Health Highlights: Dec. 21, 2009
Title: Health Highlights: Dec. 21, 2009
Category: Health News
Created: 12/21/2009 12:10:00 PM
Last Editorial Review: 12/22/2009
Title: Health Highlights: Dec. 21, 2009
Category: Health News
Created: 12/21/2009 12:10:00 PM
Last Editorial Review: 12/22/2009
Title: Weight and Smoking Linked to Skin Aging
Category: Health News
Created: 12/22/2009 9:49:00 AM
Last Editorial Review: 12/22/2009 9:49:40 AM
Title: Natural Treatment for RSV Infection?
Category: Health News
Created: 12/22/2009 10:48:00 AM
Last Editorial Review: 12/22/2009 10:48:52 AM
Title: Cardiac Rehab: Go, Go, Go
Category: Health News
Created: 12/22/2009 10:56:00 AM
Last Editorial Review: 12/22/2009 10:56:07 AM
Title: Gene Therapy May Stall Inherited Emphysema
Category: Health News
Created: 12/22/2009 11:00:00 AM
Last Editorial Review: 12/22/2009 11:00:53 AM
A New Year’s wish list for authors, reviewers, readers—and ourselves.
This issue of PLoS Medicine features two Policy Forums on blindness. In the first, Paul Courtright and colleagues (e177) argue that the patterns of global childhood blindness are changing. With reductions in nutritional and infectious causes of blindness, intrauterine and genetic causes have become more important, suggesting a need to reassess research, training, and programmatic requirements. In the second, Susan Lewallen and Amir Bedri Kello (e184) argue that human resources management will be crucial in reaching the global goal of eliminating avoidable blindness in sub-Saharan Africa by the year 2020. Also, in this month’s Editorial the PLoS Medicine editors reflect upon how much the publishing of research relies on a foundation of trust between authors, editors, peer reviewers, and readers. They argue that this relationship sometimes becomes tried, tested, and even broken. Thus, in the spirit of New Year’s resolutions, the editors look to the future and set down some guidelines for authors, readers, reviewers, and editors themselves to maintain and renew the trusting foundations that are essential to publishing research.
Image Credit: Ray Lopez, DownTown Pictures at flickr.com
Olivier Neyrolles and Lluis Quintana-Murci review the evidence on why tuberulosis notification is twice as high in men as in women in most countries.
In this Policy Forum, the Bellagio Essential Surgery Group, which was formed to advocate for increased access to surgery in Africa, recommends four priority areas for national and international agencies to target in order to address the surgical burden of disease in sub-Saharan Africa.
Tanja Stocks and colleagues carry out an analysis of six European cohorts and confirm that abnormal glucose metabolism is linked with increased risk of cancer overall and at specific sites.
HealthDay – (HealthDay News) — Here are the latest clinical trials, courtesy
of ClinicalConnection.com: