on average paying $3,515 and employers paying $9,860, according to the benchmark 2009 Employer Health Benefits Survey released today by the Kaiser Family Foundation and the Health Research & Educational Trust (HRET).
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