Popular Articles
Natural Remedies

Shire Has Filed A Treatment Protocol For Velaglucerase Alfa For Gaucher Disease
Shire plc (LSE: SHP, NASDAQ: SHPGY), the global specialty biopharmaceutical company, announces that, at the request of the FDA, in view of a potential restriction on the availability of the current approved and marketed treatment for Gaucher Disease patients, it has filed a treatment protocol for velaglucerase alfa, its enzyme replacement therapy in development for the treatment of Gaucher Disease.
generic viagra online
Food Standards Commission Targets Dangerous Bacteria, Chemicals
The Codex Alimentarius Commission, (CAC) concluded a week-long meeting and adopted more than 30 new international standards, codes of practice and guidelines to improve worldwide food safety and protect the health of consumers.
News of the day
Academy Makes Recommendations To Build Clinical Academic Capacity
UK clinical research is currently benefiting from significant additional investment from Government and other research funders. A challenge for funders and institutions is to allocate res across the range of clinical academic specialties, to most effectively pursue research and its translation into improved healthcare.
Public Health

Arizona Jail Could Be E-Health Test, But Slow To Take The Necessary Steps

A troubled county jail, where hundreds of lawsuits have stemmed from mistakes in managing the inmates" health information, would be a perfect testing ground for electronic medical records, the Arizona Republic reports. But Maricopa County officials have not acted on repeated recommendations to implement such a system, "even when faced with hundreds of lawsuits and the loss of accreditation for CHS operations." The inmates - who have a legal right to appropriate health care - have often not been convicted of crimes, arrive in clusters of about 350 a day, often use drugs and have psychiatric disorders. In many cases, they have not seen a doctor in years despite problems with chronic diseases like diabetes, the Republic reports. And the jail "still relies on paper files and an electronic database designed for jailers, not doctors, to track the physical and mental ailments of its 10,000 inmates" across six facilities. The Republic relays the story of Deborah Braillard, an insulin-dependent diabetic, who was jailed for five days, gliding in and out of consciousness, a condition guards assumed was related to drug withdraw, before being taken to a hospital where she died. Paper records from a previous visit listed her condition, but the staff didn"t check them. "An electronic-medical-record system provides a central database that can be designed to hold any kind of information," the Republic reports. "Files are available to health-care workers across the institution" (Hensley and Wingett, 6/1). This information was reprinted from kaiserhealthnews.org with kind permission from the Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation. You can view the entire Kaiser Daily Health Policy Report, search the archives and sign up for email delivery at kaiserhealthnews.org. © Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation. All rights reserved.


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