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ReachMD Launches CME iPhone APP
ReachMD, which provides medical news and information to healthcare practitioners, is raising its profile with the Continuing Medical Education, or CME, application for the Apple iPhone and iPod touch. This is the first CME application that lets users listen to all ReachMD Continuing Medical Education content, get regular updates on new Continuing Medical Education content and take Continuing Medical Education tests for credit, all from their iPhone or iPod touch.
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'We Want Sex, Not AIDS'
Health workers fail to understand the importance of sex for Tanzanian children
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Researchers Compare Different Systems Of Measuring Treatment Intensity In Hypertension Care
It is known that more intensive management of hypertension can improve blood pressure control and thus improve cardiovascular outcomes. However, there are several different systems of measuring the intensity of management of hypertension, and they have not been previously compared. If one system performs best, it would be important to use it to measure intensity of management for research and quality improvement purposes. Researchers from Boston University have compared different measures of treatment intensity in hypertension care and have found that one of the measures should be preferred to the others. This study, which appears in the July issue of Circulation: Cardiovascular Quality and Outcomes, shows that the measure originally described by Okonofua, et al. (Hypertension, 2006) predicts blood pressure control more effectively than the other two measures studied.
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Toronto Star Columnist Examines Polio Eradication In India

According a Toronto Star column, it is an "enormous challenge" for India"s government to try to get all of its citizens immunized against polio. "It has used everything from elephants and camels to rickety boats and bikes to ferry the vaccine to remote regions where temperatures have topped 40C the past three months. The polio serum needs to be kept at a temperature below 8C. Its efforts have not all been in vain: the number of new cases in the country last year was 559, down from 200,000 in the early 1980s," writes columnist Rick Westhead. This year, India"s health ministry is expected to administer almost 1.1 billion vaccines to 172 million children, the Toronto Star reports. In more than half the country, "vaccination drives have been held every four to six weeks since the start of 2006. It"s a constant, exhaustive struggle to keep pace in a country that"s adding 30 million babies a year," according to the column. "The fact is, we aren"t going to beat this until we address problems like sanitation and nutrition. They are all too closely linked," said Arvind Dabass, a WHO physician who oversees the polio eradication effort in the district of Saharas. "Every year that passes without a conclusive victory over the disease generates more scrutiny of the WHO"s polio eradication program. The Indian government alone is spending $325 million a year, and the eradication effort worldwide has ballooned to more than $1 billion annually," according to the newspaper. In addition, critics argue the money should be used for other pressing causes. "Eradicating this disease is a huge idea, on the scale of going to the moon, and as we get closer, it requires more investment, which prompts more criticism that we are spending too much for that final 1 percent," said Chris Wolff, an scientist who oversees the WHO"s polio eradication program in India. He said it is "not unfathomable" that donors could pull the plug on funding (7/11). 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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