From: Newsletter Phys.org <not-for-reply@physorg.com>
Date: Fri, Sep 12, 2014 at 2:36 AM
Subject: Science X Newsletter Thursday, Sep 11
To: Pascal Alter <pascal.alter@gmail.com>
Dear Pascal Alter,
Here is your customized Phys.org Newsletter for September 11, 2014:
Spotlight Stories Headlines
- Multiscreen social TV would enrich traditional viewing experience- Astronomers pinpoint 'Venus Zone' around stars
- RobotsLAB offers tiny BMW Z4 for NAO robot to drive around (w/ Video)
- New species of electrons can lead to better computing
- Ceramics don't have to be brittle: Materials scientists are creating materials by design
- 'Hot Jupiters' provoke their own host suns to wobble
- Shark-munching Spinosaurus was first-known water dinosaur
- Scientists map white matter connections within the human brain
- Chemists create 'assembly-line' for organic molecules
- NASA's newest human spacecraft on the move
- Microbes evolve faster than ocean can disperse them
- Facebook posts reveal personality traits, but changes complicate interpretation
- Cutting the cord on soft robots
- Microscopic diamonds suggest cosmic impact responsible for major period of climate change
- How salt causes buildings to crumble
Astronomy & Space news
Astronomers pinpoint 'Venus Zone' around starsSan Francisco State University astronomer Stephen Kane and a team of researchers presented today the definition of a "Venus Zone," the area around a star in which a planet is likely to exhibit the unlivable conditions found on the planet Venus. | |
'Hot Jupiters' provoke their own host suns to wobbleBlame the "hot Jupiters." These large, gaseous exoplanets (planets outside our solar system) can make their suns wobble when they wend their way through their own solar systems to snuggle up against their suns, according to new Cornell University research to be published in Science, Sept. 11. | |
Lurking bright blue star caught—The last piece of a supernova puzzleA team led by Gastón Folatelli at the Kavli IPMU, the University of Tokyo, has found evidence of a hot binary companion star to a yellow supergiant star, which had become a bright supernova. The existence of the companion star had been predicted by the same team on the basis of numerical calculations. This finding provides the last link in a chain of observations that have so far supported the team's theoretical picture for this supernova. The results are published in the Astrophysical Journal Letters and have wide implications for our knowledge of binary systems and supernova mechanisms. | |
ESA's bug-eyed telescope to spot risky asteroidsSpotting Earth-threatening asteroids is tough partly because the sky is so big. But insects offer an answer, since they figured out long ago how to look in many directions at once. | |
NASA's newest human spacecraft on the moveNASA is one step closer to launching its newest spacecraft designed for humans. | |
Mars Curiosity Rover Arrives at Martian Mountain(Phys.org) —NASA's Mars Curiosity rover has reached the Red Planet's Mount Sharp, a Mount-Rainier-size mountain at the center of the vast Gale Crater and the rover mission's long-term prime destination. | |
Study helps unravel mysteries of the venusian atmosphere (w/ Video)(Phys.org) —Underscoring the vast differences between Earth and its neighbor Venus, new research shows a glimpse of giant holes in the electrically charged layer of the Venusian atmosphere, called the ionosphere. The observations point to a more complicated magnetic environment than previously thought – which in turn helps us better understand this neighboring, rocky planet. | |
NASA research gives guideline for future alien life searchAstronomers searching the atmospheres of alien worlds for gases that might be produced by life can't rely on the detection of just one type, such as oxygen, ozone, or methane, because in some cases these gases can be produced non-biologically, according to extensive simulations by researchers in the NASA Astrobiology Institute's Virtual Planetary Laboratory. | |
Russian and American astronauts return to EarthTwo Russian cosmonauts and an American astronaut returned to Earth on Thursday after spending more than six months working together aboard the International Space Station, as tensions between their countries soared over the Ukraine crisis. | |
Image: Rosetta mission selfie at cometUsing the CIVA camera on Rosetta's Philae lander, the spacecraft have snapped a 'selfie' at comet 67P/Churyumov–Gerasimenko. | |
Image: Mirror array in Large Space SimulatorThis vast enclosure, made to appear larger still by an array of mirrors at its end, is ESA's Large Space Simulator. | |
Jellyfish flames on the ISSFire is inanimate, yet anyone staring into a flame could be excused for thinking otherwise: Fire dances and swirls. It reproduces, consumes matter, and produces waste. It adapts to its environment. It needs oxygen to survive. | |
