Curated News: Featured: MedWire

Filters close
23-Jun-2016 9:00 AM EDT
Heading to the Hospital? Even with Insurance, It May Cost You $1,000 or More, New Study Finds
Michigan Medicine - University of Michigan

Even if you have what you might think of as good health insurance, your next hospital stay could cost you more than $1,000 out of your own pocket. And that amount has gone up sharply in recent years – a rise of more than 37 percent just for straightforward hospital stays for common conditions.

Released: 24-Jun-2016 5:05 PM EDT
Health Tips for Traveling Abroad with Kids
University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), Health Sciences

Before your family heads to Mexico, Asia or beyond, do a little planning ahead of time to keep everyone healthy during their journey. Dr. Nava Yeganeh, an assistant professor of pediatric infectious diseases and director of the Pediatric International Travel and Adoption Clinic at Mattel Children’s Hospital UCLA, explains three important strategies.

Released: 24-Jun-2016 12:05 PM EDT
Primary Care Visits Result in More Colon Cancer Screening, Better Followups
UT Southwestern Medical Center

People who visit their primary care physicians are more likely to get potentially life-saving colon cancer screenings and follow up on abnormal stool blood test results – even in health systems that heavily promote mail-in home stool blood tests that don’t require a doctor visit, a study involving UT Southwestern population health researchers shows.

Released: 22-Jun-2016 1:05 PM EDT
Australia 20 Years After Gun Reform -- No Mass Shootings, Declining Firearm Deaths
University of Sydney

Since gun law reform and the Firearms Buyback program 20 years ago, Australia has seen an accelerating decline in intentional firearm deaths and an absence of fatal mass shootings, the Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA) reports today in a landmark study.

22-Jun-2016 8:00 AM EDT
Memory Loss Caused by West Nile Virus Explained
Washington University in St. Louis

Many West Nile encephalitis survivors suffer long-term neurological problems such as memory loss. New research from Washington University School of Medicine shows that the patients’ own immune systems may have destroyed parts of their neurons, and that intervening in the immune response may help.

14-Jun-2016 11:05 AM EDT
Microbiota Affect the Rate of Transplant Acceptance and Rejection
University of Chicago Medical Center

Researchers from the University of Chicago have shown that microbiota—the bacteria, viruses and other microbes living on the skin and in the digestive system—play an important role in the body’s ability to accept transplanted skin and other organs.

Released: 20-Jun-2016 9:00 AM EDT
Amid Terrorism Fears, Promising Leads in Hunt for Radiation Antidote
University of Virginia Health System

Researchers have identified promising drugs that could lead to the first antidote for radiation exposure that might result from a dirty bomb terror attack or a nuclear accident such as Chernobyl.

Released: 20-Jun-2016 9:00 AM EDT
High Blood Sugar Could Mean Lower Risk of One Type of Brain Tumor
Ohio State University

In a surprising twist, benign brain tumors that have previously been tied to obesity and diabetes are less likely to emerge in those with high blood sugar, new research has found.

Released: 17-Jun-2016 1:05 PM EDT
Rapid Medicaid Expansion in Michigan Didn’t Reduce Access to Primary Care
Michigan Medicine - University of Michigan

Despite predictions that expanding Medicaid would crowd doctor’s offices with new patients, and crowd out patients with other kinds of insurance, a new University of Michigan study finds no evidence of that effect.

Released: 15-Jun-2016 1:05 PM EDT
Piping Hot Drinks May Lead to Cancer of the Esophagus
University of Southern California (USC)

Drinking piping hot coffee, tea and the caffeine-infused beverage yerba mate probably causes cancer, the World Health Organization announced Wednesday.

Released: 15-Jun-2016 11:05 AM EDT
Antidepressive Treatment During Pregnancy Can Affect Newborn Brain Activity
University of Helsinki

According a new study, fetal exposure to commonly used SRI drugs may affect brain activity in newborns. The researchers suggest that the effects of drugs on fetal brain function should be assessed more carefully, Indications for preventive medication should be critically evaluated, and non-pharmacological interventions should be the first-line treatment for depression and anxiety during pregnancy.

9-Jun-2016 4:30 PM EDT
Diabetes Drug Lowers Risk of Cardiovascular Complications, Kidney Disease
University of North Carolina Health Care System

According to data from the large, multinational LEADER clinical trial, the glucose-lowering drug liraglutide safely and effectively decreases the overall risk of heart attack, stroke, or cardiovascular death, kidney disease, and death from all causes for people with type 2 diabetes.

10-Jun-2016 1:00 PM EDT
Botox’s Sweet Tooth Underlies Its Key Neuron-Targeting Mechanism
University of California, Irvine

The Botox toxin has a sweet tooth, and it’s this craving for sugars – glycans, to be exact – that underlies its extreme ability target neuron cells in the body … while giving researchers an approach to neutralize it.

Released: 13-Jun-2016 9:00 AM EDT
From Nanotechnology, A Better Prognostic Tool For Brain Cancer
Yale Cancer Center/Smilow Cancer Hospital

A new nano-fabricated platform for observing brain cancer cells provides a much more detailed look at how the cells migrate and a more accurate post-surgery prognosis for brain cancer (glioblastoma) patients.

6-Jun-2016 10:00 AM EDT
Study Sets Standards for Evaluating Pluripotent Stem Cell Quality
Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center

As the promise of using regenerative stem cell therapies draws closer, a consortium of biomedical scientists reports about 30 percent of induced pluripotent stem cells they analyzed from 10 research institutions were genetically unstable and not safe for clinical use. In a study published June 9 by the journal Stem Cell Reports, the multi-institutional research team reports on the comprehensive characterization of a large set of induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs).

Released: 9-Jun-2016 11:05 AM EDT
A New Way for Prevention of Pathogenic Protein Misfolding
Aarhus University

Incorrectly folded proteins can cause a variety of diseases. Danish researchers have found a solution for preventing this misfolding.

8-Jun-2016 10:00 AM EDT
Concussion Outcome Predicted Using Advanced Imaging
Albert Einstein College of Medicine

Researchers, led by Michael Lipton, M.D., Ph.D., at Albert Einstein College of Medicine and Montefiore Health System, using an advanced imaging technique, have been able to predict which patients who’d recently suffered concussions were likely to fully recover.

7-Jun-2016 10:55 PM EDT
Yuck Factor May Boost Hand Hygiene Compliance
Henry Ford Health

The yuck factor may be an effective tool for boosting hand hygiene compliance among health care workers, according to a study at Henry Ford Hospital in Detroit. Infection Prevention and Control specialists observed that showing magnified images of bacteria found on things common in the health care environment like a mouse pad or work station, even a person’s hand, swayed workers in four patient care units to do a better job of cleaning their hands. Compliance rates improved on average by nearly 24 percent.

6-Jun-2016 5:00 AM EDT
A Disturbing Number of Teens Show Evidence of Early Hearing Damage, Prompting a Warning From Tinnitus Researchers
McMaster University

New research into the ringing-ear condition known as tinnitus indicates an alarming level of early, permanent hearing damage in young people who are exposed to loud music, prompting a warning from a leading Canadian researcher in the field.

1-Jun-2016 3:05 PM EDT
Almost All Food and Beverage Products Marketed by Music Stars Are Unhealthy, According to New Study
NYU Langone Health

NYU Langone researchers publish first study to quantify nutritional quality of food and drinks endorsed by music celebrities popular among teens.



close
2.41999