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Limited number of spine surgeons among recipients of National Institutes of Health grants awarded for degenerative spine disease research
CONCLUSIONS: Few spine surgeons receive NIH grants for degenerative spine disease research. Future opportunities may exist for spine surgeons to collaborate in identified areas of clinical interest. Additional strategies are needed to increase NIH funding in spine surgery.PMID:37548536 | DOI:10.3171/2023.7.SPINE23101
Source: Journal of Neurosurgery.Spine - August 7, 2023 Category: Neurosurgery Authors: Jason Silvestre James A Clemmons Hao-Hua Wu Kyra Caldwell James D Kang Source Type: research

Medication self-management in predominantly African American and Caribbean American people with epilepsy: The role of medication beliefs and epilepsy knowledge
CONCLUSIONS: In these PWE, the most prevalent reasons for suboptimal medication self-management were behaviorally mediated and potentially modifiable. Negative medication beliefs and misconceptions about epilepsy and its treatment were common. Results further suggest that interventions addressing negative medication beliefs will be more effective than knowledge-based psychoeducation alone to improve medication self-management in this patient population.PMID:37544193 | DOI:10.1016/j.yebeh.2023.109313
Source: Epilepsy and Behaviour - August 6, 2023 Category: Neurology Authors: Cara L Crook Seth A Margolis Allyson Goldstein Jennifer D Davis Jeffrey S Gonzalez Arthur C Grant Luba Nakhutina Source Type: research

Distribution of serotypes causing invasive pneumococcal disease in older adults from high-income countries and impact of pediatric and adult vaccination policies
CONCLUSIONS: Vaccinating older adults with higher-valency PCVs, especially PCV20, could substantially reduce the remaining IPD burden in high-income countries, regardless of current PCV use in pediatric NIPs and adult PPSV23 policies.PMID:37544825 | DOI:10.1016/j.vaccine.2023.08.001
Source: Vaccine - August 6, 2023 Category: Allergy & Immunology Authors: Lindsay R Grant Mary P E Slack Christian Theilacker Jelena Vojicic St éphane Dion Ralf-Rene Reinert Luis Jodar Bradford D Gessner Source Type: research

The Effect of Proximal Row Carpectomy and Trapeziectomy on First Ray Stability: A Cadaveric Study
CONCLUSION: We observed a significant increase in thumb metacarpal subsidence following concurrent trapeziectomy with PRC when compared to trapeziectomy alone. Our results suggest that performing both operations together would lead to a substantial risk of first ray subsidence.CLINICAL RELEVANCE: When treating concurrent basilar thumb and wrist arthritis, it may be more effective to stage the procedures or use a form of thumb metacarpal suspension or arthrodesis.PMID:37542496 | DOI:10.1016/j.jhsa.2023.06.013
Source: Hand Surgery - August 5, 2023 Category: Surgery Authors: Charles Carlson Anxhela Nezha Grant Mathison Robert Ablove Source Type: research

Long-running ProMED email service for alerting world to disease outbreaks is in trouble
The first news about the COVID-19 pandemic came not from a government or a scientific publication, but in an email from a disease-alert system called ProMED . This fateful missive in December 2019 about a few cases of a mysterious pneumonia in Wuhan, China, is just one example of how physicians and public health experts around the world have used the 30-year-old, free service to share real-time information about local disease outbreaks with tens of thousands of subscribers. But ProMED is now on life support. Much of its work came to a screeching halt yesterday when 21 of its 38 paid editors and moderators went o...
Source: Science of Aging Knowledge Environment - August 4, 2023 Category: Geriatrics Source Type: research