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August 31, 2004

PLoS Medicine

PLoS Medicine will go live on 19 October 2004. PLoS Medicine will
commemorate the 10th anniversary of the International Conference on
Population and Development by scoring progress in reproductive health on
September 6.

PLoS Medicine
Fulltext v1+ (2004+)
http://www.plosmedicine.org
Print ISSN: 1549-1277 | Online ISSN: 1549-1676.

Thanks to Susanne DeRisi (PLoS Web Manager) and James Butcher, editor,
PLoS Medicine, for providing extra information following my post
yesterday.

George S. Porter
Sherman Fairchild Library of Engineering & Applied Science
California Institute of Technology
Mail Code 1-43, Pasadena, CA 91125-4300
Telephone (626) 395-3409 Fax (626) 431-2681
http://library.caltech.edu
contributor http://stlq.info |
http://www.earlham.edu/~peters/fos/fosblog.html

Minorities worry public health system won't respond fairly in a bioterrorist event

African-Americans and Asians less likely to believe the public health system would respond fairly in a bioterrorist event, UCLA study shows
While nearly three-quarters of Americans believe that the public health system would respond fairly in a bioterrorist event, African-Americans and Asians adhere to this view in smaller proportions, perhaps because of past discriminatory policies put in place by health officials, according to a new UCLA study.

The findings will be published in late September in Biosecurity and Bioterrorism: Biodefense Strategy, Practice, and Science. The article is also available online at the journal's Web site, http://www.biosecurityjournal.com/PDFs/v2n304/520402.pdf

Article from Eureka Alert

UNDERSTANDING AND PROMOTING HEALTH LITERACY

UNDERSTANDING AND PROMOTING HEALTH LITERACY (PAR-04-116)
LETTER OF INTENT RECEIPT DATE: September 13, 2004; September 13, 2005; September 13, 2006
APPLICATION RECEIPT DATE: October 13, 2004; October 13, 2005; October 13, 2006

The participating Institutes, Centers and Offices of the National Institutes of Health (NIH) and the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ) invite investigators to submit R01 research grant applications on health literacy. The goal of this Program Announcement is to increase scientific understanding of the nature of health literacy and its relationship to healthy behaviors, illness prevention and treatment, chronic disease management, health disparities, risk assessment of environmental factors, and health outcomes including mental and oral health. Increased scientific knowledge of interventions that can strengthen health literacy and improve the positive health impacts of communications between healthcare and public health professionals (including dentists, healthcare delivery organizations, and public health entities), and consumer or patient audiences that vary in health literacy, is needed. Such knowledge will help enable healthcare and public health systems serve individuals and populations more effectively, and employ strategies that reduce health disparities in the population.

The research must involve either: a) health literacy, or one of its many components, as a key outcome, b) health literacy as a key explanatory variable for some other outcome, c) methodological or technological improvement to strengthen research on health literacy, or d) health literacy-focused preventions and interventions.

This PA will use the NIH R01 award mechanism. As an applicant, you will be solely responsible for planning, directing, and executing the proposed project. This PA uses just-in-time concepts. It also uses the modular budgeting format.

For more information go to http://grants.nih.gov/grants/guide/pa-files/PAR-04-116.html

UNDERSTANDING AND PROMOTING HEALTH LITERACY (PAR-04-117)
LETTER OF INTENT RECEIPT DATE: September 13, 2004; September 13, 2005; September 13, 2006
APPLICATION RECEIPT DATE: October 13, 2004; October 13, 2005; October 13, 2006

The participating Institutes, Centers and Offices of the National Institutes of Health (NIH) and the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ) invite investigators to submit R03 research grant applications on health literacy. The goal of this Program Announcement is to increase scientific understanding of the nature of health literacy and its relationship to healthy behaviors, illness prevention and treatment, chronic disease management, health disparities, risk assessment of environmental factors, and health outcomes including mental and oral health. Increased scientific knowledge of interventions that can strengthen health literacy and improve the positive health impacts of communications between healthcare and public health professionals (including dentists, healthcare delivery organizations, and public health entities), and consumer or patient audiences that vary in health literacy, is needed.

The research must involve either: a) health literacy, or one of its many components, as a key outcome, b) health literacy as a key explanatory variable for some other outcome, c) methodological or technological improvement to strengthen research on health literacy, or d) health literacy-focused preventions and interventions.

This PA will use the NIH R03 award mechanism. Examples of the types of projects that ICs support with the R03 include the following: pilot or feasibility studies; secondary analysis of existing data; small, self-contained research projects; development of research methodology; and the development of new research technology. As an applicant, you will be solely responsible for planning, directing, and executing the proposed project. A project period of up to two years and a budget for direct costs of up to two $25,000 modules or $50,000 per year may be requested.

For more information go to http://grants2.nih.gov/grants/guide/pa-files/PAR-04-117.html.

THE AMERICAN CANCER SOCIETY-BARBARA THOMASON RESEARCH PROFESSORSHIP (OR CLINICAL RESEARCH PROFESSORSHIP) FOR OVARIAN CANCER

The American Cancer Society has issued a Request for Applications for the American Cancer Society-Barbara Thomason Research Professorship or Clinical Research Professorship for Ovarian Cancer. The award is intended for an outstanding mid-career investigator who has made seminal contributions to our understanding of the etiology, genetics, pathogenesis, epidemiology, diagnosis or treatment of ovarian cancer and who continues to provide leadership in this research area. Applications from distinguished investigators in all categories of ovarian cancer research, including basic, translational, clinical and applied research, are requested. The amount of the award is $100,000 per year for five years and may be renewed for an additional five years. Candidates must be American citizens or permanent residents with at least 10 years of experience beyond receipt of their terminal degree and within 15 years of their appointment as a full professor.

To get more information, click here to view the entire RFA

UPCOMING SPECIAL SEMINARS

Thursday, August 12, noon to 1:00 p.m., 450 CCRB
"Treatment of Tobacco Addiction: Past, Present and Future"
Dorothy Hatsukami, Ph.D., Professor, Department of Psychiatry, Principal Investigator, Transdisciplinary Tobacco Use Research Center, University of Minnesota

Tuesday, August 17, noon to 1:00 p.m., 450 CCRB
"Can Diet Protect Against Breast Cancer?"
Mimi C. Yu, Ph.D., Professor, University of Southern California, Norris Comprehensive Cancer Center

WOMEN’S HEALTH RESEARCH CONFERENCE-2004

Monday, September 13, 2004, 8:30-5:00 p.m., Radisson-Metrodome Hotel, Minneapolis
Sponsor: University of Minnesota National Center of Excellence in Women’s Health
Keynote address: Florence Haseltine, M.D., Ph.D., Director, Center for Population Research

Featured speakers include Cancer Center members Doug Yee, M.D. and Amy Skubitz, Ph.D. Online registration is available at www.womenshealth.umn.edu or contact wmhealth@umn.edu, 612-626-1125.

PIECES OF A DREAM: THE REALITY OF AFRICAN AMERICAN HEALTH CARE IN MINNESOTA AND UNEQUAL TREATMENT

Friday, September 17, 2004, Holiday Inn-Metrodome, Minneapolis, MN
This meeting is co-sponsored by the Minnesota Medical Association and the Minnesota Black Physicians Foundation. Register online at www.mnmed.org/mapb.

August 30, 2004

MedlinePlus: Understanding Medical Research

A *NEW* website with information and links on the topic of Understanding Medical Research.

State bioterror monitoring expanded to animals

By Warren King
Seattle Times medical reporter

State health officials are expanding their early warning system for a bioterrorist attack by employing the help of rabbits, squirrels, mice and other critters.
As part of the state's biological-warfare defense, state veterinarians recently began monitoring unusual small-animal deaths for evidence of tularemia, plague or other diseases that could be caused by lethal agents.

Articel from Seattle Times

Contamination Will Delay Some Flu Shots

By Steven Reinberg
HealthDay Reporter

FRIDAY, Aug. 27 (HealthDayNews) -- The U.S. government announced Friday that nearly half of this year's flu vaccine supply will arrive about a month late because some doses may be contaminated.

Despite the delay, health officials said there was little to worry about, and that the vaccine will eventually be available to anyone who needs one.

Article from Forbes.com

Swift action needed for all American uninsured, American Public Health Association

29 Aug 2004

The American Public Health Association responded today to the U.S. Census Bureau’s alarming report that the number of uninsured and Americans living in poverty both rose in 2003. The Census Bureau reported that the number of uninsured Americans rose by 1.4 million to 15.6 percent, or 45 million, in 2003, up from 15.2 percent in 2002, the third straight annual increase. Meanwhile, the nation’s poverty rate also climbed to 12.5 percent last year, from 12.1 percent in 2002.