Virgin Galactic pushes first flight—againVirgin Galactic has again pushed back its timeline for launching space tourism flights from southern New Mexico's Spaceport America. | |
Solar storm heads Earth's way after double sun blastsTwo big explosions on the surface of the sun will cause a moderate to strong geomagnetic storm on Earth in the coming days, possibly disrupting radio and satellite communications, scientists said Thursday. | |
NASA image: Expedition 40 Soyuz TMA-12M landingGround support personnel are seen at the landing site after the Soyuz TMA-12M spacecraft landed with Expedition 40 Commander Steve Swanson of NASA, and Flight Engineers Alexander Skvortsov and Oleg Artemyev of the Russian Federal Space Agency (Roscosmos) near the town of Zhezkazgan, Kazakhstan on Thursday, Sept. 11, 2014. |
Medicine & Health news
Scientists map white matter connections within the human brain(Medical Xpress)—To see, think or feel, the 100 billion neurons in our brain must exchange messages. These are transmitted over some 100 trillion specialized connections, known collectively as the "connectome." Most connections are extremely short, carrying information a few hundred-thousandths of an inch between nearby neurons. But many important connections are much longer, winding as much as a foot from one end of the brain to the other. | |
Why does the placebo response work in treating depression?(Medical Xpress)—In the past three decades, the power of placebos has gone through the roof in treating major depressive disorder. In clinical trials for treating depression over that period of time, researchers have reported significant increases in patient's response rates to placebos—the simple sugar pills given to patients who think that it may be actual medication. | |
Compound protects brain cells after traumatic brain injuryA new class of compounds has now been shown to protect brain cells from the type of damage caused by blast-mediated traumatic brain injury (TBI). Mice that were treated with these compounds 24-36 hours after experiencing TBI from a blast injury were protected from the harmful effects of TBI, including problems with learning, memory, and movement. | |
Team discovers neurochemical imbalance in schizophreniaUsing human induced pluripotent stem cells (hiPSCs), researchers at Skaggs School of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences at University of California, San Diego have discovered that neurons from patients with schizophrenia secrete higher amounts of three neurotransmitters broadly implicated in a range of psychiatric disorders. | |
Intestinal bacteria needed for strong flu vaccine responses in miceMice treated with antibiotics to remove most of their intestinal bacteria or raised under sterile conditions have impaired antibody responses to seasonal influenza vaccination, researchers have found. | |
You can classify words in your sleepWhen people practice simple word classification tasks before nodding off—knowing that a "cat" is an animal or that "flipu" isn't found in the dictionary, for example—their brains will unconsciously continue to make those classifications even in sleep. The findings, reported in the Cell Press journal Current Biology on September 11, show that some parts of the brain behave similarly whether we are asleep or awake and pave the way for further studies on the processing capacity of our sleeping brains, the researchers say. | |
Tipping the balance of behavior(Medical Xpress)—Humans with autism often show a reduced frequency of social interactions and an increased tendency to engage in repetitive solitary behaviors. Autism has also been linked to dysfunction of the amygdala, a brain structure involved in processing emotions. Now Caltech researchers have discovered antagonistic neuron populations in the mouse amygdala that control whether the animal engages in social behaviors or asocial repetitive self-grooming. This discovery may have implications for understanding neural circuit dysfunctions that underlie autism in humans. | |
Smokers who consume too much sodium at greater risk of developing rheumatoid arthritisA new study published online in the journal Rheumatology today indicates that the interaction between high sodium intake and smoking is associated with a more than doubled risk of developing rheumatoid arthritis (RA). | |
'Fat shaming' doesn't encourage weight lossDiscrimination against overweight and obese people does not help them to lose weight, finds new UCL research funded by Cancer Research UK. | |
Binge drinking in pregnancy can affect child's mental health and school resultsBinge drinking during pregnancy can increase the risk of mental health problems (particularly hyperactivity and inattention) in children aged 11 and can have a negative effect on their school examination results, according to new research on more than 4,000 participants in the Children of the 90s study at the University of Bristol by a team of researchers from the universities of Nottingham, Bristol, Leicester, Oxford, Queensland (Australia) and Sheffield. The research is published today in the journal European Child & Adolescent Psychiatry. | |
