Community Forum top_calendar.gif top_members.gif top_faq.gif top_search.gif top_home.gif    

Go Back   Community Forum > The Internet Medical Journal > News
User Name
Password
FAQ Members List Calendar Search Today's Posts Mark Forums Read


Reply
 
Thread Tools Search this Thread Display Modes
  #1  
Old August 12th, 2002, 19:05
sysadmin sysadmin is offline
Administrator
 
Join Date: 2001
Posts: 1,085
July 28 - August 3, 2002


Saturday, August 03, 2002

Researchers Influenced by Pharmaceutical Company Sponsorship
These authors looked at studies published in BMJ and found that those researchers who did a study funded by a pharmaceutical company or other for-profit organization were significantly more likely to conclude that the intervention (e.g. new pharmaceutical) was superior. Comment: money talks, and it appears to even affect scientific researchers. Pharmaceutical company sponsorship of clinical trials is not an ideal situation, but if these companies don't sponsor research, who will? [ BMJ 2002;325:249 ( 3 August ) ]  


Alternatives to Hormone Replacement Therapy
This review article on alternatives to hormone replacement therapy states that exercise, black cohosh, and soy may all reduce vasomotor symptoms. Soy has also been shown to decrease lipid levels and increase bone density when taken in large doses. The evidence for a benefit of taking St. John's wort is equivocal. Comment: raloxifene seems to be a promising alternative at this point. [ article ]  


Louisiana Declares West Nile Emergency
An outbreak of West Nile virus--transmitted by mosquitos--has infected 58 and killed 4 Louisiana residents this summer. Comment: an excellent review on this has been published online by the CDC at http://www.cdc.gov/ncidod/dvbid/westnile/index.htm. [ article ]  


Friday, August 02, 2002

Terbinafine Best Treatment for Toenail Fungus
This review found that terbinafine (Lamisil) was more effective than itraconazole (Sporanox) and also topical treatments in eradicating toenail fungus. [ article ]  


Advertisement

Click Here






Thursday, August 01, 2002

Totally Smoke-Free Workplaces Increase the Quit Rate
This meta-analysis found that totally smoke-free workplaces have the effect of decreasing tobacco consumption by nearly 4%. Partially smoke-free workplaces, where smoking is restricted to certain areas only, were not shown to decrease tobacco consumption. Making all workplaces smoke-free in the US would end up costing the tobacco industry approximately $1.7 billion USD a year. Making all workplaces smoke-free in the United Kingdom would have the effect of decreasing tobacco company revenues by approximately £310m a year. [ article ]  


Wednesday, July 31, 2002

US Senate Approves Bill Allowing US Pharmacists to Buy Cheap Drugs From Canada
The US senate has approved a measure that would allow US pharmacists and drug wholesalers to import prescription drugs from Canada. Currently, many drugs cost from 25% to 80% lower in Canada than in the US. [ article ]  


Viagra Successfully Used in Treatment of Newborn Pulmonary Hypertension
A doctor in India is under fire for successfully using sildenafil (Viagra) in the treatment of life-threatening newborn pulmonary hypertension. Comment: this is but one of the uses that sildenafil may be beneficial in. The medication was used to dilate the blood vessels supplying the babies' lungs. [ article ]  


Tuesday, July 30, 2002

DrKoop.com Sold for $186000 US
The website founded by former surgeon general C Everett Koop has been sold for $186000 USD. It was once valued at $1 billion. [ article ]  


Positive Thinking Extends Life
This study of 660 volunteers over the age of 50 found that those who viewed aging positively lived an average of 7.5 years longer than those who regretted the passing years. [ article ]  


Advertisement

Click here!






Monday, July 29, 2002

Aerobic Exercise Helps Fight Fibromyalgia
This study of 132 patients with fibromyalgia found that aerobic exercise was better than relaxation and flexibility exercises in increasing patients' perceived health status at 3 months. At 1 year, fewer patients in the aerobic exercise group fulfilled the criteria for fibromyalgia. They also had greater reductions in tender point counts. Comment: it isn't surprising that improving a person's overall health leads to a reduction in fibromyalgia. [ article ]  


Sunday, July 28, 2002

AAPS Opposes Model Health Powers Act

Thursday, July 25, 2002. Newsmax.Com Wires- The Association of American Physicians and Surgeons is pressing its opposition to the federally sponsored Model State Emergency Health Powers Act (MEHPA), which opponents charge would give authorities the right to enforce quarantines, vaccinate people, seize and destroy property without compensation, and ration medical supplies, food and fuel in a public-health emergency, USA Today reports.


The law was "developed as a model for the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and provided to state legislatures last year," according to USA Today, which reports that "fewer than a third of the states have adopted laws to give governors and state health officials powers to respond to a bioterrorism attack or other public-health emergencies."


