Friday, October 23, 2015

Progress reported on drug to regrow hair

Two FDA-approved drugs regrow hair in lab mice; could it lead to a cure for baldness?

From: http://www.cbsnews.com/news/progress-reported-on-drug-to-regrow-hair/

Lab makes progress on treatment for baldness

Researchers at Columbia University Medical Center hope their work will someday help bald men regrow hair

From: http://www.cbsnews.com/videos/lab-makes-progress-on-treatment-for-baldness/

Is that candy or Ecstasy? Halloween warnings spook parents

Facebook is abuzz with warnings about drugs disguised as candy, but how real is the threat?

From: http://www.cbsnews.com/news/halloween-warning-is-that-candy-or-ecstasy/

Many teens admit they ride with drunk drivers

"Sometimes one strong voice in the crowd can change things quite a bit."

From: http://www.cbsnews.com/news/many-teens-admit-they-ride-with-drunk-drivers/

Paintball, BB Guns Can Severely Injure Kids

Serious eye injuries, organ damage can occur, researchers warn



From: http://www.webmd.com/children/news/20151023/paintball-bb-guns-can-severely-injure-kids-study-finds?src=RSS_PUBLIC

Brain Chemistry May Change to Cope With Pain

Researchers document increase in opiate receptors in arthritis patients



From: http://www.webmd.com/brain/news/20151023/brain-chemistry-may-change-to-cope-with-pain?src=RSS_PUBLIC

Illnesses, Deaths Spur FDA Warning on Hep C Drugs

Cautionary label will be added to Viekira Pak and Technivie, agency says



From: http://www.webmd.com/hepatitis/news/20151023/illnesses-deaths-spur-fda-warning-on-hepatitis-c-drugs?src=RSS_PUBLIC

Pilot implementation of first malaria vaccine recommended by WHO advisory groups

The World Health Organization’s Strategic Advisory Group of Experts on Immunization (SAGE) and the Malaria Policy Advisory Committee (MPAC) jointly recommended pilot projects to understand how to best use a vaccine that protects against malaria in young children.

“This was a historic meeting with two of WHO’s major advisory committees working together to consider current evidence about this vaccine,” said Professor Fred Binka, acting chair of MPAC. “The committees agreed that pilot implementations should be the next step with this vaccine.”

From: http://www.who.int/entity/mediacentre/news/releases/2015/sage/en/index.html

Michael Jackson's dermatologist ​Dr. Arnold Klein dies

He was dermatologist to the stars, including Elizabeth Taylor, Dolly Parton and Carrie Fisher

From: http://www.cbsnews.com/news/michael-jacksons-dermatologist-dr-arnold-klein-dies/

Can you really be addicted to cheese?

Researchers say certain highly processed foods may get people hooked the same way as drugs

From: http://www.cbsnews.com/news/can-you-be-addicted-to-cheese/

School staff saves student who collapsed at gym

When a Utah teen collapsed during gym class, faculty members rushed to the rescue and jump-started his heart

From: http://www.cbsnews.com/videos/school-staff-saves-student-who-collapsed-at-gym/

Vice principal saves student's life

Quick action helped middle schooler survive after collapsing in class

From: http://www.cbsnews.com/news/vice-principal-saves-students-life/

Your Asthma Survival Guide for Allergies

You can live a full and active life even when you have allergic asthma. Follow these tips from WebMD.



From: http://www.webmd.com/asthma/features/survive-allergy-season-guide?src=RSS_PUBLIC

Rare identical triplets born in Baltimore

Parents have their hands full with three identical baby boys

From: http://www.cbsnews.com/news/rare-identical-triplets-born-in-baltimore/

Plague began infecting humans earlier than thought

DNA of lethal bacteria has been found in human remains dating back thousands of years

From: http://www.cbsnews.com/news/plague-began-infecting-humans-earlier-than-thought/

Notion Obese Fare Better vs. Chronic Ills Refuted

Prior research suggesting that excess weight may offer protection called flawed



From: http://www.webmd.com/diet/obesity/20151022/study-refutes-notion-that-obese-fare-better-against-chronic-ills?src=RSS_PUBLIC

FDA Approves New Pancreatic Cancer Drug

Agency says medication can be used in combination with others for advanced cases



From: http://www.webmd.com/cancer/pancreatic-cancer/news/20151022/fda-approves-new-pancreatic-cancer-drug?src=RSS_PUBLIC

Kids at Growing Risk of Deadly 'Superbug'

Researchers aim to halt spread of antibiotic-resistant bacteria found in hospitals and long-term care centers



From: http://www.webmd.com/children/news/20151022/kids-at-growing-risk-of-deadly-superbug-infection-study?src=RSS_PUBLIC

Are black men receiving worse prostate cancer care?

