Popular Articles
Stretch Mark Cream

Managing Acute Post-operative Pain In Hospital
Health professionals caring for patients with acute post-operative pain can improve pain management with a new drug use evaluation toolkit developed by the National Prescribing Service Ltd (NPS).
generic viagra online
AXURA(R)/AKATINOL(R) Enhances Communication Abilities In Patients With Alzheimer÷´s Disease - for A Longer Integration In Social And Family Life
Memantine improves functional communication skills in patients with moderate to severe Alzheimer"s disease (AD), noticeable by caregivers. These are the study results discussed at the International Conference on Alzheimer"s Disease (ICAD). The data of two recent clinical trials support that AXURA®/AKATINOL® - an uncompetitive NMDA receptor antagonist - effects language skills in AD patients and improves cognitive abilities and functional communication. Leading neurologists emphasize that improvement of communication skills is a meaningful treatment target. Communication breakdown can trigger feelings of frustration in Alzheimer"s patients and these feelings may manifest as behavioral instability. This in turn is known to be a major of caregiver"s burden and distress. Drugshop to buy zoloft online and other pills.
News of the day
To Maintain Normal Daily Function, Those With Insomnia Need Increased Brain Activation
According to a research abstract presented at SLEEP 2009, the 23rd Annual Meeting of the Associated Professional Sleep Societies, patients suffering from chronic primary insomnia (PIs) have higher levels of brain activation compared to normal sleepers during a working memory test.
Endocrinology

Young Scots From Deprived Backgrounds More Likely To Die From Heart Disease

In Scotland, young men and women (ages 35-44) from socially deprived groups are around six times more likely to die from heart disease than the most affluent individuals in the same age range, according to research published on bmj.com today. The results reveal that this disparity diminishes with age but only disappears for people who are 85 or over. The number of people dying from heart disease in Scotland has halved in the last two decades but the country still has some of the highest deaths in Europe and globally, says the study. And while the overall number of deaths from heart disease in Scotland is decreasing, this decline is slowing down in young adults, especially those from deprived groups, say the authors. The research team, led by Professor Simon Capewell, a clinical epidemiologist from the University of Liverpool, argue that the slow down is not due to poor treatment provision but is linked to unhealthy social environments and high risk behaviour like smoking and poor diet. They maintain that these factors are more common in individuals from deprived backgrounds and that this study reveals major social inequalities in Scotland. The authors surveyed death rates from heart disease in Scotland from 1986 to 2006. The study included men and women aged 35 and over. They conclude that: "These mortality changes reflect social gradients in unhealthy behaviour, lifestyle and circumstances resulting in poor diet and high tobacco consumption leading to unfavourable levels of major coronary heart disease risk factors. These inequalities are persisting in spite of the widespread and constant health promotion and health prevention initiatives, which suggests substantial and continuing barriers to healthy changes." In an accompanying editorial, Professor Alastair Leyland, from the Medical Research Council in Glasgow, agrees that it is extremely worrying that the slowing of improvements at younger ages is confined to the most deprived groups and asks why these young Scots are "not sharing in the benefits seen by others?" Given health promotion programmes have had limited success, Leyland argues that perhaps it is time "to tackle the social inequalities themselves - unequal distribution of power, money, res and life chances." The British Medical Journal


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