More needed to protect our sportspeople from brain injury, experts sayTwo University of Birmingham academics are calling for more research to be carried out looking at how the brains of sportspeople – including children – react when they receive a blow to the head. | |
South Korea to hike cigarette price by 80%South Korea on Thursday proposed a steep 80 percent hike in cigarette prices to cut consumption in a nation with one of the world's highest male smoking rates. | |
High levels of physical activity linked to better academic performance in boysA recent Finnish study shows that higher levels of physical activity are related to better academic achievement during the first three school years particularly in boys. | |
Model to improve diabetes management well-received by primary care physiciansNurses certified in diabetes education can be integrated successfully into primary care physician offices in an effort to improve the health of people with diabetes, according to a University of Pittsburgh Graduate School of Public Health evaluation funded by the American Diabetes Association. | |
Mushroom compound with vitamin E suppresses prostate cancer tumoursStopping Australia's most commonly diagnosed cancer - prostate cancer - in its tracks is the goal of scientists around the world. | |
Housework brings no mental health benefitsHousework just doesn't scrub up as a physical activity that brings any mental health benefits, say researchers from Deakin University's Centre for Physical Activity and Nutrition Research (C-PAN). | |
Study examines potential link between assisted reproduction and autism(Medical Xpress)—When prospective parents have trouble conceiving and decide to seek medical help, they typically experience more than a little anxiety and have a host of questions: What are the potential risks to the mother and the baby? What kinds of diseases or other problems are associated with assisted reproduction? And, is one of those problems autism? | |
Report finds scale and cost of dementia escalatesDementia UK: The Second Edition, prepared by King's College London and the London School of Economics for the Alzheimer's Society, finds that the cost of dementia to the UK has hit £26 billion a year and that people with dementia, their carers and families shoulder two-thirds of the cost themselves. The charity calls for the government to end the artificial divide between health and social care which unfairly disadvantages people with dementia. | |
Malaria medications from wasteAll of the best currently available pharmaceuticals against malaria can now be produced in pure form using a single process, even from the waste of the plant-extraction. The method which has been developed allows for the complete production of anti-malaria medicines, in a continuous fashion, utilizing one reactor at one location. The process can also utilize both artemisinin and the plant waste product to produce these medicines, allowing for more material to be used and medicines produced without having to increase the amount of material farmed. The ability to utilize multiple sources for production builds on the photochemical reactor developed two years ago by the same scientists in Berlin. In collaboration with Prof. Andreas Seidel Morgenstern from the Max Planck Institute for Dynamics of Complex Technical Systems, it is possible, for the first time, to produce multiple medicines - pure - in a continuous and automated fashion u! tilizing a single process. The purity of the final compounds exceeds the limits set by certification authorities such as the WHO and the FDA. | |
Endometriosis a burden on women's livesEndometriosis often takes a long time to be diagnosed and affects all areas of a women's life, a study has found. | |
Breast milk is brain foodYou are what you eat, the saying goes, and now a study conducted by researchers at UC Santa Barbara and the University of Pittsburgh suggests that the oft-repeated adage applies not just to physical health but to brain power as well. | |
Neuroscientist explores mechanism that can cause deficit in working memoryAmy Griffin, associate professor of psychological and brain sciences at the University of Delaware, has received a five-year, $1.78 million grant from the National Institute of Mental Health to support her research into the brain mechanisms of working memory. | |
Is the pattern of brain folding A 'fingerprint' for schizophrenia?Anyone who has seen pictures or models of the human brain is aware that the outside layer, or cortex, of the brain is folded in an intricate pattern of "hills", called gyri, and "valleys", called sulci. | |