The Census Bureau largely attributed the decline in insurance coverage rates to the drop in coverage from employment-based health plans, partially offset by increases in government health coverage. Employment-based health insurance coverage fell 0.9 percentage points between 2002 and 2003, while Medicare coverage increased 0.2 percentage points.

Article from Medical News Today

August 28, 2004

New tool predicts how long pollutants will stay in soil

Equation could help decide future of land tainted with pesticides, pharmaceuticals
Building on an idea developed by medicinal chemists, Johns Hopkins researchers have devised a new mathematical tool that accurately predicts how long certain pollutants -- including pesticides and pharmaceuticals -- will remain in soil.

The work is timely because researchers and public officials have become increasingly concerned about pharmaceuticals and personal care products that have been detected in soil and water. Environmental engineers are seeking better ways to track these emerging pollutants, which tend to be more complex and water-soluble than previous contaminants of concern, such as chlorinated solvents and petroleum byproducts.

This new modeling approach is important because environmental regulators and cleanup consultants need to know the extent to which hazardous contaminants will linger on a piece of land and the rate at which they will migrate toward critical water resources and supplies. The new approach will help them decide whether the pollutants need to be removed and how best to accomplish this, the researchers say.

Article from Eureka Alert

New HIV findings

Researchers show HIV patients may be infected with more than one type of HIV.

Some HIV patients may be plagued by more than one type of HIV infection according to researchers at the McGill AIDS Centre, Sir Mortimer B. Davis - Jewish General Hospital and the McGill University Health Centre. They have shown that some patients may be susceptible to a second infection with another HIV virus including viruses resistant to drugs. This infection with a second HIV virus is called superinfection.

Article from

The future of HIV therapeutics is brightening, according to Gladstone Institutes Director

Nature Immunology commentary highlights promising advances in the field
Recent discoveries about the way that HIV infects cells are propelling the development of a broad spectrum of promising new antiviral drugs, according to an invited commentary on the topic in the current issue of Nature Immunology (August 27, 2004).

The assessment is made by Gladstone Institute of Virology and Immunology (GIVI) Director Warner Greene, MD, PhD, who also serves as professor of medicine, microbiology and immunology at the University of California, San Francisco.

In the piece, Greene points out that basic research on HIV, a relatively simple pathogen with only nine genes encoding 15 proteins, are leading to compelling new therapies that deny the initial entry of HIV into its cellular host. In addition, fast-moving research of naturally occurring factors with potent antiviral properties is opening the way for future development of an entirely new class of anti-HIV drugs.

Press Release from Eureka Alert

More Americans visit doctor, drug prescriptions up

Friday, August 27, 2004 Posted: 9:47 AM EDT (1347 GMT)

ATLANTA, Georgia (Reuters) -- Americans made an estimated 890 million visits to the doctor in 2002, a 1 percent increase from the previous year, according to a survey released Thursday by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

High blood pressure, colds, sore throats, diabetes and arthritis were the most frequently diagnosed conditions, according to doctors who participated in the CDC's annual tracking of office-based medical care.

Article from CNN Health

15 diseases account for 50% of the rise in health care costs

By Andy Miller
Cox News Service

ATLANTA - A new Emory University study found that 15 medical conditions led to about half of the $200 billion rise in U.S. health spending from 1987 to 2000.
The study, published on the Web site of the journal Health Affairs, said five of those conditions - heart disease, trauma, cancer, pulmonary conditions and mental disorders - accounted for 31 percent of the growth in health spending over that period.

Article from The Salt Lake Tribune

Contaminated flu shots 'not a crisis,' says CDC

Sabin Russell, Chronicle Medical Writer

Despite the discovery of tainted vaccine at the British factory that makes half of America's flu shot supply, U.S. health authorities said Friday they were confident there would be enough available for the coming influenza season.

"This is not a crisis,'' said Dr. Julie Gerberding, director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta, during a press conference.

Article from SFGate.com

August 27, 2004

Despite resistance, flu drug still preferred

WHO says Tamiflu remains top choice in case of epidemic
Updated: 9:35 a.m. ET Aug. 27, 2004GENEVA - The World Health Organization (WHO) said on Friday that despite new research indicating some resistance to Tamiflu, it remained its “drug of choice” for protection against bird flu and in case of a human flu pandemic.

Klaus Stohr, head of WHO’s influenza program, also called for more data after Japanese researchers reported on Thursday that resistance to Tamiflu, made by Switzerland’s Roche, may be more common than previously thought


Artice from: MSNBC

August 25, 2004

NEW DORIS DUKE GRANT COMPETITION

Clinical Interfaces Award Program

Team Awards at the interface of the clinical and basic sciences. Research supported by this program must:
-foster new and collaborative ways of addressing complex problems of human health and disease;
-be conducted by teams that include key investigators from at least three disciplines as equal partners. One of these key investigators must be a clinical investigator; and
-be unique and only achievable through integration of a cross-disciplinary team of investigators.

Disciplines include: the biological, physical, chemical, social and population sciences, mathematics, computer sciences, and engineering. Proposals in all disease areas will be considered. Up to three full grants of up to $2.25 million will be awarded.

Pre-proposal deadline: November 2, 2004.
Award start date: October 1, 2005

Full details and instructions are available on the Doris Duke Charitable Foundation's web site: http://www.ddcf.org/mrp/ciap

THE AMERICAN CANCER SOCIETY-BARBARA THOMASON RESEARCH PROFESSORSHIP (OR CLINICAL RESEARCH PROFESSORSHIP) FOR OVARIAN CANCER

The American Cancer Society has issued a Request for Applications for the American Cancer Society-Barbara Thomason Research Professorship or Clinical Research Professorship for Ovarian Cancer. The award is intended for an outstanding mid-career investigator who has made seminal contributions to our understanding of the etiology, genetics, pathogenesis, epidemiology, diagnosis or treatment of ovarian cancer and who continues to provide leadership in this research area. Applications from distinguished investigators in all categories of ovarian cancer research, including basic, translational, clinical and applied research, are requested. The amount of the award is $100,000 per year for five years and may be renewed for an additional five years. Candidates must be American citizens or permanent residents with at least 10 years of experience beyond receipt of their terminal degree and within 15 years of their appointment as a full professor. To get more information, click here to view the entire RFA

NEW CANCER CENTER PUBLIC RELATIONS DIRECTOR

Mary Lawson has been recruited as the Public Relations Director and will begin her duties on September 7th. Mary will have primary responsibility for positioning the Cancer Center as a world class center and ensuring that the Center's scientific and medical accomplishments are understood and appreciated by key audiences. Mary has extensive experience in health care and science-related communications and most recently has been part of Mayo Clinic's communications team working in oncology. Contact information: office: 749 CCRB, phone: 624-6165.

AMERICAN CANCER SOCIETY INSTITUTIONAL RESEARCH GRANT

This grant is for instructors and assistant professors who have no independent national funding and are engaged in cancer-related research. Cancer related research includes analysis of developmental biology, gene regulation, or alternation of intracellular or extracellular processes that may lead to an improved understanding or therapy of potential or actual oncogenic events in prokaryotic or eukaryotic cells. Funding is available up to $20,000. Applications are being accepted until October 1, 2004. Applications may be obtained by calling 612-626-1926 or sending email to micek003@tc.umn.edu.

4TH CANCER CULTURE AND LITERACY INSTITUTE

The Cancer, Culture and Literacy Institute is a series of educational activities that examine the nexus of culture and literacy relating to effective communications and research. This NCI funded program includes a five-day hands-on intensive learning experience in Tampa, Florida, January 8-13, 2005, as well as monthly continuing educational modules delivered via the Web, and mentoring experiences with nationally recognized scholars involved in this area of scientific inquiry. A yearlong commitment is expected where participants apply new knowledge in their research activities. Tuition, transportation, lodging, meals and resources are provided to participants during the five-day program.

Eligibility: Doctorally prepared investigators (PhD, DrPH, MD, DNS, ScD or equivalent) wishing to enrich their perspectives on culture and literacy in the conceptualization and design of cancer control/population science research should apply. Deadline for receipt of application: September 20, 2004, 5:00 pm EST.

For more information about the Institute and eligibility requirements call (813) 745-6031, e-mail Dr. Cathy Meade cdmeade@moffitt.usf.edu or visit our website at http://www.moffitt.usf.edu/Education/ccl_institute/index.asp

CANCER PREVENTION RESEARCH SMALL GRANT PROGRAM

EXPIRATION DATE: December 21, 2007, unless reissued
APPLICATION RECEIPT DATES: December 20, 2004; March 21, 2005; July 21, 2005; November 21, 2005; March 22, 2006, July 20, 2006, November 20, 2006; March 20, 2007; July 21, 2007., December 20, 2007

This Program Announcement (PA) replaces PAR-02-176, which was published in the NIH Guide on September 27, 2002.

