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Bangladesh child accidents shock

Public HealthMay 10 05

About three children die every hour in Bangladesh from serious injuries and accidents such as drowning the UN children’s agency, Unicef, says.
Unicef’s report, published in Dhaka on Monday, said more than 30,000 children were killed this way each year.

Accidents accounted for 38% of child deaths, with drowning the leading cause. Most of the drowning victims were under three years of age.

The nation’s health minister said he was shocked and vowed to take action.

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Foam treatment for varicose veins

PregnancyMay 10 05

Injecting patients with a foam that expands in the blood vessels can successfully treat troublesome varicose veins, say doctors.
Between 20% and 30% of adults develop varicose veins, usually later in life or during pregnancy.

As well as looking unpleasant, varicose veins can ache, throb and itch.

More than 50 patients at Ealing Hospital in London have received the foam therapy with good results, says consultant Mr George Geroulakos.

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Race of face sets brain activity

BrainMay 10 05

The brain reacts differently to the faces of people from different races, research shows.

When volunteers looked at pictures of African-Americans, the brain area that processes emotions became active, a study in Nature Neuroscience found.

When they looked at photos of Caucasian faces, the activity was much less.

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Effort to improve kids’ asthma care falls short

AsthmaMay 10 05

For inner-city kids with Asthma, a school-based initiative to let their doctors know about the severity of the children’s asthma didn’t seem to make much difference, New York researchers report.

“Unfortunately,” Dr. Jill S. Halterman told Reuters Health, “provider notification of symptoms did not increase the likelihood of these children receiving enhanced preventive care, and many of the children were still inadequately treated at follow-up.”

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WHO lists approved websites for vaccine safety

Public HealthMay 10 05

The World Health Organisation (WHO), warning of one-sided and alarming reporting of vaccine safety on websites, on Tuesday issued a list of 23 sites it deemed reliable.

The approved sites meet the WHO’s criteria including credibility, content and disclosure of the group’s funding, according to a statement.

“We want to help Web readers and governments have access to reliable information. These sites have passed the criteria for good practices and will be reviewed every 18 months,” told Philippe Duclos, WHO medical officer.

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U.S. group launches online medical record program

Public HealthMay 10 05

Patients will be able to see, change and share medical records on the Internet with a service launched on Monday by a company set up by a coalition of professional medical groups.

They say the service, called iHealthRecord, will let patients control their own records, while allowing doctors vital access when they need it, eventually reducing the risks of mistakes such as prescribing errors.

And, they hope, it could provide a way for doctors and patients to replace thick medical charts and swap information without the need for costly and time-consuming office visits.

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French surgeons begin UK ‘exile’

Public HealthMay 10 05

Hundreds of French surgeons have begun a symbolic “exile” in Britain to demand the right to charge higher fees.
The private sector doctors plan to spend four days at the southern English resort of Camber Sands.

The group Surgeons of France says fees have remained static for 15 years while insurance rates have soared tenfold because of an explosion in lawsuits.

The group says the French government promised extra funds last year, but the money has not materialised.

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UN warns WTO farm talks could worsen food crisis

Public HealthMay 09 05

The head of the U.N. World Food Programme (WFP) warned on Monday that new rules on food aid as part of a global trade pact could reduce its flow and increase starvation in poor countries.

James Morris, executive director of the Rome-based agency, called instead on richer powers to boost food aid - in cash or kind - back to at least the annual 11 million tonnes of 2001 from the 7.5 million to which it dropped last year.

- Full Story - »»»    

Drug makers working on U.S. advertising guidelines

Drug NewsMay 09 05

Drug makers are developing voluntary guidelines aimed at improving television and other advertisements as part an effort to rebuild public trust, the industry’s top lobbyist said on Monday.

Companies have been criticized for creating television commercials and magazine ads that glorify a drug’s benefits while minimizing the risks of side effects.

“We obviously have room for improvement,” said Billy Tauzin, president of the Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America, known as PhRMA. The industry “needs to recapture the trust of the American people,” he told reporters.

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Limit portions of farm-raised salmon, experts say

Food & NutritionMay 09 05

People should avoid eating too much farm-raised salmon, which contains significantly more of the chemical dioxin than is found in fish caught in the wild, new study findings show.

After analyzing the dioxin content of farm-raised and wild salmon captured in different regions, a group of North American researchers found that farm-raised types contain between 3 and 10 times more dioxin than wild salmon.

Using guidelines from the World Health Organization, the researchers calculate that consumers should eat fewer than 10 meals of farm-raised salmon per month, and limit fish that’s raised on northern European farms to 4 times per month.

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Preemies thrive on formula with added fatty acids

PregnancyMay 09 05

Formula feeds containing fatty acids—specifically docosahexanoic acid (DHA) and arachidonic acid (ARA)—may improve the development of preterm infants, new research suggests.

The findings, which appear in the Journal of Pediatrics for April, are based on a study of 361 preterm infants who were randomized to receive formula containing DHA from algal oil and ARA from fungal oil, DHA from fish oil and ARA from fungal oil, or no supplementation. The babies were compared to a group of 105 full-term breast-fed infants.

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Polio cases rise to 40 in Yemen

Public HealthMay 09 05

The number of Yemeni children diagnosed with polio has risen to 40, almost double the figure quoted by the World Health Organisation (WHO) at the end of April, a Yemeni Health Ministry official said on Monday.

Yemen, which last reported polio in 1996, is the 15th country to have the disease reappear since mid-2003, including 13 African countries and Saudi Arabia.

Officials fear the disease - which mainly affects children under the age of five, causing irreversible paralysis - could still be spreading. The latest cases appeared in various provinces but mostly in the Red Sea port of Hodeidah.

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Indonesia says it’s getting control of polio outbreak

InfectionsMay 09 05

Indonesia is bringing its first outbreak of polio in a decade under control, but the virus may exist elsewhere besides a concentration of villages in West Java province, a senior health official said on Monday.

Umar Fahmi, the top official in charge of communicable diseases at the Health Ministry, told Reuters the number of positive cases of polio was now four, after one child had been cleared.

“We can say it’s under control, although it really depends on where the virus has travelled to.

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U.N. may add new chemicals to ‘dirty dozen’ ban

Public HealthMay 09 05

Countries at a U.N. meeting in Uruguay agreed on Friday to consider adding four new chemicals to the “dirty dozen” list of banned pesticides and industrial chemicals, a U.N. official said.

The week-long meeting that concluded on Friday also sought to reduce the legal exemptions included in the 2004 U.N. ban on the world’s most hazardous substances blamed for deaths, cancer or birth defects in humans and animals.

But exemptions for some toxins such as DDT were maintained to allow their use to fend off deadly insects despite their harmful effects.

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Hungary PM wants more to contribute to health cost

Public HealthMay 09 05

Hungary’s Prime Minister Ferenc Gyurcsany said on Monday he would force people who work but do not pay national heathcare insurance to pay up and help finance the country’s ailing health system.

Economists estimate healthcare and pensions account for around a third of the budget deficit and the Socialist-led government hopes a system of individual social tax accounts will help track those who evade payments.

“There are about half a million people who are active, have a job, and do not insure themselves,” Gyurcsany told parliament.

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