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GP Dies After Contracting Swine Flu - British Medical Association Statement
Commenting on the news that a GP has died after contracting swine flu, Dr Laurence Buckman, Chairman of the BMA"s GPs Committee, said:
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Growing Concern Over MRSA Transmission Between Pets And Their Owners
A review published in the July edition of The Lancet Infectious Diseases discusses septic syndromes and bite-related infections caused by cats and dogs. It is written by Dr Richard Oehler, of the University of South Florida College of Medicine, Tampa, FL, USA, and his team. The review informs on how MRSA (methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus) infections are increasing. They are transmitted between dogs or cats and their human handlers, and vice-versa, and cause infections of the skin and soft-tissue. Surgical infections are the most common. Drugshop to buy zoloft online and other pills.
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UK Tops The List Of 213 Countries At Extreme Risk To The Spread Of Swine Flu
A Warwick Business School professor and one of the founders of global risks specialist, Maplecroft, has released three new maps and indices revealing the countries most at risk from an influenza pandemic.
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Recent Releases: Human-Rights And Health; WHO's TB Report; Drug-Resistant TB

Lancet Study Finds No Association Between Human-Rights Treaties and Health Status The ratification of primary human-rights treaties is not associated with health status changes, according to a team of Canadian researchers, who add the findings "should not be interpreted to mean that human-rights treaties have no effect on important health issues." Published in the Lancet, the findings are based on the analysis of health data gathered from 170 countries. "We suggest the need for stringent requirements for ratification of treaties, improved accountability mechanisms to monitor compliance of states with treaty obligations, and financial assistance to support the realisation of the right to health," the authors conclude (Palmer et al., Lancet, 6/6). NEJM Perspective Examines WHO"s Annual TB Report Peter Donald and Paul van Helden of the University of Stellenbosch, examine the WHO"s 13th annual tuberculosis report in a New England Journal of Medicine perspective piece and ask whether the new statistics "represent the turn of the tuberculosis tide and provide reason for cautious optimism?" They write that the emergence of drug-resistant strains of TB "could hardly have come at a worse time - in the midst of the worst economic conditions in a century." They also note the establishment of the Global Laboratory Initiative as a of optimism and conclude, "The tuberculosis tide has turned, but maintaining the momentum will require a financial and political commitment that may be beyond the capability of many struggling communities" (Donald/van Helden, NEJM, 6/4). Lancet Study, Comment Examine Drug-Resistant TB A Global Project on Anti-Tuberculosis Drug Resistance study, recently published in the Lancet, found that multi-drug resistant TB "remains a threat" to TB control in provinces in China and countries of the former Soviet Union. The study also found that drug-resistant TB data are "unavailable in many countries, especially in Africa," which highlights the "need to develop easier methods for surveillance of resistance" in TB, according to the study (Wright et al., Lancet, 5/30). In a related comment in the Lancet, Martien Borgdorff of the University of Amsterdam and Peter Small of the Institute for Systems Biology and the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, examine the data from the study. They write that although "we know how to prevent the emergence" of drug-resistant TB, the "bad news is that this measure is not being done in many affected countries." The comment includes ideas for improved surveillance. "[N]ew instruments and innovative health-care systems" are the "solution" for drug-resistant TB, but it will require "additional res and a commitment to innovation from traditional donors, and from countries with emerging economies that are working to address their own domestic TB problems," according to Borgdorff and Small (Borgdorff/Small, Lancet, 5/30). This information was reprinted from globalhealth.kff.org with kind permission from the Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation. You can view the entire Kaiser Daily Global Health Policy Report, search the archives and sign up for email delivery at globalhealth.kff.org. © Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation. All rights reserved.


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