Health Care


Research Links Sleep Loss to Weight Gain

”No one’s sure why that happens, but it's thought to be influenced by limited food choices on the night shift, eating at the wrong times of day, and having limited time and energy for exercise,” the study says.

GAO Designates 3 New 'High-Risk' Areas: EPA, FDA, Financial Reg System

In its latest 2009 update for the 111th Congress and President Obama, the agency designated three new high-risk areas, focusing on the U.S. Financial Regulatory System, the FDA's oversight of medical products, and EPA's processes for assessing and controlling toxic chemicals.

Cardiologists Offer Tips to Protect Hearts in a Bad Economy

A bad economy can take its toll on the heart with increased stress, poor eating, and forgoing healthful activities like going to the gym when money is tight. UCLA cardiologists suggest the following tips to help protect the heart during this time of financial uncertainty.

New Study Adds to Bisphenol A Concern

The chemical, known as BPA, is used in plastics and can linings, and it has been linked to heart disease. This study shows BPA stays in the human body longer than scientists had thought.

FDA Warns Consumers Against Dietary Supplement Containing Undeclared Drug

The Food and Drug Administration is warning consumers not to take Venom HYPERDRIVE 3.0, a product sold as a dietary supplement and containing sibutramine, a controlled substance with risks for abuse or addiction and poses potential safety risks.

New Study Adds to Bisphenol A Concern

The chemical, known as BPA, is used in plastics and can linings, and it has been linked to heart disease. This study shows BPA stays in the human body longer than scientists had thought.

Better Procedures Raised SCA Survival in Japan

Training citizens in CPR and letting EMS personnel use AEDs in the field without physicians' online oversight improved response time and increased bystander-initiated CPR, according to research reported in Circulation: Journal of the American Heart Association.

doctor advising an overweight patient

Improved Survey Shows 'Huge Burden of Diabetes,' NIH Says

"We're facing a diabetes epidemic that shows no signs of abating, judging from the number of individuals with pre-diabetes," said lead author Catherine Cowie, Ph.D., of the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases,



Shriners Hospitals for Children to Kick Off Year-Long Burn Prevention Campaign

During Burn Awareness Week, Feb. 1-7, Shriners Hospitals for Children will kick-off a year-long campaign focused on preventing gasoline burn injuries. A special Web site has been developed for the campaign, www.burnawarenessweek.org.

AMGA Unveils Health Care Reform Priorities

With the advent of the new administration and the 111th Congress, the American Medical Group Association (AMGA) recently announced its health care reform principles. Beginning with a call for universal access to health care, AMGA's priorities focus on systemic changes to improve the quality of health care for America's patients.

National Heart Failure Awareness Week Approaches

In recognition of National Heart Failure Awareness Week, Feb. 8-14, the American Association of Heart Failure Nurses (AAHFN) is encouraging everyone to learn the symptoms of heart failure and offering tips on maintaining a healthy heart.

Survey: Many Employees Frequently Go to Work When Ill

More than four out of 10 (45 percent) professionals recently surveyed admitted they very frequently go to work when they feel sick. However, only 17 percent of managers polled believe the practice is this common.

EMTs transporting an injured patient

MMWR Paper Explains 2006 EMS Decision Scheme

This information should help communities understand and utilize the scheme, which is an algorithm used by about 800,000 EMS personnel nationwide to decide the most appropriate destination for injured patients.

Tips for Choosing the Right Nursing Home

Although a new nursing home quality rating system has several dimensions, experts say it fails to address perhaps the most important question: Are the residents who live there happy?

HICPAC to Get Update on Health Worker Vaccinations

The CDC advisory committee's Feb. 12 meeting in Atlanta also will include a follow-up discussion on the HHS Healthcare-Associated Infections elimination plan.

Study Finds MRSA in Midwestern Swine, Workers

The first study documenting methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) in swine and swine workers in the United States has been published by University of Iowa researchers.

APIC Expands Targets of Infection-Prevention Effort for 2009

New elimination guides on preventing ventilator-associated pneumonia, MRSA in long-term care settings, catheter-associated urinary tract and bloodstream infections, and Acinetobacter baumannii are in the works.

CDC Revises Field Triage Guidelines

Key revisions include vehicle crash damage criteria that can help determine which patients may require care at a trauma center.

a stressed employee

Employers Unsure About Impact of Migraines on Productivity

In a survey of large employers released by the non-profit Midwest Business Group on Health, 91 percent of respondents recognize that migraine headaches impact productivity, yet most don't track the costs or severity of the problem in their covered populations.

House Labor Committee Now 30-18 in Democrats' Favor

The membership of the full committee and its subcommittees was settled last night, with Chairman George Miller, D-Calif., saying strengthening the middle class and protecting retirement savings remain top priorities.

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