A new study finds racial disparities in the cost and quality of treatment

From: http://www.cbsnews.com/news/black-men-prostate-cancer-care/

A checkup for the checkup: Do you really need a yearly physical?

In the United States, annual physicals are part of the fabric of our health care system. For adults, even perfectly healthy ones, an annual visit to the doctor has long been considered to be the foundation of good care. But recently, experts have begun questioning whether our collective belief in this ritual is reasonable. Are the benefits of annual care actually as great as we think? Can patients get the benefits of the yearly checkup in other ways?

In an editorial recently published in The New England Journal of Medicine, Drs. Ateev Mehrotra and Allan Prochazka explored the complex issues surrounding annual physical exams. In the name of improving “value” in health care, they argue that these routine visits should not continue.

Evaluating the benefits and risks of the annual checkup

As physicians and health care policy experts, the authors understand that it will be difficult for all of us to change this practice. Although a number of professional guidelines recommend that physicians should no longer follow the tradition of the annual exam, data show that the frequency of these exams hasn’t diminished. Both doctors and patients are strongly wedded to the practice, and surveys show that the majority believe they should continue.

But what are the true benefits of this practice? Careful reviews of several large studies have shown that these annual visits don’t make any difference in health outcomes. In other words, being seen by your doctor once a year won’t necessarily keep you from getting sick, or even help you live longer. And some of the components of an annual visit may actually cause harm. For example, lab tests and exams that are ordered for healthy patients (as opposed to people with symptoms or known illnesses) are statistically more likely to be “false positives” — that is, when test results suggest a problem that doesn’t exist. Even if these inaccurate findings affect only a tiny percentage of the more than 200 million adults who would undergo such exams, the monetary, practical, and emotional costs are huge.

Drs. Mehrotra and Prochazka indicate that reducing the number of annual exams would save both money and time. The time that primary care doctors currently spend on these visits could be used to address urgent needs and expand access to health care for those in need. They recognize that this change will be a hard sell, in part because many doctors and patients perceive the annual visit as a critical opportunity to cement the doctor-patient relationship and a way to ensure that people receive appropriate screenings and preventive care.

Three steps to a better model of care

In order to encourage this shift, the authors propose three steps. First, they recommend a new type of visit solely to focus on the doctor-patient relationship. This would allow those who are new to a physician to have an initial visit to establish a relationship, and allow others to be seen on some routine interval (perhaps every 3 years or so) to maintain it. The emphasis would be more on medical and social history, and less on the exam or screening laboratory tests.

Second, they acknowledge that if the annual visit is to be discarded, primary care doctors will need to find a more proactive way to monitor their patients’ attention to preventive care. They suggest that waiting for patients to keep their annual visits to review this is too “passive” an approach, and encourage practices to shift to “active engagement” of their patients. Ways to do this might include: online risk assessments, waiting-room questionnaires, and a review of preventive care at any visit to the doctor.

Finally, they suggest that in order for doctors and patients to embrace this shift, payers must make changes as well. The authors recommend that health plans and government programs no longer pay for annual visits or use regular checkups as a measure of health care quality.

The demise of the yearly checkup will feel like a loss to many patients and their doctors. But the authors encourage us to think creatively about ways to maintain the important values of this visit in new and more efficient ways. Their “checkup” suggests that the “checkup” needs a major surgery. To push the metaphor, if we follow through on their suggestions, then like any procedure, it will be healthier in the end, but we will all likely feel some pain as we go through it.

This discussion isn’t just theoretical for me. As a primary care doctor, I agree that the benefits of the yearly checkup can and should be achieved in other ways. At the same time, I know that making these changes with my patients will be difficult. Discontinuing the annual physical will be felt as a loss, as a form of abandonment, for some. The most powerful way to address this will be to recognize and name that loss, and to let patients know that the important parts of the annual will endure: attention to their needs, attention when they need it, and attention to their routine preventive care — just all without the annual visit.

The post A checkup for the checkup: Do you really need a yearly physical? appeared first on Harvard Health Blog.



From: Amy Ship, MD http://www.health.harvard.edu/blog/a-checkup-for-the-checkup-do-you-really-need-a-yearly-physical-201510238473

Fecal transplants need better regulation, experts say

Treatment for serious gut infections shows promise, if you can overcome the "ick factor"

From: http://www.cbsnews.com/news/fecal-transplants-need-better-regulation-experts-say/

This World Polio Day, we want to say thank you



From: World Health Organization http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8uraJcdC1FI

Aging: What to expect



From: http://www.mayoclinic.org/healthy-lifestyle/healthy-aging/in-depth/aging/art-20046070

Headaches and hormones: What's the connection?



From: http://www.mayoclinic.org/diseases-conditions/chronic-daily-headaches/in-depth/headaches/art-20046729