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Relevance of community-based participatory research in community medicine training
Anand Krishnan, Rajesh Tandon, Baridalyne NongkynrihIndian Journal of Community Medicine 2020 45(3):256-260 Community-based participatory research (CBPR) is an approach in which researchers undertake research in partnership with those affected by the issue being studied, for the purpose of taking action or effecting social change. It can also incorporate those who will use the results to change practice and inform policy. The practice of CBPR is primarily focused on “Knowledge for Change.” Most research projects in such CBPR partnerships are funded through the academic partners. In many situation...
Source: Indian Journal of Community Medicine - August 31, 2020 Category: International Medicine & Public Health Authors: Anand Krishnan Rajesh Tandon Baridalyne Nongkynrih Source Type: research

The American Journal of Medicine Responds
The Editors of The American Journal of Medicine (AJM) are grateful to Dr. Heslley Machado Silva for calling our attention to the Brazilian government's misinterpretation and misuse of an article published in The American Journal of Medicine.1 As noted in Dr. Silva's commentary, the Brazilian government continues to tout hydroxychloroquine (HCQ) as a cure-all and preventive for COVID-19 infections. The government quotes an article printed in the AJM in January 2021 but written and accepted more than 6 months earlier and posted on the PubMed website2 at that time.
Source: The American Journal of Medicine - February 17, 2021 Category: General Medicine Authors: Joseph S. Alpert, Harvey B Simon Tags: Commentary Source Type: research

Institutionalization of personalized medicine in India: analysis of research trends and government interventions
Personalized Medicine, Ahead of Print.
Source: Future Medicine: Personalized Medicine - July 14, 2023 Category: Genetics & Stem Cells Authors: Ishita Goyal Madhavi Yennappu Source Type: research

Liberia: Chevron, Baylor College of Medicine to Provide Pediatric Health
[New Dawn]Chevron-Liberia Limited, in collaboration with the Baylor College of Medicine in Houston, Texas, in the United States, has disclosed that in its five-year partnership program with the Government of Liberia, it will provide pediatric health services to the children of Liberia.
Source: AllAfrica News: Health and Medicine - February 8, 2013 Category: African Health Source Type: news

Liberia: Chevron-Liberia, Baylor College of Medicine to Provide Pediatric Health Services to Liberia
[Heritage]Chevron-Liberia Limited, in collaboration with the Baylor College of Medicine in Houston, Texas, in the United States, has disclosed that in its five-year partnership program with the Government of Liberia, it will provide pediatric health services to the children of Liberia.
Source: AllAfrica News: Health and Medicine - February 14, 2013 Category: African Health Source Type: news

Meeting the Challenges of Global Nuclear Medicine Technologist Training in the 21st Century: The IAEA Distance Assisted Training (DAT) Program
Many countries have made significant investments in nuclear medicine (NM) technology with the acquisition of modern equipment and establishment of facilities, however, often appropriate training is not considered as part of these investments. Training for NM professionals is continually evolving, with a need to meet changing requirements in the workforce. Even places where established higher education courses are available, these do not necessarily cater to the practical component of training and the ever-changing technology that is central to medical imaging. The continuing advances in NM technology and growth of applicat...
Source: Seminars in Nuclear Medicine - April 14, 2013 Category: Radiology Authors: Heather E. Patterson, Margarita Nunez, Geraldine M. Philotheou, Brian F. Hutton Source Type: research

Should health insurance exchanges be regulated by the federal government?
Aaron Carroll, M.D., M.S., health policy expert for "Sound Medicine," discusses the national and local impact of health insurance exchanges. Exchanges allow people with chronic conditions, those who have been discriminated against and those who are unable to afford a private policy to purchase insurance through the government. The Affordable Care Act decided that states would control their own exc....
Source: Sound Medicine - April 21, 2013 Category: Global & Universal Authors: Sound Medicine Source Type: news

Lean laboratories: laboratory medicine needs to learn from other industries how to deliver more for less
Laboratory medicine faces unprecedented challenges worldwide. Demand continues to grow year on year both in volume and complexity as populations age and healthcare becomes ever more sophisticated. Crude test numbers are rising at between 6% and 10% per annum1 and revenue continues to fall, at least in relative terms, irrespective of the type of funding system. In the UK, the Department of Health is looking to an absolute cut in annual pathology costs of 20%.2 In Australia, the federal government has capped growth in the pathology budget at 5% per annum for the next 5 years, closely linked with a variety of strategies ...
Source: Journal of Clinical Pathology - July 22, 2013 Category: Pathology Authors: Knowles, S., Barnes, I. Tags: Legal and forensic medicine Leading article Source Type: research