The Division of Cancer Prevention of the National Cancer Institute (NCI) invites applications that address developmental research in chemoprevention agent development, biomarkers, early detection, and nutrition science. The Small Grants Program is designed to aid and facilitate the growth of a nationwide cohort of scientists with a high level of research expertise in cancer prevention research. This PA will use the NIH Small Grants Program (R03) award mechanism. As an applicant, you will be solely responsible for planning, directing, and executing the proposed project. The total budget may not exceed $100,000 in direct costs for the entire project. The direct costs in any one year must not exceed $50,000. Please note that facilities and administrative [F&A] costs requested by any consortium participants are excluded from the direct cost limit per NIH Guide Notice NOT-OD-04-040.)

The total project period for an application submitted in response to this program announcement may not exceed two years. NIH policy limits the number of amendments that may be submitted to one. The small grant is not renewable. This PA uses just-in-time concepts. It also uses the modular budgeting format.
http://grants.nih.gov/grants/guide/pa-files/PAR-04-147.html

To view all grants available through the Cancer Center, visit http://www.cancer.umn.edu/page/aboutus/grantopp.html

August 24, 2004

UN will award annual public health fellowships in $5 million programme

24 August 2004 – The United Nations health agency today announced plans to train as many as 10 young people each year dedicated to improving public health, including upgrading responses to epidemics and other widespread health emergencies, especially in developing countries.

The World Health Organization (WHO), with a special $5 million grant from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, today said it will train people younger than 38 years who already hold an advanced public health-related degree. At least half will be women and 80 per cent from developing countries.

Article from UN News Center

Ten-State Mutual Aid Effort for Public Health Emergencies

News Story Aug 24 2004
Nebraska Gov. Mike Johanns announced that Nebraska will designate a portion of next year's federal bioterrorism grant to begin an aggressive effort to develop a ten-state alliance to provide mutual aid in the event of an act of bioterrorism or other public health emergency.

"Mutual aid agreements would vastly increase our response capability by pulling our region together to share expertise and resources in the event of an emergency," Gov. Johanns said. "The interest expressed by our neighboring states leads me to believe the time is now to pursue this effort. Nebraska is already attracting national attention for our collaboration in the public health arena, now we'll extend that effort across state lines."

The governor made the announcement after speaking at a four-state meeting being hosted by Nebraska to discuss bioterrorism collaboration. The other states attending are Iowa, Kansas and Missouri. The ten-state alliance would also include North Dakota, South Dakota, Wyoming.

Article form Government Today

Vital Drug Use Drops with Medicare Coverage Gaps

Tue Aug 24, 2004 04:45 PM ET

NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - After exceeding their annual drug benefit cap, Medicare beneficiaries often decrease their use of essential medications, apparently to compensate for the coverage gap, according to a new report.
By contrast, stopping medications completely or not starting new medications are relatively unpopular strategies used by this group, Dr. Chien-Wen Tseng, from the University of Hawaii in Honolulu, and colleagues found.

The findings, which appear in the Journal of the American Medical Association, are based on a survey of 665 beneficiaries who had exceeded their benefit cap and 643 who had not. In the former group, coverage gaps ranged from 75 to 180 days.

Article from Reuters Health

Inhaled Anthrax Vaccine Protects in Animals-Report

Tue Aug 24, 2004 05:09 PM ET

For release at 5 p.m. EDT
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A powdered anthrax vaccine that people potentially could take by themselves protects rabbits against the deadliest form of the bacteria, researchers said on Tuesday.

Developed jointly by U.S. Army researchers and BD Technologies, the vaccine works about as well as current injected versions, the scientists said.

Article from Reuters Health

Univ. of Ariz. Gets Cancer Research Grant

Univ. of Ariz. Cancer Center Receives $19.5 Million Grant for Continued Research on Skin Cancer

The Associated Press

TUCSON, Ariz. Aug. 24, 2004 — The University of Arizona's Cancer Center has been given a $19.5 million grant for continued research on skin cancer.
The grant, which runs through 2009, will go toward developing a drug that can neutralize cancer-causing agents in the skin. It's the largest National Cancer Institute program project grant awarded to the center in 24 years.

Article from abc News

California West Nile virus cases up 46 percent over last week

(08-24) 17:22 PDT LOS ANGELES (AP) --

The number of confirmed human cases of West Nile virus in California rose more than 46 percent in a week as the number of people killed by the mosquito-borne illness rose from seven to nine, health authorities said Tuesday.

The two latest reported deaths both occurred in San Bernardino County, an 88-year-old man in Loma Linda and an 82-year-old man from the city of San Bernardino, the local Department of Public Health said.

Article from SFGate.com

Scope of illness outbreak complicates probe

750 people who visited Ohio island fell ill
Tuesday, August 24, 2004 Posted: 9:18 AM EDT (1318 GMT)

TOLEDO, Ohio (AP) -- The wide scope of an outbreak that sickened hundreds of travelers to a Lake Erie resort island will make it difficult to find a source for the illness, infectious disease experts said.

Some say they suffered nausea and diarrhea after traveling to South Bass Island in recent weeks, while some say they fell ill in early June.

Article from CNN: Health

Survey: Most don't trust public health in case of terrorism

Tuesday, August 24, 2004 Posted: 7:31 PM EDT (2331 GMT)

NEW YORK (AP) -- Most Americans are not confident in the health care system's ability to respond to a biological, chemical or nuclear attack, according to a survey released Tuesday.

The Columbia University poll found that 39 percent of Americans trust the public health system in the event of a major terrorist attack. The number is down from 46 percent in 2003 and 53 percent in 2002.

Article from CNN: Health

"The health care system is decidedly not ready to cope with a major crisis of the type that might include these very aggressive weapons," said Dr. Irwin Redlener, director of the university's National Center for Disaster Preparedness.

August 22, 2004

Blogging

Hello All...

Off for a few days...I'll cath up by next Tuesday.

Cindy

August 19, 2004

Study looks at smoking ban's effect on health

By TAD VEZNER and LUKE SHOCKMAN
BLADE STAFF WRITERS


A study released today by an anti-smoking group on the effects of smoking bans in Toledo and Bowling Green showed a sharp drop in heart attacks in Bowling Green following implementation of its ban.

The heart-attack study — done by public health researchers at the Medical College of Ohio and funded by the Ohio Tobacco Use Prevention and Control Foundation — did not analyze heart attack rates in Toledo because its ban has been fully enforced only since January and 2004 health data are not yet available.

Article from toledoblade.com

Public Health Grand Rounds

A National Satellite Broadcast and Webcast

First Things First:
Defining Local Public Health Practice
for Safer, Healthier Communities

What is in a name? or a definition? For public health practice, the answers could determine resource allocation, community expectations, workforce development, and even public health policy. In recent years, public health practice has received unprecedented support and visibility, but there are also unprecedented expectations.

Can everyone expect the same safeguards of health, regardless of the size or location of their community? Local and state health officials believe they can, and this belief is driving the National Association of County and City Health Officials' effort to develop an operational definition of local public health agencies. It is anticipated the definition will provide the framework needed to secure funding and leverage resources needed for a consistent, robust governmental public health presence at the local level.

The purpose is clear but the road map to achieving this has not been easy to follow. To bring clarity to this issue, join us as we discuss the case of Public Health Solutions, a district health department based in Crete , Nebraska , that is working to create a local public health agency from scratch and succeed in meeting the expectations of a safer, healthier community for its citizens.

For more information go to: http://www.publichealthgrandrounds.unc.edu/

Flyer: http://www.publichealthgrandrounds.unc.edu/defining/flyer.pdf

UNICEF dispatches 10 million measles vaccines across Madagascar

17 August 2004 – In the largest immunization campaign ever undertaken in Madagascar, the United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF) today announced the delivery of 10 million measles vaccines to the country.

Over the past few days, trucks and planes loaded with measles vaccines, auto-disable syringes, communication materials and manuals for mobilizers began leaving the capital of Antananarivo and port city of Tamatave for every district in the country.

Article from UN News Centre

State to test infants for 5 more diseases

Thursday, August 19, 2004 - Page updated at 12:00 A.M.

By Julia Sommerfeld
Seattle Times staff reporter


STEVE RINGMAN / THE SEATTLE TIMES
Laurra Corsello of Seattle holds her 8-month-old daughter, Helena, who has galactosemia, a metabolic condition that occurs in about 1 in 50,000 babies. Hers is one of nine newborn diseases now automatically screened for in Washington.

