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New strategies to reduce hospital-aquired infections

The current goal to reduce sickness and death from infections that patients acquire in hospitals has created a renewed focus on identifying ways to reduce the problem at its source. Hospital water for drinking, bathing, showering, to make ice cubes or to rinse medical equipment is increasingly being recognized as a significant source of microbes that may contribute to many of these life-threateni...

Hospitalizations because of chicken pox down dramatically since implementation of vaccine

Since the introduction of the varicella (chicken pox) vaccine in 1995, hospitalizations and doctor visits because of chicken pox have dropped dramatically, according to a study in the August 17 issue of JAMA. Varicella vaccine is recommended for routine immunization of children aged 12 to 18 months and for older susceptible children and adults in the United States, according to background...

Bacteria can survive for weeks on hospital surfaces

A major cause of hospital-acquired infections can persist for days and even weeks on environmental surfaces found in healthcare settings, including bed linens, computer keyboard covers and acrylic fingernails, according to research presented today at the 105th General Meeting of the American Society for Microbiology. Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) is a major cause of ho...

One in 14 men having a heart attack drive themselves to hospital

Seven per cent of men having a heart attack drove themselves to hospital and only 60 per cent went by ambulance, according to research published in the latest Journal of Advanced Nursing. The study, which looked at 890 heart attack patients admitted to six major teaching hospitals in Dublin, Southern Ireland, also found that it took women five times as long as men to go to casualty depar...

Minorities, uninsured less likely to receive care at high-volume hospitals

Compared to white patients, black, Asian and Hispanic patients and those who are uninsured are less likely to undergo complex surgery at high-volume hospitals, which have been associated with better outcomes, according to a study in the October 25 issue of JAMA. Efforts to improve the quality of surgical care in the United States have led many organizations to advocate the use of high-vol...

Hospital-acquired infections -- Inevitable?

In a press conference held earlier today at Washington D.C.'s The Press Club, David B. Nash, MD, editor of The American Journal of Medical Quality, addressed hospital-acquired infections and the widespread anchoring belief ?by both healthcare professionals and patients ?that acquiring infections in the hospital is unavoidable. This concern is addressed in a special supplement to the Novemb...

Funding to tackle hospital superbugs

A novel approach to treating infectious diseases is being developed by researchers at Cardiff University. A team in the School of Medicine's Institute of Nephrology has been awarded £800,000 by the W...

Controlling antibiotics and antibiotic resistance in hospitals

In one of the first national studies on guidelines that control antibiotics and antibiotic resistance in hospitals, researchers from the Indiana University School of Medicine, the Regenstrief Institute, Inc. and the Richard Roudebush Veterans Administration Medical Center report that hospitals that follow national guidelines on controlling antibiotic use have lower rates of antibiotic resistance....

Temple University Hospital investigates treatment for cervical dysplasia

Temple University Hospital's Center For Women's Health is participating in a national study to determine the safety and effectiveness of an investigational treatment for cervical dysplasia. According to the American Cancer Society, approximately 500,000 women are diagnosed with high-grade cervical dysplasia each year, with roughly 10,000 cases progressing to cervical cancer. For numerous w...

Study identifies risk factors for spread of respiratory infections in hospitals

The 2003 severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) epidemic in China has lessons to teach hospitals on how to prevent the spread of other respiratory diseases, according to new research appearing in the April 15 issue of Clinical Infectious Diseases, currently available online. Hospitals were epicenters of SARS transmission in Guangzhou province and Hong Kong in 2003. In hospitals with espe...

