Popular Articles

New Method Significantly Improves Treatment Of Severe Heart Condition, Canadian-led Study Finds
The results of an international study led by a Toronto-area doctor were unveiled today that show there"s a more effective way to treat patients with a severe arrhythmia, or irregular heartbeat, than the current treatment methods.
generic viagra online
Electronic Coding Overestimates Prevalence Of Barrett's Esophagus
In a review of more than 2,000 patients coded for Barrett"s esophagus, electronic diagnosis overestimated the prevalence of the disease according to researchers in California. They found that only 61.9 percent of patients assigned a billing diagnosis code for Barrett"s esophagus actually had Barrett"s esophagus after a manual record review. The study evaluated the accuracy of diagnostic codes for Barrett"s esophagus by contrasting codes from electronic databases with diagnoses from a detailed medical record review. Researchers also evaluated the reproducibility of a pathologic diagnosis of Barrett"s esophagus between two pathologists and between a single pathologist on two different occasions. The study appears in the May issue of GIE: Gastrointestinal Endoscopy, the monthly peer-reviewed scientific journal of the American Society for Gastrointestinal Endoscopy (ASGE).
News of the day
Study: Women Age 30+ Modify Breast Cancer Risk With Exercise
Women over age 30 who regularly exercise decrease their chances of breast cancer, according to a study presented today at the American College of Sports Medicine"s 56th Annual Meeting in Seattle.
Oncology

Health Visitors Reject Call For MMR To Be Made Compulsory

Health visitors are opposed to a proposal to make the MMR immunisation mandatory for young children. Unite, which embraces the Community Practitioners" and Health Visitors" Association (CPHVA), has rejected the call by a former chairman of the British Medical Association (BMA), Sir Sandy Macara for children under five to be compulsorily immunised with the MMR injections against measles, mumps and rubella. Cheryll Adams, Unite"s Lead Professional Officer, Strategy & Practice Development said: "We believe that the NHS is about choice, therefore we think that Sir Sandy"s MMR motion to be debated at this month"s BMA conference would be incompatible with that principle." "Instead, Unite/CPHVA believes that employing more health visitors and community nurses would provide the enhanced coverage necessary by healthcare professionals to explain to parents that MMR is a vital defence against these diseases which can either kill or cause serious disability." "Educating parents, not coercion, is the best way forward." Cheryll Adams said that health visitors believed there was a direct link between the declining MMR take-up rates and the slimming down of the health visiting service by primary cares trusts (PCTs) over the last four years. She said: "The health visiting service is now so under-red that health visitors no longer automatically see families when the child is 8-to-12 months old, which is the best time to provide advice and information, so that parents can make an informed decision about the first MMR immunisation." At present, only 80% of children have had both the MMR immunisations needed to give full protection - it is only when that figure reaches 95% does the population as a whole achieve the "herd immunity" necessary to keep these diseases at bay. Unite


Add your comment:
Name:
Site address: http://
Your message:
Enter today\\\\'s date, 2 digits
(spam protection):