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Other links
Department of Health Newborn Screening Program
March of Dimes, Washington chapter


Babies born in Washington are now being screened for a longer list of genetic disorders. After spending much of this year rolling out a battery of new blood tests, the state Department of Health announced yesterday that all newborns will automatically be screened for nine life-threatening conditions before they leave the hospital. In years past, newborns were screened for just four.
Each of the five new conditions is rare, has a tongue-twisting name — homocystinuria, for instance — and has potentially deadly or disabling consequences if left untreated.

Article from The Seattle Times

Nigeria Says Needs $248 Million to Fight AIDS

Wed 18 August, 2004 21:14

ABUJA, Nigeria (Reuters) - Nigeria needs about $248 million to expand its anti-AIDS program and provide life-saving pills for 200,000 of its 3.5 million citizens infected with the virus, the country's health minister said Wednesday.

Nigeria launched Africa's biggest AIDS control plan in 2002 to distribute cheap antiretroviral drugs from India to 10,000 adults and 5,000 children at a subsidized monthly cost of $7 per person.

Article from Reuters UK Health

U.S. Hazards Statistics website from National Weather Service

The U.S. Natural Hazard Statistics provide statistical information on fatalities, injuries and damages caused by weather related hazards. These statistics are compiled by the Office of Services and the National Climatic Data Center from information contained in Storm Data, a report comprising data from NWS forecast offices in the 50 states, Puerto Rico, Guam and the Virgin Islands.

Link

Leukaemia risk for kids living near petrol stops

12:33 19 August 04

NewScientist.com news service

Children who live next to a petrol station are four times more likely to develop acute leukaemia than other children in the same area, suggests new research.

The small study, carried out at four sites in France, looked at 280 children with leukaemia and a control group of 285 children, all younger than 15 years. The children’s mothers were given a questionnaire relating to their lifestyle.

The researchers found that children living next door to a petrol station or automotive garage had a quadrupled risk of leukaemia. And the risk of developing acute non-lymphoblastic leukaemia was seven times greater compared with children who lived in the same area, but not next to a petrol station.

Article from NewScientist.com

Researchers developing blood test to detect presence of breast cancer

By CAROLYN ABRAHAM
Thursday, August 19, 2004 - Page A1


The notion that doctors may one day be able to detect cancer as they do cholesterol, in mere drops of blood, is no longer a pipe dream.

Researchers in Canada and the United States have developed separate techniques to pinpoint elusive tumour cells from a thimbleful of drawn blood, a feat that may help predict the severity of a patient's cancer without biopsy or bone scan.

Both projects found that the greater the number of tumour cells collected in a sample, the more dangerous the disease appeared to be. The results are expected to give doctors a relatively painless tool to help identify who needs aggressive treatment, who is not benefiting from it and who might be spared the toxicity of chemotherapy.

Article from GLOBEANDMAIL.COM

Bush mulls importing prescription drugs

Cites safety as issue
From Jill Dougherty
CNN
Wednesday, August 18, 2004 Posted: 8:43 PM EDT (0043 GMT)



President Bush signs autographs Wednesday during a rally in Chippewa Falls, Wisconsin.


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HUDSON, Wisconsin (CNN) -- With political pressure mounting to allow imports of cheaper prescription drugs from Canada and other countries, President Bush appeared to move closer to supporting the idea Wednesday -- but only if the safety of the drugs could be assured.

Asked about prescription drug imports during a town hall meeting in Wisconsin, Bush said, "I'm looking at this. ... There's a lot of pressure in Congress for importation."

Article from CNN: Health

Public health authority meets today

August 18, 2004


BY KIM NORRIS
FREE PRESS BUSINESS WRITER

More than a year after the idea was conceived, the state's first public health authority, dedicated to serving more than 700,000 poor and uninsured people in Wayne County, is to hold its first public meeting today.

Gov. Jennifer Granholm, whose efforts to address the health care crisis in Detroit led to the creation of the Detroit Wayne County Health Authority, is expected to attend the meeting at the St. Francis Cabrini Clinic, 1050 Porter St., Detroit.

Article from the Detroit Free Press

August 18, 2004

CDC: '03 Flu Shot Effective Half the Time

Fri Aug 13, 7:43 PM ET Add Health - AP to My Yahoo!

By DANIEL YEE, Associated Press Writer

ATLANTA - Last season's flu shot was effective only about half the time, confirming the concerns many experts had since the vaccine was not an exact match for one of the flu strains making many Americans sick, the government said Thursday.

Even so, "the vaccine still provided some protection and substantial health benefits," said Dr. Carolyn Bridges, an epidemiologist with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (news - web sites).

Article from Yahoo/AP News

U.S. Asks Chiron to Develop Bird Flu Vaccine

From Reuters/Yahoo News:
Tue Aug 17,10:55 AM ET

Chiron Corp. has won a contract to develop a human vaccine against a strain of bird flu that can infect people and "has the potential to trigger a modern-day pandemic," the U.S. government said on Tuesday.

The National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases said it had awarded Chiron, of Emeryville, California, the contract to develop a vaccine against the H9N2 strain of avian influenza virus.

Article from Reuters:Health

Public Health Grand Rounds

Public Health Grand Rounds, “First Things First: Defining Local Public Health Practice for Safer, Healthier Communities

What is in a name? or a definition? For public health practice, the answers could determine resource allocation, community expectations, workforce development, and even public health policy. In recent years, public health practice has received unprecedented support and visibility, but there are also unprecedented expectations.

Can everyone expect the same safeguards of health, regardless of the size or location of their community? Local and state health officials believe they can, and this belief is driving the National Association of County and City Health Officials' effort to develop an operational definition of local public health agencies. It is anticipated the definition will provide the framework needed to secure funding and leverage resources needed for a consistent, robust governmental public health presence at the local level.

More Information and registration available at: http://www.publichealthgrandrounds.unc.edu/

Word on Health

NIH plays a major role in finding better ways to diagnose, treat, cure or prevent diseases. The practical health information in The NIH Word on Health is based on research conducted either by NIH's own scientists or by our grantees at universities and medical schools around the country.

Material published in The NIH Word on Health is not copyrighted. You may use it without permission of the National Institutes of Health.

Link: http://www.nih.gov/news/WordonHealth/

Brain diseases linked to environmental factors

BEIJING, Aug. 16 (Xinhuanet) --Brain diseases have been on a steady increase in the past two decades and researchers believe they have found a link between these diseases and the environment.

A report on brain disease in Australia, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, the Netherlands, Spain, the U.K. and the U.S. , finds that dementia rates have tripled in men and increased by about 90 percent among women over two decades. China Radio International reported Monday.

Researchers indicate that higher levels of pesticides, industrial effluents, car exhausts, domestic waste and other pollutants are responsible for increases in Alzheimer's disease, Parkinson's disease and motor neurone disease.

Article from China View

August 17, 2004

Study: U.S. Veterans Care Beats Managed Care in Diabetes

Mon Aug 16, 2004 07:03 PM ET

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Veterans with diabetes get better care under the Department of Veterans Affairs system than some patients using managed care, U.S. researchers reported on Monday and suggested nationalized health care can work well.
The study, published in the Annals of Internal Medicine, shows VA patients got the recommended care more often.

The study suggests that nationalized health care can work, the team at the University of Michigan and University of California said.

"A nationally funded health care system can provide excellent quality of care," Dr. Eve Kerr, of the VA Ann Arbor Healthcare System and assistant professor of internal medicine at the University of Michigan Medical School, said in a statement.

Article from Reuters

Study: U.S. Veterans Care Beats Managed Care in Diabetes

Mon Aug 16, 2004 07:03 PM ET

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Veterans with diabetes get better care under the Department of Veterans Affairs system than some patients using managed care, U.S. researchers reported on Monday and suggested nationalized health care can work well.
The study, published in the Annals of Internal Medicine, shows VA patients got the recommended care more often.

The study suggests that nationalized health care can work, the team at the University of Michigan and University of California said.

"A nationally funded health care system can provide excellent quality of care," Dr. Eve Kerr, of the VA Ann Arbor Healthcare System and assistant professor of internal medicine at the University of Michigan Medical School, said in a statement.

Article from Reuters

Computer games teach nutrition

Saturday, August 14, 2004 Posted: 10:41 PM EDT (0241 GMT)

WASHINGTON (AP) -- The virtual baked beans were falling fast. The unopened can had to go somewhere, but where? Not the simulated freezer.

"This food wouldn't spoil in that location," the computer-generated voice said. "But the quality of food could be affected, or you might be using space in your freezer unnecessarily."

