Popular Articles

Scientists Use Climate Variables And Vegetation Indices To Predict And Mitigate Dengue Epidemics In The American Tropics
Dengue Fever (DF) and Dengue Hemorrhagic Fever (DHF) are the most important vector-borne viral diseases in the World. Around 50-100 million cases appear each year putting 2.5 billion people at risk of suffering this debilitating and sometimes fatal disease. Dengue Fever is prevalent in the Tropics. For that reason, an interdisciplinary team of researchers from the University of Miami (UM) and the University of Costa Rica have used global climatological data and vegetation indices from Costa Rica, to predict Dengue outbreaks in the region.

Statement By HANYS' President Daniel Sisto Regarding The State Department Of Health Hospital-Acquired Infection Report
"Patients, policymakers, and practitioners all agree that reliable, accurate, and consistent quality measures are essential elements in improving health care services. This report is a clear indication that the efforts hospitals continue to make to prevent and control infections are having a positive impact on patient care. Hospitals are actively developing and sharing infection control techniques and best practices, and have engrained in their organizations a zero tolerance policy for preventable patient harm.
News of the day
Ohio Comprehensive Sex Education Program Improves Knowledge Of Safer-Sex Practices, Study Finds
Ohio students who participate in the Cleveland Metropolitan School District"s comprehensive sex education program show more knowledge and better attitudes toward safer-sex practices than students who do not participate, according to a study released Tuesday by Philliber Research Associates, the AP/Dayton Daily News reports. The school district uses a graduated sex education program for students in kindergarten through 12th grade. The program begins with instruction about the human body and inappropriate touching and progresses to discussions about sexually transmitted infections and relationships. The study, which was funded by the AIDS Funding Collaborative in Cleveland, found that more than 75% of parents of children in kindergarten through sixth grade approved of the program.The Collaborative for Comprehensive School Age Health, a coalition of northeast Ohio organizations that opposes abstinence-only sex education, said that the report validates the effectiveness of the city"s program. The study"s release coincides with advocates" efforts against two other sex education-related measures under consideration in the state budget plan. According to the AP/Daily News, the Republican-controlled state Senate wants to require the state Department of Education to apply for federal abstinence-only education funding. The state Senate also wants Ohio to continue to require legislative approval before any changes can be made in health education, although Gov. Ted Strickland (D) and the Democrat-controlled House want to change these requirements, the AP/Daily News reports (AP/Dayton Daily News, 6/23).
Oncology

A New Chapter In The Fight Against Tuberculosis Opened By Unexpected Discovery

A close relative of the microorganism that causes tuberculosis in humans has been found to form spores. This is a sensational finding because researchers have long been convinced that these kinds of bacteria - the mycobacteria - were incapable of forming spores. Leif Kirsebom"s research group at Uppsala University now has photographic proof, obtained while working with the bacteria that causes tuberculosis in fish, to challenge this long-held belief. Their discovery, which has attracted much attention from other scientists, might constitute a new turn in the fight against human tuberculosis. "This opens a completely new chapter in mycobacteriology. Now we can perhaps understand how mycobacteria "hibernate" and cause latent infections," says Leif Kirsebom. To "hibernate", many types of bacteria generate spores. Anthrax bacteria are a well-known example of this. Spores are stabile and can remain inactive for many years. Bacteria will often form spores when faced with harsh conditions, such as a drastic decrease in nutrition. However, the discovery that mycobacteria can produce spores means that even this group of microorganisms has the ability to "hibernate". The Uppsala research group"s pioneering discovery was completely unexpected. In fact, it was the result of a sidetrack in a study on something entirely different, RNA. "In our studies we noticed something strange that we wondered about, but it wasn"t until I received funding to take up a completely new line of research that we took the opportunity to examine more closely the strange finding that we were seeing," says Leif Kirsebom. The microorganism that causes human tuberculosis, Mycobacterium tuberculosis, was identified in 1882 by the German microbiologist, Robert Koch. Every year ten million new cases of tuberculosis are diagnosed and two to three million people die of the disease. Treatment is difficult because the microorganism is becoming increasingly resistant to antibiotics. It is estimated that a third of the world"s population carries the microorganism latently, without any symptoms of the disease. "This means that the disease can break out much later, even decades after the initial infection," explains Leif Kirsebom. Little is known about tuberculosis bacteria during this latent stage of the disease. It has been suggested that they are somehow "sleeping" or that their growth is retarded by the infected host"s immune system. This lack of knowledge about how they "hibernate" applies to the other kinds mycobacteria as well. Mycobacteria are found everywhere in our environment - in groundwater and tap water, in humans and animals. Besides tuberculosis, they cause many other serious diseases, for example Buruli ulcer and leprosy in humans and Johne"s disease in cattle. Even the intestinal disease, Crohn"s, is believed to be linked to mycobacteria. The discovery that mycobacteria can form spores opens entirely new avenues to understanding how they "hibernate" and spread. Leif Kirsebom Uppsala University


Add your comment:
Name:
Site address: http://
Your message:
Enter today\\\\'s date, 2 digits
(spam protection):