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Myths: Human Papillomavirus infection
Human papilloma virus (HPV), coloured transmission electron micrograph (TEM). Common myths & facts about HPV infection Not a common problem. Approximately 80% of sexually active adults will have the HPV virus at some point during their life. Only women get HPV. This infection is common in both sexes. Condoms prevent HPV infection. If there is a skin-to-skin contact, you can get the infection. Every type of HPV cause cancer. High-risk viruses (16, 18) can cause cervical, anal, oral and penile cancer. Only vaginal sex can spread the infection. HPV can be spread through oral, vaginal or anal sex. Garlic concentrat...
Source: Unbounded Medicine - May 23, 2016 Category: Surgery Authors: Jon Mikel Iñarritu Tags: Uncategorized Source Type: blogs

How Rhode Island Parents Are Winning Back Their Rights to Vaccine Choice
Conclusion Parents who are resolute in their efforts to safeguard their parental rights are making significant progress in the war against vaccine mandates. They recognize the power they have to influence government policies about vaccination. They find ways to connect with elected officials to voice their concerns about protecting their children from unwanted exposure to the chemicals, toxins, and foreign DNA contained in vaccines. They know their children don’t need a government-mandated vaccine against a sexually transmitted infection, especially at the young age of nine or ten years old. If you live in Rhode Island, ...
Source: vactruth.com - May 9, 2016 Category: Allergy & Immunology Authors: Missy Fluegge Tags: Logical Missy Fluegge Recent Articles Top Stories Gardasil 9 Gardasil Death HPV Vaccine truth about vaccines Vaccine Exemptions vaccine mandate Source Type: blogs

The Gardasil Vaccine Disaster and Why You Must Investigate This Vaccine Yourself
The HPV vaccine has proven to be a disaster. This vaccine, developed to protect young women from cervical cancer, has failed to provide protection. In fact, it has succeeded in doing the opposite by increasing cervical cancer rates in those vaccinated. Reports of health damage caused by this vaccine are immense. The HPV vaccination has been linked with life-threatening autoimmune disorders, cancer, paralysis, infertility and death. In fact, several countries have opposed the vaccine, as evidenced through public warning or lawsuits. A lead researcher of the vaccine has advised parents not to use it. One independent group of...
Source: vactruth.com - March 24, 2016 Category: Allergy & Immunology Authors: Michelle Goldstein Tags: Logical Michelle Goldstein Recent Articles American Medical Association (AMA) autoimmune disorders blood clots brain inflammation Centers for Disease Control (CDC) Cervarix disabling fatigue eizures facial paralysis gardasil Guil Source Type: blogs

What You Need to Know to Protect Your Daughter from the Gardasil Vaccine Disaster
The HPV vaccine has proven to be a disaster. This vaccine, developed to protect young women from cervical cancer, has failed to provide protection. In fact, it has succeeded in doing the opposite by increasing cervical cancer rates in those vaccinated. Reports of health damage caused by this vaccine are immense. The HPV vaccination has been linked with life-threatening autoimmune disorders, cancer, paralysis, infertility and death. In fact, several countries have opposed the vaccine, as evidenced through public warning or lawsuits. A lead researcher of the vaccine has advised parents not to use it. One independent group of...
Source: vactruth.com - March 24, 2016 Category: Allergy & Immunology Authors: Michelle Goldstein Tags: Logical Michelle Goldstein Recent Articles American Medical Association (AMA) autoimmune disorders blood clots brain inflammation Centers for Disease Control (CDC) Cervarix disabling fatigue eizures facial paralysis gardasil Guil Source Type: blogs