Another lesson learned from the Fantastic Food Challenge, a package of four computer games designed to teach people who get nutrition aid such as federal food stamps how to make better use of their food.

Article from CNN

August 15, 2004

Crow in Oregon tests positive for West Nile

Friday, August 13, 2004 - Page updated at 12:40 P.M.


VALE, Ore. — Oregon's first case of West Nile virus has been detected in a crow in Malheur County in southeast Oregon, public health officials said today.
Oregon had been among a few states where West Nile had not yet surfaced.

Nationwide, West Nile infected more than 9,300 people last year, killing 244, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. That's more than double the number of cases reported in 2002, although fatalities remained steady. The higher case numbers may be due to increased surveillance, the CDC said.

Article from Seattle Times

August 14, 2004

Ministers order child medicine safety review

By Severin Carrell
15 August 2004


Drugs companies will be told by health ministers this week to make their medicines safer for children because of fears that many widely used pills have not been properly tested.

Health experts have recently stepped up warnings that children may be wrongly prescribed with drugs, including antibiotics, painkillers, anti-depressants and asthma treatments, because they are rarely tested for use on under-16s.

Article from Independent.co.uk

August 13, 2004

Major HIV drug trial to be halted

A major HIV drug trial in Cambodia has been shelved amid claims it violated people's human rights.
The trial was supposed to be one arm of an international study to see if Tenofovir, which is used to fight HIV, can also protect against the disease.

But sex workers refused to participate unless they were given full medical insurance to protect them against any future illnesses.

Article from BBC UK Edition

Swat teams target skeeters: Health officials take action to halt EEE vi

By Kay Lazar
Saturday, August 14, 2004

Worried that weekend rains will spawn an army of disease-carrying mosquitoes, health officials are declaring war on the bugs with stepped-up spraying and tracking to halt the spread of deadly eastern equine encephalitis in Southeastern Massachusetts.

The assault comes as a 64-year-old Brockton surveyor remains hospitalized in serious condition after he was infected, likely while working outdoors in Middleboro earlier this month.

``After all this rain passes through and it warms up, there is concern about mosquito populations increasing rapidly,'' Ralph Timperi, director of the state public health laboratory, said yesterday.

Article from BostonHerald.com

Early Test on Vietnam Bird Flu Victim Shows H5N1

Fri Aug 13, 2004 03:46 AM ET

By Christina Toh-Pantin
HANOI (Reuters) - Preliminary tests by Vietnam have shown the presence of the H5N1 strain in one of three people who died from bird flu, heightening fears about the return of a virus that killed 24 people in Asia earlier this year.

Vietnam's health ministry said eight people suspected of being infected with bird flu were in hospital and authorities are investigating other deaths in southern Hau Giang province.

Article from Reuters

FDA fears drugs a terror target

Acting commissioner says imported drugs biggest concern

Thursday, August 12, 2004 Posted: 10:29 AM EDT (1429 GMT)


WASHINGTON (AP) -- "Cues from chatter" gathered around the world are raising concerns that terrorists might try to attack the domestic food and drug supply, particularly illegally imported prescription drugs, acting Food and Drug Administration Commissioner Lester M. Crawford says.

In an interview with The Associated Press, Crawford said Wednesday that he had been briefed about al-Qaeda plans uncovered during recent arrests and raids, but declined further comment about any possible threats.

Article from: CNN:Health

August 12, 2004

Vaccine Could Prevent Most Cervical Cancers

Thu Aug 12, 2004 04:42 PM ET


By Will Boggs, MD
NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - A vaccine based on the seven types of human papillomavirus (HPV) most commonly linked to cervical cancer could prevent most cases of the deadly disease, researchers predict.

As yet, however, no such vaccine exists.

"HPV vaccines offer today the best strategy to combat cervical cancer," Dr. Nubia Muñoz from International Agency for Research on Cancer, Lyon, France told Reuters Health.

Muñoz and colleagues conducted an analysis of all HPV types in cervical cancer from an international survey and from a multicenter study, involving more than 3600 women with cervical cancer from 25 countries.

Article from Reuters

Vietnam confirms three deaths from bird flu: WHO

GENEVA : The World Health Organisation (WHO) said the Vietnamese government had confirmed three people had died from bird flu.

The WHO said the deaths of the three, who were among a group of people hospitalized between July 19 and August 8, were the first cases officially recorded in Vietnam since February.

Article from Mediacomp

Nutrition guidelines: More fruit, vegetables, workouts

Thursday, August 12, 2004 Posted: 11:01 AM EDT (1501 GMT)

WASHINGTON (AP) -- Americans need to spend more time working out and less time chowing down.

That's the conclusion of a federal advisory panel looking at ways to get people to adopt healthier eating and exercise habits.

The Dietary Guidelines Advisory Committee, holding its final meeting Wednesday, called for some changes in current nutrition recommendations. The tougher task is motivating people to work toward a healthy weight by being more physically active and watching what they eat.

It won't be easy. Federal researchers already have found that almost two-thirds of adults are overweight or obese, and more than three-fifths do not get enough regular physical activity.

Article from CNN: Health

Brazil plans 3 billion free condoms for AIDS fight

Last Updated: 2004-08-11 15:40:30 -0400 (Reuters Health)

BRASILIA, Brazil (Reuters) - Brazil intends to distribute 3 billion free condoms every year, mainly to the poor and young, in a bid to prevent the spread of AIDS, the country's AIDS director said on Wednesday.

The plan to offer universal, free access to condoms builds on the country's renowned AIDS treatment program, which provides a cocktail of free drugs for patients with the human immunodeficiency virus, or HIV, which causes AIDS.

But the effort also faces the potential opposition of the country's Roman Catholic church, which has said free-condom distribution could encourage promiscuity.

"The contraceptive is mandatory in all non-stable sexual relationships," said Pedro Checkr, who reassumed authority over Brazil's AIDS program last week after previously running it from 1996 to 2000.

"The ideal would be to reach 3 billion contraceptives," he said.

Three billion condoms would be equivalent to 35 for every one of Brazil's 85 million people considered sexually active. The country has a total population of 175 million.

Handing out free condoms has grown sharply in importance under the country's program to fight AIDS. It aims to increase distribution among schools in poor areas.

An estimated 600 million free condoms will be handed out this year, up from 20 million in 1995 when the program started, Checkr said. He did not say when the 3 billion figure will be reached.

The campaign has focused on handing out free condoms during Brazil's annual Carnival celebrations, when casual sex increases.

The Roman Catholic Church in Brazil - the world's largest Catholic country - has been upset by the distribution of free condoms out of a belief they could encourage promiscuity.

Brazil's center-left government reacted angrily last year to statements by a Vatican cardinal, who suggested condoms were unsafe to stop the spread of AIDS.

Checkr said the government would give incentives to local condom manufacturers to ensure sufficient supplies.

"If the whole sexually active population were to use contraceptives, there would be no stocks left," Checkr said. "So it is important to invest in the production of contraceptives to guarantee supplies."

Brazil's anti-AIDS program has been acclaimed as a model for the developing world. Its main element of handing out free drugs to patients has been achieved by winning price reductions from big drug firms, sometimes with the threat of making generic copies if companies did not agree to discounts.

Brazil halved the number of AIDS-related deaths since 1996, when distribution of free drugs began.

The government believes there are 600,000 people with HIV/AIDS in Brazil although just 200,000 have been diagnosed.

From Reuters

Safety of genetically engineered foods report

From the Institute of Medicine of the National Academies website

This report assists policymakers in evaluating the appropriate scientific methods for detecting unintended changes in food and assessing the potential for adverse health effects from genetically modified products. The committee recommended that greater scrutiny should be given to foods containing new compounds or unusual amounts of naturally occurring substances, regardless of the method used to create them.

News bite from: Georgia State University Library Blog: Public Health

New mosquito worry: Deadly parasites

Brush, then squash. Remember those three words and that technique the next time you catch a mosquito dining on your arm or leg, and you'll go a long way to protecting yourself from a potentially lethal parasitic micro-organism that may be in the mosquito, and is especially dangerous to those with weakened immune systems.

From Rutgers

Rutgers-Newark Scientist: Potentially Lethal Parasite Can Be Transmitted By Mosquitoes

Streptococcal vaccine shows promising results

Asian News International
Washington, August 12

According to a study published in the Journal Of the American Medical Association, results from a trial for a streptococcal vaccine seem to indicate that the vaccine could offer protection against streptococcal infections.

Karen L. Kotloff, M.D., of the University of Maryland School of Medicine, Baltimore, and colleagues evaluated the safety and immune reactivity of a group A streptococcal vaccine in healthy volunteers.