Steroid hormone to fight age-related diseasesThrough the study of the roundworm, Caenorhabditis elegans, the team led by Hugo Aguilaniu has discovered a hormone that enhances longevity and reduces fertility, thus reproducing the effects of an extreme diet. The scientists, based at the "Laboratoire de Biologie Moléculaire de la Cellule" (LBMC - CNRS/ENS de Lyon/Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1), now intend to explore its mode of action in the hope of finding new ways to combat age-related diseases. Their work is published on 11 September in Nature Communications. | |
Say 'ahh' to let your smartphone check for Parkinson's diseaseSmartphones are designed to be curious. Having already learned about your friendships, your family and the pattern of your daily routine, designers are now interested in your health and fitness. | |
FDA approves weight-loss drug Contrave (Update)U.S. regulators have greenlighted a new weight-loss drug called Contrave, the third in a string of approvals for prescription medications aimed at the nation's 78 million obese adults. | |
Structure of enzyme seen as target for ALS drugsInvestigators from the School of Medicine at The University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio have determined the first high-resolution structure of an enzyme that, if partially inhibited, could represent a new way to treat most cases of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS, also called Lou Gehrig's disease). | |
New superfoods could help key protein keep bodies healthyA new generation of new superfoods that tackle heart disease and diabetes could be developed following research into a protein that helps keep cells in our bodies healthy. | |
Cutting health-care costs one appendix at a timeConsumer price comparison is almost nonexistent in the U.S. health care system, but a new study shows that when given the choice between a less costly "open" operation or a pricier laparoscopy for their children's appendicitis, parents were almost twice as likely to choose the less expensive procedure – when they were aware of the cost difference. | |
Mice and men share a diabetes geneA joint work by EPFL, ETH Zürich and the CHUV has identified a pathological process that takes place in both mice and humans towards one of the most common diseases that people face in the industrialized world: type 2 diabetes. | |
Chemical signals in the brain help guide risky decisionsA gambler's decision to stay or fold in a game of cards could be influenced by a chemical in the brain, suggests new research from the University of British Columbia. | |
A non-toxic strategy to treat leukemiaA study comparing how blood stem cells and leukemia cells consume nutrients found that cancer cells are far less tolerant to shifts in their energy supply than their normal counterparts. The results suggest that there could be ways to target leukemia metabolism so that cancer cells die but other cell types are undisturbed. | |
Bully victims more likely to suffer night terrors and nightmares by age 12Children who are bullied at ages 8-10 are more likely to suffer from sleep walking, night terrors or nightmares by the time they are 12 years old. | |
Review: Rapid antigen tests accurate for strep diagnosis(HealthDay)—Rapid antigen diagnostic tests (RADTs) can be used for accurate diagnosis of group A streptococcal (GAS) pharyngitis for management of sore throat in primary care settings, according to a study published online Sept. 8 in Pediatrics. | |
ACCR: oral olaparib plus chemo beneficial in ovarian cancer(HealthDay)—For heavily pretreated, advanced ovarian cancer patients, an oral tablet inhibitor of poly ADP ribose polymerase, olaparib, can be safely administered with a weekly carboplatin/paclitaxel regimen, according to a phase I study presented at the Marsha Rivkin Center for Ovarian Cancer Research-AACR Ovarian Cancer Research Symposium, held Sept. 8 to 9 in Seattle. | |
Single random biopsy ups detection of cervical disease(HealthDay)—In women with negative colposcopy, a single random biopsy increases detection of high-grade cervical disease, according to a study published online Sept. 8 in Obstetrics & Gynecology. | |
Study finds high protein diets lead to lower blood pressureAdults who consume a high-protein diet may be at a lower risk for developing high blood pressure (HBP). The study, published in the American Journal of Hypertension, by researchers from Boston University School of Medicine (BUSM), found participants consuming the highest amount of protein (an average of 100 g protein/day) had a 40 percent lower risk of having high blood pressure compared to the lowest intake level. | |
Increased access to nature trails, forest lands–not nature preserves–could decrease youth obesity rates, study findsAs youth obesity levels in America remain at record high levels, health professionals and policymakers continue to search for solutions to this national health issue. Now, researchers at the University of Missouri and the University of Minnesota have found that local governments can help reduce youth obesity levels by increasing the amount and type of public lands available for recreation. Sonja Wilhelm Stanis, an associate professor of parks, recreation and tourism in the MU College of Agriculture, Food and Natural Resources, found that counties with more non-motorized nature trails and forest lands have higher levels of youth activity and lower youth obesity, while counties with more nature preserves have lower activity levels. | |
Ticks that vector Lyme disease move west into North DakotaAccording to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control, there are more than 300,000 cases of Lyme disease in the U.S. each year. Last year, most Lyme disease cases reported to the CDC were concentrated heavily in the Northeast and upper Midwest, with 96 percent of cases in 13 states. In fact, the disease gets its name from the northeastern town of Lyme, Connecticut, where it was first discovered. | |
Not enough vitamin B1 can cause brain damageA deficiency of a single vitamin, B1 (thiamine), can cause a potentially fatal brain disorder called Wernicke encephalopathy. | |
Ebola paper demonstrates disease transmission rateNew research from Arizona State University and the University of Tokyo that analyzes transmission rates of Ebola in West African countries shows how rapidly the disease is spreading. | |
Bioethicists call for greater first-world response to Ebola outbreakAmid recent discussion about the Ebola crisis in West Africa, Penn Medicine physicians say that high-income countries like the United States have an obligation to help those affected by the outbreak and to advance research to fight the deadly disease—including in the context of randomized clinical trials of new drugs to combat the virus. The two new editorials, which will appear "online first" in JAMA on September 11th, are written by faculty members in the Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania and the Department of Social Science, Health and Medicine at King's College London. | |
Proactive monitoring of inflammatory bowel disease therapy could prolong effectivenessProactive monitoring and dose adjustment of infliximab, a medication commonly used to treat inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), could improve a patient's chances of having a long-term successful response to therapy, a pilot observational study at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center concludes. | |
Diverse gut bacteria associated with favorable ratio of estrogen metabolitesPostmenopausal women with diverse gut bacteria exhibit a more favorable ratio of estrogen metabolites, which is associated with reduced risk for breast cancer, compared to women with less microbial variation, according to a new study published in the Endocrine Society's Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism (JCEM). | |
Study finds teenagers are far more sensitive than adults to the immediate effect or reward of their behaviorsDon't get mad the next time you catch your teenager texting when he promised to be studying. He simply may not be able to resist. | |
New study may shed light on molecular mechanisms of birth defects among older womenDartmouth researchers studying cell division in fruit flies have discovered a pathway that may improve understanding of molecular mistakes that cause older women to have babies with Down syndrome. | |
New genetic targets discovered in fight against muscle-wasting diseaseScientists have pinpointed for the first time the genetic cause in some people of an incurable muscle-wasting disease, Emery-Dreifuss muscular dystrophy (EDMD). | |
Study links genetic mutation and melanoma progressionDartmouth researchers have found that the genetic mutation BRAFV600E, frequently found in metastatic melanoma, not only secretes a protein that promotes the growth of melanoma tumor cells, but can also modify the network of normal cells around the tumor to support the disease's progression. Targeting this mutation with Vemurafenib reduces this interaction, and suggests possible new treatment options for melanoma therapy. They report on their findings in "BRAFV600E melanoma cells secrete factors that activate stromal fibroblasts and enhance tumourigenicity," which was recently published in British Journal of Cancer. | |
Inflammation may be key to diabetes, heart disease linkInflammation may be the reason high blood sugar levels damage blood vessels, raising the possibility that anti-inflammatory medications might someday be used to lower the risk of blood vessel disease in people with diabetes, according to a study presented at the American Heart Association's High Blood Pressure Research Scientific Sessions 2014. | |
Age and diabetes duration linked to risk of death and macrovascular complicationsNew research published in Diabetologia (the journal of the European Association for the Study of Diabetes) shows that age (or age at diagnosis) and duration of diabetes disease are linked to the risk of death and marcovascular complications (those in larger blood vessels), whereas only diabetes duration is linked to the risk of microvascular complications (in smaller blood vessels such as those in the eyes). | |