Funtabulously Frivolous Friday Five 136
Just when you thought your brain could unwind on a Friday, you realise that it would rather be challenged with some good old fashioned medical trivia…introducing Funtabulously Frivolous Friday Five 136 Question 1 Why is it called the ‘Pap‘ test? + Reveal the Funtabulous Answer expand(document.getElementById('ddet1483302694'));expand(document.getElementById('ddetlink1483302694')) After its inventor George Papanicolaou originally from Greece but later worked in the United States as a pioneer in cytopathology and early cancer detection. His work contributed to a 70% reduction in cervical cancer mortality ...
Source: Life in the Fast Lane - March 4, 2016 Category: Emergency Medicine Authors: Neil Long Tags: Frivolous Friday Five Burton Line FFFF George papanicolaou James Parkinson lead poisoning MRI Pap smear Parkinson's disease Samter's Triad Zeugmatography Source Type: blogs

My Children are Vaccine-Damaged; are Yours?
Conclusion A growing number of today’s children suffer from vaccine damage. Most individuals do not make the connection between health problems and vaccines. When asked about the cause of autoimmune disorders, asthma, allergies, diabetes, learning disabilities, attention deficit disorder, autism, and other common childhood diseases and illness, the majority of health care providers advise patients that the causes are unknown. Doctors, including most integrative physicians, fail to make the connection to vaccines. It takes one moment to permanently damage the health of an adult or child, but takes a lifetime to t...
Source: vactruth.com - February 5, 2016 Category: Allergy & Immunology Authors: Michelle Goldstein Tags: Logical Michelle Goldstein Top Stories autoimmune disorders gardasil HPV Vaccine Medical Authority vaccine injury Source Type: blogs

When patients question the motives of their physicians
I was recently scrolling through my Facebook newsfeed when I came upon a long message chain started by one of my friends, an older woman from my hometown in New Jersey. She had seen a discussion given by a drug representative who was promoting administering Gardasil to early adolescents for the prevention of cervical cancer, and my friend wanted to know how other parents felt about allowing their children to be given the vaccine. The discussion that followed was remarkable to me for a number of reasons. I knew that there was a lot of public suspicion surrounding the HPV vaccine, much of it fueled by fear of negative side e...
Source: Kevin, M.D. - Medical Weblog - January 30, 2016 Category: Journals (General) Authors: Tags: Education Medical school Pediatrics Source Type: blogs

It’s Cervical Health Awareness Month – Do You Have The Facts?
Today’s post first ran on Mogul. The scary news: Cervical cancer is one of the world’s deadliest forms of cancer. The hopeful news: It’s also one of the most easily preventable. January is Cervical Health Awareness Month, a chance to bring attention to cervical cancer and spread the word about important steps women can take to stay healthy. Cervical cancer is a disease in which normal cells on the surface of the cervix change, grow, and form a tumor [1]. According to the American Cancer Society, there were more than 12,000 reported new cases of cervical cancer in the U.S. in 2014, resulting in more than 4,000 dea...
Source: Disruptive Women in Health Care - January 29, 2016 Category: Consumer Health News Authors: dw at disruptivewomen.net Tags: Cancer Women's Health Source Type: blogs

TBT: Getting Diagnosed with Cervical Cancer
In honor of it being Cervical Cancer Awareness Month today’s TBT post is one we ran as part of a series back in 2014. January is Cervical Cancer Month. According to the CDC, in 2010 11,818 women in the United States were diagnosed with cervical cancer and 3,939 women died from the disease. And while these statistics are disheartening, once the leading cause of death in women, cervical cancer has rapidly declined over the past 40 years.  The decline in cases can be attributed to preventative medicine: more women are getting regular Pap tests, which can find cervical precancer before it turns into cancer. Throughout t...
Source: Disruptive Women in Health Care - January 14, 2016 Category: Consumer Health News Authors: dw at disruptivewomen.net Tags: Cancer TBT Women's Health Source Type: blogs

What Do We Know About Medical Errors Associated With Electronic Medical Records?
By ROSS KOPPEL Recently, the Journal of Patient Safety published a powerful and important article on the role of EHRs in patient harm, errors and malpractice claims. The article is open access. Electronic Health Record–Related Events in Medical Malpractice Claims by Mark L. Graber, Dana Siegal, Heather Riah, Doug Johnston, and Kathy Kenyon.  