Article from HindustanTimes.com

FDA approves two drugs to treat radiation exposure

The US FDA has approved two drugs to treat radiation exposure. The injectable drugs could be available on prescription for people who wanted protection before a terrorist attack. The drugs treat americium or curium contamination.

Acting FDA Commissioner Lester Crawford, said "The approval of these two drugs is another example of FDA's readiness and commitment to protecting Americans against all terrorist threats."

Article from Medical News Today

Public health program receives national award

By The Times-Standard

Sara Watson Arthurs

The National Association of County and City Health Officials has selected the Humboldt County Department of Health and Humans Services' Alcohol and Other Drug Death Review as a Model Practice, one of 29 programs nationwide to receive the award.

The Model Practice Awards program recognizes programs that demonstrate exemplary and replicable qualities in response to a local public health need.

Article from the Times-Standard

August 11, 2004

First UK license for human cloning

Wednesday, August 11, 2004 Posted: 9:39 AM EDT (1339 GMT)

LONDON, England (AP) -- Britain granted its first license for human cloning Wednesday, more than three years after becoming the first nation to authorize the technique to produce stem cells for medical research.

A team of researchers at Newcastle University hope eventually to create insulin-producing cells that could be transplanted into diabetic patients

Article from CNN:Health

HMOs bring back unpopular controls

August 11, 2004: 7:02 AM EDT

CHICAGO (Reuters) - HMOs are bringing back some tried-and-true but highly unpopular methods to stem crushing medical costs, according to the findings of a nationwide survey released Wednesday.

Articel from CNNMONEY

Poll: Seniors favor drug imports

Wednesday, August 11, 2004 Posted: 10:07 AM EDT (1407 GMT)


WASHINGTON (AP) -- Older and disabled Americans strongly support proposals to permit prescription drug imports and to allow the government to negotiate prices of medicines, said a poll released Tuesday.

Both ideas, also backed by the Kerry presidential campaign, would give Americans access to cheaper prescription drugs, said most of those polled, all Medicare recipients. Four-fifths of those questioned in the Kaiser Family Foundation poll said they support both proposals, dismissing misgivings about the safety of imported drugs.

Article from CNN: Health

Sudan: IDPs At Risk of Diseases As Hepatitis Reported

UN Integrated Regional Information Networks

August 11, 2004
Posted to the web August 11, 2004

Nairobi

Unless safe, clean water and better sanitation become more readily available in camps for displaced people in the troubled western Darfur region of Sudan, the people living there are at risk of contracting waterborne diseases like Hepatitis, health agencies warned.

The World Health Organisation (WHO), which on Tuesday reported that an outbreak of Hepatitis E had killed 22 people, with 625 cases reported in Darfur between May and July, said that despite the efforts of relief agencies, "existing resources are insufficient to cover the basic needs of the IDPs [internally displaced persons]".

Article from allAfrica.com

Gov't Chickenpox Vaccine Can Save Lives

A new study finds a childhood vaccine making a difference in preventing the potentally life threatening disease.

Government researchers looked at the chicken pox vaccine. They found it is very effective in preventing the childhood illness. Before the chicken pox vaccine was available hundreds of Americans would die each year from complications of the disease. It's hard to protect kids from each others germ.

Article from WNEP16

Thirty six volunteers inoculated with SARS

As learned from the SARS vaccine development research group the last six volunteers have accepted the inoculation of a clinical testing vaccine for severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) on August 4. By far all 36 volunteers in China's SARS vaccine first stage clinical research have been inoculated with the vaccine.

As learned from Lin Jiangtao, head of the Respiratory Medical Department with the China-Japan Friendship Hospital, after observing for a week the six volunteers are normal in temperature with no adverse reactions observed.

Article from People's Daily Online

People on Medicare Stand Two-to-One Against Drug Bill

Two of Three Want Congress to Fix the Law, Few Currently Plan To Enroll But Most Don't Know Enough To Say

Aug. 11, 2004 - Many more people on Medicare have an unfavorable than a favorable impression of the new law that adds a drug benefit to the program, but most want Congress to fix rather than repeal it, according to a new survey of the opinions of people - primarily senior citizens - on Medicare released yesterday.

Article from SeinorJournal.com

August 10, 2004

Scientists take step toward strep vaccine

Tuesday, August 10, 2004 Posted: 4:20 PM EDT (2020 GMT)

CHICAGO (AP) -- Scientists say they are making headway in developing a vaccine against a common strep germ, the cause of millions of sore throats as well as a deadly but uncommon flesh-eating disease.

A test of an experimental vaccine in just 28 people prompted an immune response with no serious side effects, but it's still not known if the shot would keep people from catching the strep germ.

Still, it was the first human testing of such a vaccine in almost 30 years, although at least two other vaccines are also under development.

Results of the federally funded study were reported in Wednesday's Journal of the American Medical Association.

Article from CNN: Health

CDC Survey Documents Serious Crisis In Sudanese Refugee Children

HHS/CDC recommend immediate increase in feeding programs, food rations, and public health measures

Sudanese children in refugee camps in northeastern Chad risk serious illness or death from lack of food, clean water, shelter, and health care, say survey findings released today by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, an agency of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.

CDC Link

Chicken Pox Vaccine Curbs Severity, Contagiousness of Disease

By Kathleen Doheny
HealthDay Reporter

TUESDAY, Aug. 10 (HealthDayNews) -- Like all vaccines, the one for chicken pox isn't foolproof, but a new study finds that when vaccinated children still get the disease, they are only half as contagious as unvaccinated kids.

Their cases are also typically much less severe, said study author Dr. Jean F. Seward, of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Article from Forbes.com

Poll: Older Americans Unhappy with Medicare Changes

Tue Aug 10, 2004 06:07 PM ET

By Joanne Kenen
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Older Americans are confused and unhappy about upcoming changes in the federal Medicare health program, according to a nonpartisan survey released on Tuesday that indicates the issue could help Democrats win the November vote.

The Kaiser Family Foundation-Harvard School of Public Health found that 47 percent of the 1,223 Medicare beneficiaries surveyed had an unfavorable view of Medicare reforms like the prescription drug benefit, 26 percent viewed the reforms favorably, and 25 percent said they didn't know.

Article from Reuters

Project BioShield: The first line of biological defense

Billions of dollars back this initiative to spur development of bioterrorism countermeasures. But new vaccines and treatments are only one aspect of readiness.

By Stephanie Stapleton, AMNews staff. Aug. 16, 2004.

National leaders have always dreamed of the creation of an impenetrable shield or barrier to protect against foreign assaults on American soil. Think fortresses, defense build-ups, interceptor missiles and even the Star Wars program.

Article from amednews.com

Five-in-one baby jab plan unveiled

The government has announced plans for a new combined jab for babies.
The vaccination will protect children against diphtheria, tetanus, whooping cough, Hib and, for the first time, polio in a single shot.

Article from BBC News

HK Scientists Sound Alert on Another Bird Flu Virus

HONG KONG (Reuters) - A bird flu virus commonly found in chickens in Hong Kong's markets could mutate and jump more easily to humans, possibly leading to the next influenza pandemic, scientists said on Tuesday.
Researchers found the H9N2 virus in about two percent of chickens in a study between 2001 and 2003.

Article from Reuters

Study: Black women more likely to have deadly breast cancer tumors

(New Haven-AP, Aug. 10, 2004 5:58 AM) _ A new study from Yale researchers finds black women are four times more likely to have a genetic mutation that makes breast cancer tumors deadly.

Black women are less likely than white women to get breast cancer. But the study says they are more likely to have aggressive tumors.

Article from WTNH.com

August 9, 2004

Lagos Seeks Counselling On HIV/Aids

August 8, 2004
Posted to the web August 9, 2004

Mojisola Idris And Mary Ekah
Lagos

Commissioner for Health, Lagos State, Dr. Leke Pitan, has called on the authority concerned to counsel mothers who are HIV positive on the best way to breast feed their babies, saying due to the status of a HIV positive mother she is deprived of the opportunity to breast feed her child directly.

Speaking on the topic "The Impact of HIV/AIDS Endemic on Nursing Mother Who is a Carrier," at the National Association of Women Journalists (NAWOJ) international BreastFeeding Celebration in Lagos, Pitan said mother- to-child transmission of HIV was the major route through which children were infected.

Article from allAfrica.com

Mad cow-type disease blamed on transfusion

USA Today
August 8, 2004

A second case in which the human form of mad cow disease was spread through a blood transfusion has been reported in the United Kingdom. The first such case was reported there in December, and health officials say they've been expecting more.

Article from IndyStar.com

Weak patients in Canada are stalked by bacterium

Clifford Krauss NYT

Back to Start of Article TORONTO A bacterium that causes virulent diarrhea in the elderly has been spreading through hospitals in Quebec and Alberta and may have contributed to the deaths of 100 patients in one institution alone in the last 18 months, the medical authorities said on Sunday.

Article from the International Herald Tribune

Safety: Hazards in the Medicine Cabinet

By JOHN O'NEIL

Published: August 10, 2004


edications that are considered unsafe for older people are frequently being prescribed to patients over 65, researchers reported yesterday.

The study, which examined prescription rates, found that 1 in 5 older patients received at least one unsafe drug.

Dr. Kevin A. Schulman of the Duke Clinical Research Institute, the lead author of the study, said that as the body ages, the way it reacts to medicine changes and the likelihood of severe side effects increases. In recent years, efforts to steer the drugs most likely to produce these side effects away from older patients have included the publication of lists of drugs deemed inappropriate for people over 65, Dr. Schulman said.

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In the study, the researchers compared one of these lists with a database containing all prescriptions written in 1999 for 765,423 patients over 65 through a pharmaceutical benefits management company.

The study found that 21 percent of the patients had at least one drug on the list, and that half those prescriptions were for drugs considered to have the potential for serious adverse effects. The most commonly prescribed inappropriate drugs were two antidepressants, amitriptyline and doxepin.

The study also found that 15 percent of the patients had been given two drugs from the list and that 4 percent had been given three or more.

Dr. Schulman said the list of drugs to avoid was not ironclad. In some cases, a careful evaluation by a doctor would lead to the conclusion that a drug on the list would be the best choice for a particular older patient, he said.

But often, he said, safer alternatives exist. Older patients may be able to avoid risks by discussing medications with their doctors.

Artcle from The New York Times

Breast Cancer Operations Rare for Most U.S. Surgeons

Mon Aug 9, 2004 05:37 PM ET

ATLANTA (Reuters) - Most women diagnosed with breast cancer in the United States are operated on by surgeons who perform relatively few of these operations each year, according to a U.S. study released on Monday.

The finding by researchers in Wisconsin is startling in light of recent U.S. and U.K studies that showed women had a better chance of surviving breast cancer if operated on by a surgeon who did at least 15 to 30 of the operations each year.

Article from Reuters

August 7, 2004

New Rules On Mad Cow Alerts

WASHINGTON, August 4, 2004

(AP) The U.S. government is setting more stringent standards for when it will announce that an initial screening test for mad cow disease has yielded a suspicious result, the Agriculture Department said Wednesday.

The department is now requiring additional preliminary test results before the public is informed. A leader of the beef industry hailed the new procedure, while a consumer advocate expressed skepticism.

Article from CBSNEWS.com

Few Mothers Meet Breastfeeding Goals, Study Shows

Thu Aug 5, 2004 10:55 AM ET

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Only 14 percent of U.S. mothers exclusively breastfeed their babies for the minimum recommended six months, according to government data released on Thursday.
New state-by-state statistics show that Oregon has the highest rate of mothers meeting the minimum standards, but even there just 25 percent are able to give their babies breast milk and nothing else for six months, the report shows.

The American Academy of Pediatrics, the World Health Organization and most other experts recommend that mothers give their babies breast milk only -- no formula, juice or solid food -- until they are six months old.

Article from Reuters

Fight superbug as if it were SARS, doctor urges

Aug. 6, 2004. 01:00 AM

MONTREAL—With a study linking a virulent superbug to the deaths of up to 100 Quebecers in one hospital in the past 18 months, a Quebec doctor is calling on Ottawa to attack the bacteria with the same resolve used to fight SARS.

"It's not a problem specific to our institution," said Dr. Jacques Pépin, co-author of a study into deaths at the University Hospital in Sherbrooke he says were caused by Clostridium difficile — a common intestinal bacteria that can be deadly to elderly patients.

Article from Toronto Star

Health benefit now No. 1 cost

Workplace survey details shifting

Kristen Gerencher
CBS MarketWatch
Aug. 8, 2004 12:00 AM

SAN FRANCISCO - The cost of providing health care to workers has surpassed that of paid leave as the most expensive benefit for employers, according to a new report.

In the first quarter of this year, medical benefits accounted for 23 percent of compensation not including wages compared with 22.6 percent for paid leaves, including vacations and sick time, according to a study from Employment Policy Foundation, an economic-research group that focuses on workplace issues.

Article from azcentral.com

PUBLIC HEALTH: Latest skeeter spray targets Culex species

Posted on Fri, Aug. 06, 2004

By Brenden Timpe

Herald Staff Writer


Mosquito control trucks sprayed Grand Forks on Thursday night in an effort to thin the population of Culex species mosquitoes, which are considered most likely to carry West Nile Virus.

Thursday's average mosquito trap count was 27 - far below the 100 level that usually sparks a city-wide ground spray. But Don Shields, director of the Grand Forks Public Health Department, said the spraying was done to reduce the risk of West Nile Virus

From GrandForksHearald.com

August 5, 2004

School of Public Health Dean Mark Becker to leave U for South Carolina

Becker was named provost and executive vice president for academic affairs in South Carolina.

By Hayley Odom


ypical days for School of Public Health Dean Mark Becker do not exist.
His routine schedule of leading the school and teaching classes part-time is interrupted by last-minute meetings with student leaders and community members. His evenings are filled with dinners recruiting new faculty members or ceremonies recognizing fellow colleagues.

As dean, Becker’s first priority is the University’s School of Public Health. But soon his top priority will span an entire university.

Article from mndaily.com

The Polio Epidemic in Nigeria: a Public Health Emergency (2)

Vanguard (Lagos)
ANALYSIS
August 4, 2004
Posted to the web August 4, 2004

By Chidi Achebe


All parties involved in the polio eradication exercise should work together for the sake of the children and posterity

Solutions/strategies: The vaccine campaign

NIGERIA must embark upon an aggressive, vigorous and sustained immunisation campaign to cover not just the vulnerable in Kano and surrounding states, but children and all others at risk throughout the country. This effort will require significant financial assistance and political commitment from the Federal Government of Nigeria. In particular, the local leadership must show as much zeal in restarting the vaccination campaign as it showed in bringing it to a halt.

Subpopulations that must also receive vaccinations are travellers to areas or countries where poliomyelitis is or may be epidemic or endemic; laboratory and health care workers handling specimens or who come in close contact with patients that may be excreting the virus; unvaccinated adults whose children will be receiving OPV (the oral form of the vaccine that contains attenuated polio virus); unvaccinated adults and incompletely vaccinated adults in epidemic and endemic areas of Nigeria, should also receive polio vaccination preferably IPV (the inactivated Polio vaccine). Other groups that need to be covered by the vaccination campaign include pregnant women; household contact of persons with immunodeficiency diseases; patients with altered immune states; patients with immunosuppression due to therapy for other diseases or known HIV infection. All these patients in this latter group should receive IPV.

Article from allAfrica.com

Study: Two health systems -- black and white

Wednesday, August 4, 2004 Posted: 5:11 PM EDT (2111 GMT)





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BOSTON, Massachusetts (Reuters) -- Inferior qualifications and less access to resources among doctors who treat black patients may contribute to racial disparities in the quality of U.S. health care, authors of a study said Wednesday. The study, published in Thursday's New England Journal of Medicine, found that many of the doctors treating black patients complain they don't have the resources to adequately care for them.

"The findings paint a picture of two health systems, where physicians treating black patients appear to have less access to important clinical resources and be less well-trained clinically than physicians treating white patients," said study leader Peter Bach of the Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center in New York.

Article from CNN

August 4, 2004

Public Health Insurance Picked Up 5M Kids

MARK SHERMAN

Associated Press


WASHINGTON - About 5 million children have been added to government health programs since 2001, many because their parents lost employer-sponsored insurance, according to a new study.

Medicaid and the State Children's Health Insurance Program provided a safety net for children whose parents' coverage ended or became too expensive during the economic downturn at the start of the decade, said the Center for Studying Health System Change, a private research organization in Washington, D.C.

Article from Miami Herald

Adherence to guidelines improves early breast cancer survival

Posted on Monday, August 02, 2004 @ 3:38 PM PDT by bjs

The first study to compare survival between women with breast cancer whose treatment was based on consensus guidelines and those whose treatment was not shows that adhering to established guidelines improves survival and reduces the risk of recurrence. The study retrospectively examined whether the systemic therapy prescribed after surgery for women with early-stage breast cancer was consistent with treatment guidelines established for at the time. Systemic therapy includes chemotherapy and hormonal therapy and is designed to reach cancer cells that may have spread beyond the original tumor site.

Article linked through ScienceBlog

Scientists clone mice from cancer cell

Posted on Monday, August 02, 2004 @ 3:50 PM PDT by bjs

Nature can reset the clock in certain types of cancer and reverse many of the elements responsible for causing malignancy, reports a research team led by Whitehead Institute Member Rudolf Jaenisch, in collaboration with Lynda Chin from Dana Farber Cancer Institute. The team demonstrated this by successfully cloning mice from an advanced melanoma cell.

Article linked through ScienceBlog

US kids without insurance miss doctor visits

Last Updated: 2004-08-03 16:16:45 -0400 (Reuters Health)

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Nearly half of the 8.5 million U.S. children who lack health insurance have not seen a doctors or nurse for a medical check-up in the past year, according to a study published on Tuesday.

One third of uninsured children have no regular source of medical care such as a pediatrician, meaning they are probably going to be taken to an emergency room for routine needs, the study found.

"What these data tell us is what low-income working parents across this nation already know - that not having health insurance is bad for our nation's children," said Dr. John Lumpkin of the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, which released the study.

Article from Reuters Health

Simplifying AIDS cocktail

IN A MUDDY SLUM in Cambodia, a mother of two shuffles through a handful of pill bottles several times a day for relief from symptoms of the AIDS virus. If she misses a few doses or mistakenly takes too many pills, her health may waver.

In the world of AIDS treatment, this woman represents a dilemma. Powerful drugs can hold the infection at bay, but the pills are costly and complicated to take. Clearly, medicine, and the politics behind it, can do better.

Article from SFGate.com

Free home STD test kits studied

Tuesday, August 3, 2004 Posted: 10:32 AM EDT (1432 GMT)

WASHINGTON (Reuters) -- A free kit that allows women to test themselves for a sexually transmitted disease in much the same way they can test themselves for pregnancy will be studied across Maryland, U.S. researchers say.

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is funding the study at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore to see if women will use the kit.

Article from CNN: Health

FDA approves 'Sculptra' for HIV patients

Tuesday, August 3, 2004 Posted: 6:35 PM EDT (2235 GMT)

WASHINGTON (AP) -- A substance long used to make dissolvable stitches now can help plump up faces left sunken and gaunt by the AIDS virus, the Food and Drug Administration ruled Tuesday.

The FDA's approval of Sculptra, an injectable filler, marks the first treatment specifically for the loss of facial fat common among HIV patients.

Article from CNN:Health

August 3, 2004

Cloning experiment shows cancer reversible

BEIJING, Aug. 2 (Xinhuanet) -- A cloning experiment may show that the human body can reverse cancer. This shows that malignancy is not the inevitable fate of a cancer cell.

  US researchers cloned mouse embryos from a melanoma skin cancer cell, and created healthy adult mice using some of the cloned cancer cells. CRIENGLISH.com reported Monday.

From China View

Drive to eradicate polio is getting back on track

John Donnelly/The Boston Globe The Boston Globe Tuesday, August 3, 2004
An outbreak in Nigeria looks beatable

PRETORIA The resumption of vaccinations against polio in a northern Nigerian state, suspended almost a year ago, has gone better than expected, raising a glimmer of hope that the virus can be eradicated by year's end, officials said Monday.

Article from the International Herald Tribune

Harvard Links Renewable Energy, Public Health

Boston, Massachusetts - August 2, 2004 [SolarAccess.com] A new report from Harvard Medical School links use of renewable energy sources to public health. Entitled "Inside the Greenhouse: The Impacts of CO2 & Climate Change on Public Health in the Inner City" the report shows how renewable energy sources can impact public health by slowing climate change.

From SolarAccess.com

Illinois Strengthens its Public Health Authority

News Story Aug 02 2004
Illinois Gov. Rod R. Blagojevich recently signed a public health bill that strengthens the state's preparedness and response authority in the event of a bioterrorism attack or a naturally occurring infectious disease outbreak.

"While Illinois is one of the best prepared states in the nation to deal with emergencies, this new law will improve the state's means to control the spread of disease, whether it be an outbreak of a dangerously contagious or infectious disease or the result of bioterrorism," the governor said.

The new law expands the power of state government, particularly the Illinois Department of Public Health, in the event of a public health crisis. It is effective immediately.

From Government Technology

August 2, 2004

Bulletin of the World Health Organization

The lastest issue of the Bulletin of the World Health Organization has just been published. To go directly to the August table of contents, click on the following link: http://www.who.int/bulletin/volumes/82/8/en/

Courtesy of Georgia State University Library - Public Health Blog

National, State, and Urban Area Vaccination Coverage Among Children Aged 19--35 Months --- United States, 2003

National, State, and Urban Area Vaccination Coverage Among Children Aged 19--35 Months --- United States, 2003. (July 30, 2004). MMWR 53(29): 658-661.

Each annual birth cohort in the United States comprises approximately 4 million infants. Maintaining the gains in vaccination coverage achieved during the 1990s among these children poses a continuing challenge for public health practitioners. The National Immunization Survey (NIS) provides estimates of vaccination coverage among children aged 19-35 months for each of the 50 states and 28 selected urban areas.

Link from Georgia State University Public Health Blog
Link to Article - MMWR

Breastfeeding can save over 1 million lives yearly, UNICEF reports

If more infants worldwide are given only mother's milk and no food or formula until the age of six months, at least 1.3 million lives could be saved this year, the United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF) said today.

With more than 10 million children dying annually from mainly preventable causes like diarrhoea and pneumonia, the agency said if every baby were exclusively breastfed for the first half-year of life, an estimated 3,500 lives could be saved each day.

UNICEF cited these statistics in calling for greater global commitment to support breastfeeding. ''If a child dies a preventable death it's because mothers and infants are not getting the basic support they need,'' said UNICEF chief Carol Bellamy.

Article from ScienceBlog

Pioneering the Basics for New Kind of Cancer Vaccine

Mayo Clinic and British researchers have developed a new approach to cancer vaccines that purposely kills healthy skin cells to target the immune system against tumors. The new approach has eradicated skin cancer tumors in mice.

The approach and results challenge conventional thinking on the creation of cancer vaccines. Their report on the ''heat shock'' vaccine therapy appears in the August issue of Nature Biotechnology, (http://www.nature.com/nbt/ ). Results are promising because multiple rounds of treatment eradicated skin cancer in all the mice in the study. If this work can be extended to humans, it could have enormous benefits. Skin cancer is currently the most common form of cancer in the United States, with an estimated one million new cases diagnosed annual

Article from Scienceblog

"Hospitals on wheels" to offer farmers health care"

BEIJING, Aug 2 (Xinhuanet) -- Most counties in central and western China will soon have mobile hospitals to ensure basic health care for poverty-stricken rural residents.

The central government has equipped counties in the region with 1,004 coaches to provide door-to-door health care for farmers, reported Monday's China Daily.

The National Development and Reform Commission and the Ministry of Health have invested 230 million yuan (US$27.7 million) in the programme.

Article from China View

Alabama governor orders health study on obesity, nutrition, PE

Associated Press
Published on: 08/02/04

MONTGOMERY, Ala. — Alarmed by childhood obesity, State Superintendent of Education Joe Morton will order a review of vending machine products sold to Alabama students, school nutrition and other health-related issues.

Morton said he will appoint a task force next month on student health and expects its report for the state school board by January.

Article from ajc.com

Cloning experiment shows cancer reversible

BEIJING, Aug. 2 (Xinhuanet) -- A cloning experiment may show that the human body can reverse cancer. This shows that malignancy is not the inevitable fate of a cancer cell.

  US researchers cloned mouse embryos from a melanoma skin cancer cell, and created healthy adult mice using some of the cloned cancer cells. CRIENGLISH.com reported Monday.

They believe this shows that malignancy is not the inevitable fate of a cancer cell.

The finding, published in the journal Genes and Development, points to a new way to treat cancer.

Dr. Rudolf Jaenisch of the Whitehead Institute at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, one of the country's leading experts in cloning, says drugs that target the cancer may prove to be a key in treating a range of cancers.

Article from China View

State's smallpox plan lacks volunteers

July 31, 2004, 1:03 PM EDT

HARTFORD, Conn. -- Public health districts in Connecticut lack volunteers to vaccinate state residents in the event of a smallpox outbreak.

Of the state's 2,000 medical volunteers, 428 are trained and ready to take action if a bioterror attack occurred.

The 3.4 million residents in Connecticut would need to be vaccinated in a 10-day period following a smallpox outbreak, according to the state's plan.

"We know in an emergency people would come out of the woodwork to help," said Dr. James Hadler, head of the state's infectious disease division.

Article From Newsday.com