Commensal bacteria help orchestrate immune response in lungStudies in mice demonstrate that signals from the bacteria that harmlessly—and often beneficially—inhabit the human gastrointestinal tract boost the immune system's ability to kill a major respiratory pathogen, Klebsiella pneumoniae, according to a paper published online ahead of print in the journal Infection and Immunity. | |
Primary care doctors reluctant to provide genetics assessment in routine carePrimary care providers report many challenges to integrating genetics services into routine primary care, according to research published today in Genetics in Medicine. | |
Physician, system factors affect CAD detection rates(HealthDay)—Nonclinical factors account for considerable variation in the detection of obstructive coronary artery disease (CAD) with coronary angiogram, according to a study published online Sept. 2 in Circulation: Cardiovascular Quality & Outcomes. | |
White matter measure predicts longer concussion recovery(HealthDay)—A measure of white matter in the brain, particularly in males, is an independent predictor of longer time to symptom resolution (TSR) after mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI), according to a study published in the September issue of Radiology. | |
Study reveals profile of patients most likely to delay hospice enrollment until final days of life(Medical Xpress)—One in six cancer patients enroll in hospice only during their last three days of life, according to a new study from a team from the Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania. Their findings, published online last month in the Journal of Clinical Oncology (JCO) also reveal a profile of patients who may be most at risk of these late admissions. | |
One-minute point-of-care anemia test shows promise in new studyA simple point-of-care testing device for anemia could provide more rapid diagnosis of the common blood disorder and allow inexpensive at-home self-monitoring of persons with chronic forms of the disease. | |
Meditation may mitigate migraine miseryMeditation might be a path to migraine relief, according to a new study by researchers at Wake Forest Baptist Medical Center. | |
Yogic breathing shows promise in reducing symptoms of post-traumatic stress disorderOne of the greatest casualties of war is its lasting effect on the minds of soldiers. This presents a daunting public health problem: More than 20 percent of veterans returning from the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan have post-traumatic stress disorder, according to a 2012 report by RAND Corp. | |
Diabetes researchers find faster way to create insulin-producing cellsUniversity of British Columbia, in collaboration with BetaLogics Venture, a division of Janssen Research & Development, LLC, has published a study highlighting a protocol to convert stem cells into insulin-producing cells. The new procedure could be an important step in the fight against Type 1 diabetes. | |
Few mild-to-moderate Parkinson's disease patients suffer from malnutrition, yet almost one-third are at riskPatients with Parkinson's disease (PD) can experience difficulties with food preparation and ingestion, which could contribute to poor nutrition and place them at risk for malnourishment. Published studies have also suggested that PD is associated with low weight, however, few studies included control groups. A report published in the Journal of Parkinson's Disease counters this conclusion in patients with mild-to-moderate PD, finding that the incidence or risk of malnutrition is no different for patients with mild-to-moderate PD compared to healthy controls. | |
One in four people with diabetes worldwide live in China, but a new approach could help transform their careDiabetes has become a major public health crisis in China, with an annual projected cost of 360 billion RMB (nearly 35 billion British pounds) by 2030, but a new collaborative approach to care that uses registries and community support could help improve diabetes care, according to a new three-part Series about diabetes in China published in The Lancet Diabetes & Endocrinology. | |
Australian man isolated in Ebola scareAn Australian was isolated in hospital Thursday after he displayed symptoms of Ebola following a trip to Africa but health officials said it is unlikely he has the deadly virus. | |
NFL needs consciousness-raising campaign on domestic abuse, say expertsThe NFL has reached a tipping point with its problem of player violence against women, says a Stanford scholar who believes the football league needs a culture shock. | |