The article is remarkable for several reasons: Considerably over 80% of the reported errors involve horrific patient harm: many deaths, strokes, missed and significantly delayed cancer diagnoses, massive hemorrhage, 10-fold overdoses, ignored or lost critical lab results, ...
Source: The Health Care Blog - January 11, 2016 Category: Consumer Health News Authors: John Irvine Tags: Uncategorized Source Type: blogs

Defunding Planned Parenthood will deny poor women access to basic health care
Micheline came to Project Medishare’s women’s health center in Port-au-Prince as many of my patients do — with advanced cancer. At only 46 years old, she still had two young daughters and a family that needed her income selling clothing on the street. Micheline has cervical cancer, a disease that literally takes years to form and grow, is easily detected with simple tests, and is entirely preventable. We initially launched the women’s health center primarily as a breast cancer treatment center, offering surgery and chemotherapy. While a huge step forward for Haiti, women continue to present in advanced stages o...
Source: Kevin, M.D. - Medical Weblog - October 17, 2015 Category: Journals (General) Authors: Tags: Physician OB/GYN Source Type: blogs

The Global Health Movement Needs The Voices Of Those Affected By NCDs
Cancer. Diabetes. Heart Disease. Alzheimer’s. Many people read about these chronic health conditions and imagine people in wealthy countries like the US and UK trying to manage them. The truth is that these diseases have gone global, disproportionately affecting underserved populations no matter where they live. As this month’s issue of Health Affairs highlights, noncommunicable diseases (NCDs) and their risk factors account for a majority of our global health burden, affecting rich and poor countries alike. These global figures come to life in the delivery of local health care. In communities around the world, health ...
Source: Health Affairs Blog - September 10, 2015 Category: Health Management Authors: Loyce Pace and Paurvi Bhatt Tags: Equity and Disparities Featured Global Health Health Professionals Population Health Public Health Quality NCDs noncommunicable diseases Patient Engagement United Nations World Health Organization Source Type: blogs

Health Affairs’ September Issue: Growing Burden Of Noncommunicable Diseases
The September issue of Health Affairs focuses on the growing burden of noncommunicable diseases. Increased wealth worldwide has reduced the frequency of some infectious diseases, while chronic diseases—heart disease, respiratory ailments, cancer, diabetes, mental illness, and others—are more widespread. The September issue was supported by Eli Lilly and Company. Tracking Global Mortality Over 30 Years: A Mix of Increases And Decreases Mohammed Ali at Emory University’s Rollins School of Public Health and coauthors examined data on deaths as a result of ischemic heart disease, stroke, diabetes, respiratory d...
Source: Health Affairs Blog - September 8, 2015 Category: Health Management Authors: Tracy Gnadinger Tags: Costs and Spending Elsewhere@ Health Affairs Equity and Disparities Featured Global Health Medicaid and CHIP Population Health Public Health Quality ACA DataWatch Global Mortality HSAs NCDs noncommunicable diseases WHO Source Type: blogs

Quantifying Planned Parenthood’s Critical Role In Meeting The Need For Publicly Supported Contraceptive Care
Over the past few months, legislative attempts to defund Planned Parenthood have flared at both the federal and state levels; these moves are clearly an attempt to shutter Planned Parenthood health centers, potentially depriving women of the contraceptive services and counseling, sexually transmitted infection (STI) testing and treatment, and breast and cervical cancer screening that they provide. Although proponents of closing Planned Parenthood argue that other providers would be easily able to fill the hole torn in the safety net, credible evidence suggests this is unlikely. In some areas, Planned Parenthood is the sole...
Source: Health Affairs Blog - September 8, 2015 Category: Health Management Authors: Jennifer Frost and Kinsey Hasstedt Tags: Costs and Spending Equity and Disparities Featured Long-term Services and Supports Population Health Public Health contraceptive coverage low-income women Planned Parenthood safety-net providers Women's Health Source Type: blogs