Future Socioeconomic Model of Academic Rehabilitation Medicine: Is It Time for a Revolution?
The current health care model consumes 16% of the gross domestic product in the United States and is not sustainable in this time of worldwide government austerity. It is estimated that chronic diseases will consume 75% of the health care costs in the United States, and this does not even include trauma and its long-term effects. Despite the recent focus on primary care, most of the cost increase is expected to be due to precisely the types of chronic illness and diseases that rehabilitation medicine frequently treats.
Source: Archives of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation - August 28, 2013 Category: Rehabilitation Authors: Jay Meythaler Tags: From the Editors' Desk Source Type: research

Emergency/disaster medical support in the restoration project for the Fukushima nuclear power plant accident
The Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant (1F) suffered a series of radiation accidents after the Great East Japan Earthquake on 11 March 2011. In a situation where halting or delaying restoration work was thought to translate directly into a very serious risk for the entire country, it was of the utmost importance to strengthen the emergency and disaster medical system in addition to radiation emergency medical care for staff at the frontlines working in an environment that posed a risk of radiation exposure and a large-scale secondary disaster. The Japanese Association for Acute Medicine (JAAM) launched the ‘Emerge...
Source: Emergency Medicine Journal - November 14, 2013 Category: Emergency Medicine Authors: Morimura, N., Asari, Y., Yamaguchi, Y., Asanuma, K., Tase, C., Sakamoto, T., Aruga, T., Members of the Japanese Association for Acute Medicine, Emergency, Task Force on the Fukushima Nuclear Power Plant Accident (JAAM-TF-FNPPA) Tags: Open access, Editor's choice, Trauma Original article Source Type: research

A survey of Turkish hospital patients’ use of herbal medicine
This study aimed to describe the prevalence, types, reasons, attitudes and possible adverse effects related with HM use in population of Turkish hospital patients.Methods: Patients over 18 years of age were included in the study. Information was collected from a questionnaire completed by both out- and in-patients admitted to the Meram Faculty of Medicine Hospital in Konya between October 1st and December 31st 2012. Questions included herb use, reasons, attitudes and adverse effects.Results: Data from 927 questionnaires, conducted by face to face interviews identified that 48.8% of the study population used HM. Women, government officials (p
Source: European Journal of Integrative Medicine - September 23, 2013 Category: Complementary Medicine Authors: Burak Cem Soner, Ayşe Saide Sahin, Tahir Kemal Sahin Tags: Original Articles Source Type: research

The Costs of Training Internal Medicine Residents in the U.S
Departments of medicine train nearly 30% of the 115,000 residents and fellows in the United States.1 Departments, however, have few reliable external sources of funding for graduate medical education and are handicapped in negotiations with teaching hospitals (the recipients of state and federal graduate medical education funding) in part due to uncertainty of the actual costs of training.2,3 Moreover, several government advisory committees are recommending cuts to graduate medical education funding.
Source: The American Journal of Medicine - July 22, 2014 Category: Journals (General) Authors: Ron Ben-Ari, Richard J. Robbins, Sailaja Pindiprolu, Allan Goldman, Polly E. Parsons Source Type: research

Dilemmas in the compassionate supply of investigational cancer drugs
Abstract In Australia, patients who want to access medicines that are not yet approved have only two options: to enrol in a clinical trial if they are eligible, or obtain their medicine through ‘compassionate supply’, which is provided at the discretion of the manufacturer. In this article, we explore ethical issues associated with the provision of oncology medicines that are still in development, either prior to regulatory approval or government reimbursement.
Source: Internal Medicine Journal - September 8, 2014 Category: Internal Medicine Authors: J. R. R. Lewis, W. Lipworth, I. Kerridge, E. Doran Tags: Ethics in Medicine Source Type: research

The Costs of Training Internal Medicine Residents in the U.S
Departments of medicine train nearly 30% of the 115,000 residents and fellows in the United States.1 Departments, however, have few reliable external sources of funding for graduate medical education and are handicapped in negotiations with teaching hospitals (the recipients of state and federal graduate medical education funding) in part due to uncertainty of the actual costs of training.2,3 Moreover, several government advisory committees are recommending cuts to graduate medical education funding.
Source: The American Journal of Medicine - July 22, 2014 Category: Journals (General) Authors: Ron Ben-Ari, Richard J. Robbins, Sailaja Pindiprolu, Allan Goldman, Polly E. Parsons Source Type: research