Health Care


Integrate Health Promotion with Safety Initiatives for Healthier Workplaces, Study Says

“While we have made great strides in creating separate cultures of safety and wellness in the United States in recent decades, the two have yet to meet and merge into a truly sustainable culture of health," said Pamela Hymel, M.D., the paper’s lead author.

Public Workshop Set on Drug Shortages

The Food and Drug Administration will host it from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Sept. 26 in Silver Spring, Md.

Approximately 92 percent of people who experience an out-of-hospital cardiac event die.

Study: 92 Percent of Out-of-Hospital Cardiac Arrest Victims Die

The majority of people who experience an OHCA event do not receive bystander-assisted cardiopulmonary resuscitation or other timely interventions that improve the likelihood of survival to hospital discharge.

Genes Play Greater Role in Heart Attacks than Stroke, Study Says

“We found that the association between one of your parents having a heart attack and you having a heart attack was a lot stronger than the association between your parent having a stroke and you having a stroke,” said senior author Peter M. Rothwell, M.D., Ph.D.

Children left alone in vehicles during hot weather are at risk of a serious injury or death from hyperthermia.

NHTSA Steps Up Efforts to Prevent Child Deaths in Hot Cars

With record high temperatures nationwide and reports of 21 hyperthermia-related child deaths already this summer, NHTSA recently convened a roundtable with key stakeholders to help step up efforts to prevent these deaths.

WHO Appoints Patient Safety Envoy

The World Health Organization's director-general appointed Sir Liam Donaldson to the post on July 21.

Depression Rates More Common in High-Income Countries, Study Says

Women were twice as likely as men to suffer depression, and the major contributing factor was loss of a partner because of death, divorce, or separation.

NIOSH Releases First World Trade Center Scientific, Medical Review

This first periodic review provides a summary of the current scientific and medical findings in the peer-reviewed literature about exposures resulting from the Sept.11, 2001, terrorist attacks in New York City and cancer studies.



WHO Warns Against Use of TB Blood Tests

More than a million of these inaccurate blood tests are carried out annually to diagnose active TB, often at great financial cost to patients.

Optimism Associated with Lower Risk of Stroke, Study Says

In an observational study, a nationally representative group of 6,044 adults over age 50 rated their optimism levels on a 16-point scale. Each point increase in optimism corresponded to a 9 percent decrease in acute stroke risk over a two-year follow-up period.

RoSPA Provides Fire, Carbon Monoxide Safety Tips for Summer Camping

"Rarely does a summer pass without reports of serious burns sustained during camping trips, and sadly we do hear about fatalities from fires that have ripped through tents or caravans, often accelerated due to the explosion of fuel canisters," said Peter Cornall, RoSPA’s head of leisure safety.

Tall Women at Heightened Risk for Cancer, Study Says

Possible reasons for the link between height and cancer risk include hormone levels related to childhood growth, and in turn to cancer risk in later life. It was also suggested that the link could simply be down to the fact that taller people have more cells in their bodies, and so a greater chance of developing cancerous cell changes.

Miami-Dade Fire Rescue ALS Team Triumphs

They took first place July 8 at the 2011 Bill Shearer International ALS/BLS Competition.

Nurse Charged in UK Hospital Deaths

Greater Manchester Police have referred five recent deaths at Stepping Hill Hospital to the coroner. Nurse Rebecca Leighton was charged July 22 with six counts of causing criminal damage with intent to endanger life or being reckless as to whether life would be endangered and one count of theft of medicine from the hospital.

NIOSH Highlights Rising Sharps Injuries

The latest posted data from the Exposure Prevention Information Network (EPINet™) is from 2007 reports, which showed the injury rates rose for teaching but not nonteaching facilities.

FDA Approves Vaccines for 2011-2012 Flu Season

The vaccine formulation protects against the three virus strains that surveillance indicates will be most common during the upcoming season and includes the same virus strains used for the 2010-2011 influenza season.

‘Find It – Fix It’ Ergonomics Challenge Is On

Organizations are asked to submit their best workplace improvements, highlighting the implementation of a creative, sustainable, and high-impact ergonomic solution.

Combination of Viruses Could Create New Flu Strain: Study

In their current study, the researchers looked at the compatibility of the 2009 pandemic pH1N1 virus—which has some genetic characteristics that may allow it to reassort more easily than other influenza viruses—with an influenza strain known as H9N2.

Police Probing Three Suspicious Deaths at UK Hospital

The staff at Stepping Hill Hospital notified authorities July 12 after the third patient died. Insulin was injected into saline solution bags, police say.

"The number of drugs in short supply is increasing at an alarming rate," American Hospital Association President and CEO Rich Umbdenstock said.

Most Hospitals Battling Drug Shortages: AHA

Most executives at 820 community hospitals said in a survey released July 12 that they are delaying treatment and experiencing higher costs because of the shortages.

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