Restricting hospital-based services during SARS outbreak had modest impact

Restrictions on the non-urgent use of hospital-based services that were imposed when a provincial health emergency was declared during the 2003 SARS (Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome) outbreak in Toronto, Ontario, resulted in only modest reductions in overall admissions. In this study, Dr. Michael J. Schull and colleagues determined that restrictions on the non-urgent use of hospital-based se...
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(Date:10/10/2008)...reated nanowire sensors coupled with simple microp...pecific enough to be used for point-of-care (POC) ...Letters . , The sensors use activation of immune...bacteria, viruses or cancer cells as the detector...nd generate a tiny current in the nanowire electro...
(Date:10/9/2008)...e-FirstCall/ -- Synaptics(R),Incorporated (Nasdaq:...olutions for mobile computing, communications, and...ll report financial results for the first quarter,... the close of market. The,company will host a corr...rs at 2:00 p.m. PT (5:00 p.m. ET) during which man...
(Date:10/9/2008)...o worry about hungry starfish and even hungrier hu...e your body temperature 50 degrees Fahrenheit in j...e habitats on Earth," said USC biologist Andrew Gr... cool Pacific seawater and the other part baked un...real-time molecular sampling of mussels in their n...
(Date:10/9/2008)...fectious Diseases (NIAID), part of the National In...tracts estimated to be up to $68.7 million to esta...isease Research at four research institutions. Sci...es to study diseases that include severe acute res...za. , Systems biology is the study of the networ...
Breaking Biology News(10 mins):Sensitive nanowire disease detectors made by Yale scientists 2Synaptics to Report First Quarter Results on October 23 2Brainy genes, not brawn, key to success on mussel beach 2Brainy genes, not brawn, key to success on mussel beach 3New Systems Biology Awards enable detailed study of microbes 2Research reveals molecular fingerprint of cocaine addiction 20280 1Research reveals molecular fingerprint of cocaine addiction 20280 2Self Regional Healthcare One of 20 Organizations Worldwide to Bring Home Workplace Award from Gallup 20275 1Self Regional Healthcare One of 20 Organizations Worldwide to Bring Home Workplace Award from Gallup 20275 2Self Regional Healthcare One of 20 Organizations Worldwide to Bring Home Workplace Award from Gallup 20275 3New technique allows targeted inactivation of genes in research model 3427 1New technique allows targeted inactivation of genes in research model 3427 2A common denominator of inflammations and fatty liver 20271 1A common denominator of inflammations and fatty liver 20271 2
(Date:10/10/2008)...Coach Holly Warlick Teams Up with Legal and Medica...Ever Cancer and Careers Seminar in,Knoxville, KNO...ion of National,Breast Cancer Awareness Month, Can...e joined forces with YWCA Knoxville, The Wellness ...e Holly Warlick, University of Tennessee,women,s b...
(Date:10/10/2008)... The Healthcare Technology Ev... , Exton, PA (PRWEB) Sept...ey Chapters of the national Healthcare Information...forces to bring regional health information techno... conference entitled The Healthcare Technology Evo...
(Date:10/10/2008)...ston, MABoston Medical Center (BMC) has received a...l Institute on Aging (NIA) to fund the Boston Clau...BMC,s Pepper Center is one of only 11 Pepper Cente... Americans Independence Center Program was establi...enator from Florida. During his five decades of pu...
(Date:10/10/2008)...olecular CT adds metabolic information from PET to...gnostic imaging for maximized workflow ...ICH, Germany, Oct. 10 /PRNewswire/ -- Siemens Heal...duces molecular CT, a new concept in,integrated im...d is a,practical solution for today,s shrinking he...
Breaking Medicine News(10 mins):Health News:Local Experts Help Women Living and Working with Cancer Even the Score 2Health News:Local Experts Help Women Living and Working with Cancer Even the Score 3Health News:Local Experts Help Women Living and Working with Cancer Even the Score 4Health News:HIMSS New Jersey and Delaware Valley Chapters Sponsor Regional Conference 2Health News:Boston Medical Center receives $5.8m grant 2Health News:Siemens Shapes the Future of Integrated Diagnostic Imaging 2Health News:Siemens Shapes the Future of Integrated Diagnostic Imaging 3Health News:Siemens Shapes the Future of Integrated Diagnostic Imaging 4
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