54,021 - 54,040 of 112,168 Results

  • Federal Panel Recommends HPV Vaccine For Boys

    The organization that helps set vaccination standards for the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention voted overwhelmingly to immunize boys; girls have been getting the vaccine for several years to help guard against cervical cancer.

  • Quarter Of Medicare Drug Plans Get Poor Ratings

    Federal officials gave negative assessments to more than 25 percent of these prescription drug plans. In the Washington area, that number is even higher. Also in the news, Medicare's database comparing hospital patient safety.

  • White House Urges Community Health Centers To Hire Vets

    The Obama administration on Tuesday called on community health centers to hire 8,000 military veterans in the next three years. The plan would draw on funds already included in the health law to boost primary care at these clinics.

  • CLASS Act Post Mortem Continues

    Even though the administration made clear it no longer intends to proceed with the implementation of the long-term care insurance program, Republican opponents are pushing hard for its actual repeal. Meanwhile, supporters continue to ask questions about why the administration opted to not move forward.

  • First Edition: October 26, 2011

    Today's early morning highlights from the major news organizations, including reports about the public's distrust of government, the super committee's progress -- or lack thereof and the latest from the campaign trail.

  • Opinion Pieces Respond To U.N. Special Rapporteur’s Report On Reproductive Health Policies

    Several opinion pieces respond to a report (.pdf) presented on Monday to the U.N. General Assembly by Arnand Grover, U.N. special rapporteur for the Right to Health, that "considers the impact of criminal and other legal restrictions on abortion; conduct during pregnancy; contraception and family planning; and the provision of sexual and reproductive education and information," according to the report summary. The report also states, "Realization of the right to health requires the removal of barriers that interfere with individual decision-making on health-related issues and with access to health services, education and information, in particular on health conditions that only affect women and girls. In cases where a barrier is created by a criminal law or other legal restriction, it is the obligation of the State to remove it" (8/3).

  • Positive Outlook, Support For Change In Polio Programs Important For Eradication Efforts

    A new report from the Global Polio Eradication Initiative (GPEI) "has concluded that the major obstacle to eradication is not political or scientific or monetary, but something seemingly mundane -- bad management," health reporter Andre Picard writes in his Globe and Mail column, adding that "the panel offers concrete proposals for what needs to be done to close the deal." He continues, "The fundamental problem though, according to the expert panel, is that the global eradication effort is overeager to celebrate the successes (like India) and ignore the failures (like Pakistan)."

  • States’ Legal Challenge Focuses High Court On Medicaid Expansion

    It is expected that the high court will soon decide which among the key issues and lawsuits challenging the health reform measure it will hear. In related news, media outlets offer local angles on how health law implementation is going and how it might impact specific states.

  • WHO Warns Of Water-Borne Disease Risk For Thailand Flood Victims

    The WHO on Saturday said hundreds of thousands of flood victims in Thailand are at risk of water-borne diseases and infections, though no major outbreaks have been reported, Agence France-Presse reports. "The spread of communicable diseases such as diarrhea, respiratory illness and conjunctivitis among displaced flood victims in shelters was a key concern, the country's WHO representative Maureen Birmingham told AFP," adding, "Flood-affected people also faced an increased risk of skin fungal infections and leptospirosis, a bacterial infection spread through contaminated water," according to the news service (10/23).

  • As Malaria Vaccine Research Goes On, Continue To Support Existing Prevention Tools To Save Lives

    In this Huffington Post opinion piece, Tido von Schoen-Angerer, executive director of the Doctors Without Borders Access to Essential Medicines Campaign, responds to the results of the RTS,S malaria vaccine clinical trial announced last week, writing, "A malaria vaccine that works would be a major breakthrough. But while the latest advance toward the development is scientifically important, there are several reasons to be cautious about the difference this vaccine could make, on the basis of current results."

  • Universal HIV Screening In ERs Not Practical, French Study Suggests

    Universal HIV screening in the ER is not a practical option, researchers from France's Emergency Department HIV-Screening Group write in a study published in the Archives of Internal Medicine on Monday, Reuters reports. According to the study, "[m]ore than 1,100 people would have to be offered HIV tests in the emergency room to find just one new infection," Reuters notes.

  • DRC Must Rethink Preparedness Strategy To Curb Cholera Outbreaks, Health Experts Say

    "With almost 17,000 cases reported in the latest nationwide cholera outbreak, the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) must rethink its preparedness strategy to curb future outbreaks, health experts told IRIN," the news service reports. "According to Kossi Ayigan of the WHO, the health cluster coordinator, the emergency response phase of the current cholera outbreak is drawing to a close and should be followed by firm action on proper sanitation and provision of safe drinking water by the government and its development partners," according to IRIN.