Using antibiotics to help heart problemsA research team from the University of Bristol is looking at whether an antibiotic has the potential to prevent or treat irregular heartbeats brought on by other medicines, thanks to a grant from national charity Heart Research UK. | |
Long acting HIV drugs to be developedHIV drugs which only need to be taken once a month are to be developed at the University of Liverpool in a bid to overcome the problem of 'pill fatigue'. | |
Ebola's ripple effectsThe race to stamp out West Africa's Ebola epidemic is not just about saving lives. It's also about stemming an assault on society that could include food shortages and mass migration, morphing from a medical emergency into a broad humanitarian crisis. | |
Mapping could help stop Ebola's spreadIn the fight against Ebola, mapping fruit bat habitats could be one important step, says a geoinformatics researcher at Sweden's Royal Institute of Technology. | |
Violent words, not just deeds, leave a lasting mark on our kidsShe showed me the cigarette burns on her arms. Her eyes seemed empty as she slumped in the chair, answering questions with defeated shrugs. Finally she explained that her stepfather had held her down and burnt her arm many times with his cigarette, calling her a "useless bitch" because she had accidentally spilled his beer. | |
VALUE study reports on accreditation statusThe Intersocietal Accreditation Commission (IAC) announced today that researchers from the University of Miami Miller School of Medicine have published a manuscript in Vascular Medicine analyzing a random national sample of Medicare beneficiary data to determine the outpatient vascular testing facilities' accreditation status and geographic location. The study manuscript entitled, "Accreditation Status and Geographic Location of Outpatient Vascular Testing Facilities Among Medicare Beneficiaries: The VALUE (Vascular Accreditation, Location & Utilization Evaluation) Study" is the first peer-reviewed presentation of the results. Findings indicate that the proportion of outpatient vascular testing facilities that are IAC accredited is low and varies by region. | |
Australian hospital patient tests free of EbolaAn Ebola false alarm at Australia's premier beachside tourist city on Thursday triggered cancelled vacation bookings, early hotel checkouts and children missing school, an official said. | |
Puerto Ricans who inject drugs among Latinos at highest risk of contracting HIVHigher HIV risk behaviors and prevalence have been reported among Puerto Rican people who inject drugs (PRPWID) since early in the HIV epidemic. Now that HIV prevention and treatment advances have reduced HIV among PWID in the US, researchers from New York University's Center for Drug Use and HIV Research (CDUHR) examined HIV-related data for PRPWID in Puerto Rico (PR) and Northeastern US (NE) to assess whether disparities among PRPWID continue. | |
From Ebola front line: Teaching how to stay safeHe's traveled to the sites of worrisome outbreaks of SARS, bird flu, MERS. But the Ebola outbreak that's spiraled out of control in West Africa presents new challenges for even a veteran infectious disease doctor—starting with how to stay safe. | |
In US, calls mount for major scale-up to Ebola crisisThe world response to the deadly Ebola crisis in West Africa needs a major scale-up that should include military flights for delivering supplies, US lawmakers and leading doctors said Thursday. | |
Many kidney failure patients have concerns about pursuing kidney transplantationConcerns about pursuing kidney transplantation are highly prevalent among kidney failure patients, particularly older adults and women, according to a study appearing in an upcoming issue of the Clinical Journal of the American Society of Nephrology (CJASN). Reducing these concerns may help decrease disparities in access to transplantation. | |
African American women receive less breast reconstruction after mastectomyDartmouth researchers have found that African American women are 55 percent less likely to receive breast reconstruction after mastectomy regardless of where they received their care. They report on their findings in "The influence of race/ethnicity and place of service on breast reconstruction for Medicare beneficiaries with mastectomy," recently published in SpringerPlus. | |
FDA panel backs Novo Nordisk injection for obesityFederal health experts say a diabetes drug from Novo Nordisk should be approved for a new use in treating obesity. | |
Ebola survivor gives blood to ill AmericanA survivor of Ebola has donated blood to an American aid worker infected with the disease, and doctors treating him at a Nebraska hospital say he has responded well to the aggressive treatment. | |
Fourth Sierra Leonean doctor infected with EbolaAnother doctor from Sierra Leone who has tested positive for Ebola will be evacuated for medical treatment, an official said Thursday, making her the first citizen of a hard-hit country to be treated abroad. |
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