One reason? The act "goes far beyond bioterrorism," Andrew Schlafly of the conservative Association of American Physicians and Surgeons told USA Today. "Unelected state officials can force treatment or vaccination of citizens against the advice of their doctors."


Schlafly's organization is part of what USA Today called a "broad coalition of opponents," which includes civil libertarians and conservative physicians who agree that the Act would violate individual rights and give government too much power. Their objections have caused lawmakers in a number of states to scuttle the bill.


The act "gives governors and state health officials a blank check to impose the most draconian sorts of measures," Barry Steinhardt of the American Civil Liberties Union told USA Today. He said it's "designed to bring quarantine and other laws into the 21st century, but in many ways it is a throwback."


The feds claim that laws such as the proposed act are needed because they give authorities the guidance and legal ability they need to make quick decisions in an emergency involving contagious or deadly pathogens. They say that most state health emergency laws haven't been updated since polio tore through the population a half-century ago.


Schlafly, who calls the act "Clintonesque," reports that "Seven states have passed portions of MEHPA, while more than double that have rejected it. No state has passed all, or even nearly all, of MEHPA. So we've done well in fighting it."


States that rejected or shelved MEHPA, Schlafly said, are Washington, Idaho, Wyoming, Nebraska, Kansas, Oklahoma, Wisconsin, California, Illinois, Kentucky, Mississippi and Connecticut.


The states that effectively rejected MEHPA by passing an alternative were Louisiana, South Dakota, Vermont and Utah. Schlafly said that he thinks the worst state in dealing with the act is Florida, where he is fighting to have the state rescind its adoption of MEHPA. Here are his rankings of the seven MEHPA states, beginning with what he calls "the worst."



  1. Florida - The public health department (not necessarily the elected governor) may declare a health emergency based on incidents that may result in substantial risk of harm to public health; then the health department has the power to use law enforcement to forcibly quarantine or by "any means necessary" vaccinate, without any recognized exceptions.
  2. Maryland - The governor may declare a "catastrophic health emergency," limited to an imminent threat of extensive loss of life or of serious disability cause by exposure to a deadly agent, defined as anthrax, Ebola, plague, smallpox and other listed causes, or mustard or nerve gas or deadly radiation, and then act on the crisis.
  3. Arizona - The governor may declare an emergency only if there is a substantial risk of a significant number of human fatalities or permanent or long-term disability, and may quarantine only if it is the least restrictive means, which expressly includes the possibility of detention in one's residence.
  4. Georgia - The governor must call a special session of the Legislature to approve or reject a declaration of a public health emergency, which requires a "high probability" of harm to a "large number" of people; vaccination rules must permit "consideration of the opinion of a person's personal physician as to whether the vaccination is medically appropriate or advisable for such person"; and unless there is "an epidemic or immediate threat thereof, the vaccination requirement shall not apply to any person who objects in writing thereto on grounds that such immunization conflicts with his religious beliefs."
  5. New Hampshire - The governor may declare an emergency, which the Legislature may revoke; the initial period of emergency is only 21 days, and a court order is required to quarantine.
  6. Minnesota - Sunsets [lapses] in 2004; the commissioner of health must apply for a court order within 24 hours after detaining someone, and must then release the detainee if a court order is not received within 48 hours.
  7. Maine - Sunsets in 2003; the health department must prove by clear and convincing evidence at a hearing, within 48 hours of detaining someone, that the "person has been exposed to or is at significant medical risk of transmitting a communicable disease that poses a serious imminent risk to public health or safety and there are no less restrictive alternatives available to protect the public health and safety"; and the court must issue a ruling within 24 hours of the hearing to either release the person or detain him for a period of no longer than 30 days.
  
Reply With Quote
Reply


Thread Tools Search this Thread
Search this Thread:

Advanced Search
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

vB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is On
Forum Jump

Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
August 2002 sysadmin News 0 September 2nd, 2002 20:07
August 25 - August 31, 2002 sysadmin News 0 September 2nd, 2002 20:01
August 11 - August 17, 2002 sysadmin News 0 September 2nd, 2002 19:56
August 2002 sysadmin News 0 September 2nd, 2002 19:44
Confronting the New Health Care Crisis sysadmin News 0 August 14th, 2002 19:28


All times are GMT -8. The time now is 06:03.


Powered by: vBulletin Version 3.0.3
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.



Be careful about reading health books. You may die of a misprint.  
- Mark Twain (1835 - 1910)

We are committed to your good health. That means that while we provide editorial medical information, we must insist that you work with your own doctor in regards to your personal health issues. All content on Medjournal.Com is strictly editorial. It constitutes medical opinion, NOT ADVICE. We do not endorse or recommend the content of Medjournal.com or the sites that are linked FROM or TO Medjournal.com. Use common sense by consulting with your doctor before making any lifestyle changes or other medical decisions based on the content of these web pages. Medjournal.Com and the Internet Medical Journal shall not be held liable for any errors in content, advertising, or for any actions taken in reliance thereon.