Archive | July, 2009

Texting drivers 23 times more likely to crash, study suggests.

July 30, 2009

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ABC World News (7/27, story 5, 2:05, Gibson) reported, “There’s a new study out today that shows that texting while driving is by far the most dangerous driving distraction. The 18-month study was conducted with long-haul truckers but researchers said the high risk associated with texting applies to all drivers.” Researchers found that while texting, [...]

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Obesity costs US health system $147 billion: study.

July 30, 2009

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CDC – Obesity-related diseases account for nearly 10 percent of all medical spending in the United States or an estimated $147 billion a year, U.S. researchers said Monday. They said obese people spend 40 percent more — or $1,429 more per year — in healthcare costs than people of normal weight. For the study, Eric [...]

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Study Suggests Smokeless Tobacco Safer Than Smoking.

July 30, 2009

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Smokeless tobacco products, as used in Europe and North America, do not appear to increase cancer risk. A large meta-analysis has shown that snuff as used in Scandinavia has no discernible effect on the risk of various cancers. Products used in the past in the US may have increased the risk, but any effect that [...]

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Study Finds Chimps Die From Simian AIDS, Dispelling Widely Held Belief.

July 24, 2009

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For the first time, scientists have shown that chimpanzees in the wild become sick and die from the simian version of AIDS. The finding upsets a widely held scientific belief that chimpanzees, the closest relatives to humans, can get the virus that causes simian AIDS but without harm.  The study was published July 23, 2009, [...]

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Researchers say health benefits of milk consumption outweigh dangers.

July 24, 2009

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Just to confuse us once more about nutrition, “drinking milk can lessen the chances of dying from illnesses such as heart disease and stroke by as much as 20 percent.” While “cow’s milk provides calcium, potassium, protein, and vitamin D,” it also contains “sugars and saturated fat,” so it “is often portrayed as an unhealthy [...]

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Adolescent Women’s Contraceptive Use Is Less Consistent Than That Of Adult Women, With A Much Higher Failure Rate.

July 22, 2009

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A new study of women’s contraceptive use around the world finds that sexually active 15-19-year-olds are more likely than their 20-49-year-old counterparts to use contraceptives inconsistently and, on average, experience a 25% higher rate of contraceptive failure. The study’s authors, Ann K. Blanc of EngenderHealth et al., believe that compared with adult women, adolescent women [...]

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H1N1 Influenza Pandemic Modeling For Public Health Action.

July 22, 2009

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Mathematical modeling can help inform public health policy in outbreaks such as the H1N1 pandemic, write members of the Pandemic Influenza Outbreak Research Modeling Team in Canada. Mathematical models have shown that small seasonal variations in transmission of the influenza virus can drive large annual surges in the disease.

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Chronic Conditions in young adults

July 22, 2009

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From July 3 MMWR. You do not have to be middle aged to have chronic disease, they start early in many individuals, particularly Asthma, hypertension and arthritis.  Prevention has to start soon after birth.    

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Special Flu Report in Johns Hopkins Public Health Magazine

July 15, 2009

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The new H1N1 influenza virus that emerged in Mexico in April 2009 ignited outbreaks as far away as the U.K. and Japan. Though H1N1 was neither as virulent nor as lethal as first suspected, the quick-mutating influenza virus should never be underestimated. Three Bloomberg School experts share their thoughts on what might happen, and what [...]

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Health Clinic Conditions May Be To Blame For Decrease In Primary Care Physicians.

July 10, 2009

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It is not only the financial rewards of specialization that drive new doctors away from primary care, but according to new research from Loyola University, “unfavorable work conditions are associated with stress, burnout and intent to leave for primary care physicians,” said Dr. Anita Varkey, study author and assistant professor in the department of medicine, [...]

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